Kremlin-installed Kherson officials said Ukrainian shelling of a Dnieper River ferry crossing killed two journalists working for a local TV station they set up under occupation. At least two other people were reported killed and 10 members of the broadcast crew and their relatives were wounded, Russia’s Tass news agency reported.
Natalia Humeniuk, a spokeswoman for Ukraine’s southern operational command, confirmed the Ukrainian military struck the Antonivskyi Bridge near the crossing but only during an overnight curfew Russian-installed officials put in place, to avoid civilian casualties.
“We do not attack civilians and settlements,” Humeniuk told Ukrainian television.
Earlier Ukrainian strikes had made the Antonivskyi Bridge inoperable, prompting Russian authorities to set up ferry crossings and pontoon bridges to relocate civilians and transport supplies to Russian troops in Kherson, which sits on the Dnieper’s western bank.
Russian-installed officials are trying to evacuate up to 60,000 people from Kherson for their safety and to allow the military to build fortifications. Ukraine’s military reported Friday that bank employees, medical workers and teachers were relocating as the city’s infrastructure wound down.
“The situation is really difficult,” the deputy head of Kherson’s Kremlin-installed regional administration, Kirill Stremousov, said in a video he posted on Telegram. “Today we are preparing the city of Kherson as a fortress for defence and are ready to defend to the last. Our task is to save people, build defences and protect the city.”
Kherson city, with a prewar population of about 284,000, was one of the first urban areas Russia captured when it invaded Ukraine, and it remains the largest city Russia holds.
Another flashpoint on the Dnieper River is the Kakhovka dam, which creates a large reservoir, and associated hydroelectric power station, about 70km from Kherson city. Each side accuses the other of targeting the facilities. Russian-installed officials claim Ukrainian forces have been attacking the facilities in part to cut the water supply to Crimea.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy contends the Russians plan to blow up the dam and power station to unleash 18 million cubic metres of water and flood Kherson and dozens of other areas where hundreds of thousands of people live. He told the European Council on Thursday that Russia would then blame Ukraine.
None of the claims could be independently verified.
Defying international law, Russian President Vladimir Putin annexed Ukraine’s Kherson, Luhansk, Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia regions last month even though his forces don’t control all the territory. Putin declared martial law in the regions to assert Russian authority in the face of military setbacks and strong international criticism.
In the Donetsk region, two people were killed in Russian shelling of the city of Bakhmut, said Pavlo Kyrylenko, the province’s Ukrainian governor. Russian troops have been unable to advance toward the city for more than a month.
In the capital of eastern Ukraine’s recently reclaimed Kharkiv region, nine people were wounded in two Russian attacks, according to Governor Oleh Syniehubov. In the city of Zaporizhzhia, a Russian S-300 missile strike on Friday wounded three people and damaged a residential building, a school and infrastructure, Ukrainian authorities said.
“Each strike won’t scare anyone. It will make us stronger,” said Dniprovskyi District acting administrative chief Volodymyr Hrianysty.
In an apparent effort to keep hostilities from spinning out of control, US Secretary of Defense Lloyd J Austin reached out to Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu on Friday for their first phone call since May 13. Defence officials have said the Russians had not responded to US efforts to set up calls.
Russia’s deployment of aircraft and troops to air bases in Belarus raised the spectre of another front on Ukraine’s northern border, although Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said: “We’re not going anywhere today ... If you do not want to fight with us, then we will not, there will be no war.”
The Ukrainian army’s general staff has warned that Belarus could attack to cut supply routes of Western weapons and equipment. Belarus’ intervention could also divert Ukraine’s resources and weaken its southern counteroffensive.
While prospects for peace appear slim, the Kremlin insisted that Putin has been open to negotiations “from the very beginning” and “nothing has changed”. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters Putin “tried to initiate talks with both Nato and the United States even before the special military operation” — the Russian term for its war in Ukraine.
Peskov was responding to Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who said earlier the Russian leader appeared to be “much softer and more open to negotiations”.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Putin’s war has backfired.
“President Putin thinks that these attacks will somehow break the will of the Ukrainian people. Instead, he is only deepening their resolve to defend their country,” Blinken told reporters on Friday.
“Moscow can knock out the lights across Ukraine, but it cannot, it will not extinguish the Ukrainian spirit. President Putin thought he could divide the trans-Atlantic alliance; instead, he’s brought us even closer together.”