Live: Russia’s Gazprom says suspending gas supplies to Latvia

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Issued on: 30/07/2022 – 07:23

Russian energy giant Gazprom Saturday suspended gas supplies to Latvia following tensions between Moscow and the West over the conflict in Ukraine and sweeping European and US sanctions against Russia. Follow FRANCE 24’s liveblog for all the latest developments. All times are Paris time (GMT+2).

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9:28am: Gazprom says suspending gas supplies to Latvia

Russian energy giant Gazprom Saturday suspended gas supplies to Latvia following tensions between Moscow and the West over the conflict in Ukraine and sweeping European and US sanctions against Russia.

“Today, Gazprom suspended its gas supplies to Latvia… due to violations of the conditions” of purchase, the company said on Telegram.

Gazprom drastically cut gas deliveries to Europe via the Nord Stream pipeline on Wednesday to about 20 percent of its capacity.

7:49am: ‘Green light from Russia’ awaited for Ukraine grain exports

Kyiv is ready to export grain and is awaiting the signal to proceed with the first shipment. But “we don’t know exactly” when this might be able to happen, FRANCE 24’s Gulliver Cragg reported from Odesa.

“There was talk of it happening yesterday; the United Nations expressed hope that it would be possible already yesterday to have the first of these ships leaving port; that did not happen. The Ukrainian side have said they are waiting for the green light from the United Nations and Turkey — who are really just the intermediaries in this discussion. I think it’s a green light from Russia that everybody is waiting for.”

7:36am: Russia looking to hold referendums in newly occupied areas of southern Ukraine

Russian-installed authorities in newly occupied territories in southern Ukraine are under pressure and possibly preparing to hold referendums on joining Russia later this year, Britain military said on Saturday.

“Local authorities are likely coercing the population into disclosing personal details in order to compose voting registers,” the Ministry of Defence said in an intelligence update on Twitter.

Russia classifies these occupied areas as being under interim “civil-military administration”. Ukraine has probably repelled small-scale Russian assaults from the long-established front line near Donetsk in the eastern region of Donbas, while in the Kherson area, Russia likely has established two pontoon bridges and a ferry system to compensate for nearby bridges damaged in recent strikes, the update said.


03:49
This handout picture released by the Russian Investigative Committee on July 29, 2022 shows what is said is the destroyed detention centre in the settlement of Olenivka in the separatist-held region of Donetsk. © Investigative Committee of Russia, AFP

 

5:35am: Russia intends to dissolve Ukraine from world map, says UN envoy to UN

The US ambassador to the United Nations said Friday there should no longer be any doubt that Russia intends to dismantle Ukraine “and dissolve it from the world map entirely.”

Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the UN Security Council that the United States is seeing growing signs that Russia is laying the groundwork to attempt to annex all of the eastern Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk and the southern Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, including by installing “illegitimate proxy officials in Russian-held areas, with the goal of holding sham referenda or decree to join Russia.”

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov “has even stated that this is Russia’s war aim,” she said. Lavrov told an Arab summit in Cairo on Sunday that Moscow’s overarching goal in Ukraine is to free its people from its “unacceptable regime.”

12:35am: Ukraine’s Zelensky calls prison strike ‘deliberate Russian war crime’

President Volodymyr Zelensky said Friday the shelling of a prison in the separatist-controlled east holding Ukrainian servicemen was a “deliberate Russian war crime” that had claimed more than 50 lives.

“Today I received information about the attack by the occupiers on Olenivka (the prison’s location), in the Donetsk region. It is a deliberate Russian war crime, a deliberate mass murder of Ukrainian prisoners of war. More than 50 dead,” he said in his daily address.

Russia and Moscow-backed separatists had earlier on Friday accused Kyiv’s forces of striking the jail, saying dozens of people died and scores were wounded. Ukraine denied targeting civilian infrastructure or prisoners of war.

Russian television showed what appeared to be destroyed barracks and tangled metal beds. It also showed blurred images of what looked like human bodies.

© France Médias Monde graphic studio

(FRANCE 24 with AP, AFP and REUTERS)