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Ukraine President Zelensky Hails Funding From The US And The European Union | Russia Ukraine War
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Ukraine President Zelensky Hails Funding From The US And The European Union | Russia Ukraine War
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Tuesday welcomed a new round of funding from the US and the European Union, totalling a combined more than $7 billion.
He said the package from Brussels supplied 2.5 billion euros ($2.576 billion), while $4.5 billion from Washington was coming "soon."
In his nightly address, the president said workers were trying to stabilise his country's energy grid, but emergency shutdowns were possible during surges in demand.
Zelenskyy also praised his nation's soldiers amid ongoing skirmishes and shelling in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, with progress being made "little by little" in the latter.
PARAMEDICS WORK IN THE DARK IN KHERSON
Since Russian forces left Kherson nearly two weeks ago damaging key infrastructure and leaving the city without water or electricity, paramedics have had to respond in the dark.
Their work was made more difficult since the Russians also took most of the city's ambulances, as they fled.
As attacks from across the Dnieper river -- where Russians forces were digging in -- intensified, first responders worried they would not have enough resources to help everyone.
Amid the sound of constant shelling early on Monday, paramedics in Kherson responded to a man suffering from liver psoriasis.
Guided by a few headlamps and flashlights, they helped him down several flights of stairs and into an ambulance in total darkness.
Despite the recent barrage of shelling, the team wasn't called to help victims from missile strikes that night.
However, they said calls had been increasing since the Russians left.
UKRAINIAN SECURITY FORCES SEARCH KYIV MONASTERY
Ukraine’s counter-intelligence service, police officers and the country's National Guard on Tuesday searched one of the most famous Orthodox Christian sites in the capital, Kyiv, after a priest spoke favourably about Russia during a service.
The search of the Pechersk Lavra monastic complex was highly unusual.
Its cathedral, churches and other buildings are a UNESCO-listed World Heritage site.
Overlooking the right bank of the Dnieper River, it has been a pilgrimage site for centuries.
The search, motivated by apparent security service suspicions of possible Russian covert operations at the complex, highlighted deep splits in the Orthodox church in Ukraine that have been sharpened by the 9-month Russian invasion.
Hundreds of Ukrainian Orthodox communities have cut their ties with the Moscow-governed branch of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church that was long one of the main sources of Russian influence and power in Ukraine.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Tuesday welcomed a new round of funding from the US and the European Union, totalling a combined more than $7 billion.
He said the package from Brussels supplied 2.5 billion euros ($2.576 billion), while $4.5 billion from Washington was coming "soon."
In his nightly address, the president said workers were trying to stabilise his country's energy grid, but emergency shutdowns were possible during surges in demand.
Zelenskyy also praised his nation's soldiers amid ongoing skirmishes and shelling in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, with progress being made "little by little" in the latter.
PARAMEDICS WORK IN THE DARK IN KHERSON
Since Russian forces left Kherson nearly two weeks ago damaging key infrastructure and leaving the city without water or electricity, paramedics have had to respond in the dark.
Their work was made more difficult since the Russians also took most of the city's ambulances, as they fled.
As attacks from across the Dnieper river -- where Russians forces were digging in -- intensified, first responders worried they would not have enough resources to help everyone.
Amid the sound of constant shelling early on Monday, paramedics in Kherson responded to a man suffering from liver psoriasis.
Guided by a few headlamps and flashlights, they helped him down several flights of stairs and into an ambulance in total darkness.
Despite the recent barrage of shelling, the team wasn't called to help victims from missile strikes that night.
However, they said calls had been increasing since the Russians left.
UKRAINIAN SECURITY FORCES SEARCH KYIV MONASTERY
Ukraine’s counter-intelligence service, police officers and the country's National Guard on Tuesday searched one of the most famous Orthodox Christian sites in the capital, Kyiv, after a priest spoke favourably about Russia during a service.
The search of the Pechersk Lavra monastic complex was highly unusual.
Its cathedral, churches and other buildings are a UNESCO-listed World Heritage site.
Overlooking the right bank of the Dnieper River, it has been a pilgrimage site for centuries.
The search, motivated by apparent security service suspicions of possible Russian covert operations at the complex, highlighted deep splits in the Orthodox church in Ukraine that have been sharpened by the 9-month Russian invasion.
Hundreds of Ukrainian Orthodox communities have cut their ties with the Moscow-governed branch of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church that was long one of the main sources of Russian influence and power in Ukraine.
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