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Russia-Ukraine updates: Hungary says it would not arrest Putin

All the updates as they happened on March 23.

Ukrainian servicemen head toward Bakhmut in BMP infantry fighting vehicles, in eastern Ukraine on March 22, 2023. (Photo by Aris Messinis / AFP)
Ukrainian servicemen head toward Bakhmut in BMP infantry fighting vehicles, in eastern Ukraine [File: Aris Messinis/AFP]
By Virginia Pietromarchi
Published On 23 Mar 202323 Mar 2023

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This live blog is now closed, thank you for joining us. These were the updates on the Russia-Ukraine war on Thursday, March 23.

  • Hungary says Vladimir Putin would not be arrested if he enters the country after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for the Russian president on war crimes charges.
  • Kyiv says its troops will launch a counterattack in Bakhmut “very soon” and accuses Wagner Group mercenaries of planning to deport residents of the besieged city to Russia.
  • Slovakia has handed over the first four MiG-29 fighter jets it has pledged to donate to Ukraine and the rest of the planes are to be delivered in the coming weeks, its Ministry of Defence says.

INTERACTIVE-WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN UKRAINE

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 19:24
     (19:24 GMT)

    ICC concerned by Russia’s ‘threats’ over Putin warrant

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) has expressed concern over “threats” from Russia following its issuing of a war crimes arrest warrant for President Vladimir Putin.

    The ICC’s statement of concern on Wednesday came after former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev threatened to hit the war crimes court in The Hague with hypersonic missiles. It also followed Russia’s top investigative body opening a criminal case against ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan as well as the judges who issued the warrant for Putin.

    Read the full story here.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 18:49
     (18:49 GMT)

    EU leaders endorse supply of more ammunition to Ukraine

    European Union leaders have endorsed a plan to supply a million artillery shells to Ukraine over the next year.

    “We need to support Ukraine to defend itself, we need to continue to show solidarity and avoid any sign of fatigue,” European Parliament head Roberta Metsola said during the EU summit in which UN chief Antonio Guterres also participated.

    Officials say Ukraine is burning through shells at a faster rate than its allies can produce them, prompting a renewed search for ammunition and ways to boost production, which requires more money.

    The EU earmarked 1 billion euros for the swift supply of shells – and possibly missiles – from existing stocks and another 1 billion euros for joint orders by EU countries for more rounds.

    European Parliament President Roberta Metsola speaks during a news conference in Brussels, Belgium March 23, 2023. REUTERS/Johanna Geron
    European Parliament President Roberta Metsola speaks during a news conference in Brussels, Belgium [Johanna Geron/Reuters]
  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 18:16
     (18:16 GMT)

    Ukrainian army retracts report on Russian pullout from Kherson town

    The Ukrainian army has withdrawn a previous report saying Russian forces have left the town of Nova Kakhovka in the southern Kherson region. Russians are still there, it said.

    “Information about the alleged withdrawal of the enemy from this settlement was made public as a result of incorrect use of available data,” The army said on Telegram.

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  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 18:00
     (18:00 GMT)

    What are depleted uranium munitions the UK is sending to Ukraine?

    The United Kingdom government has announced it will provide Ukraine with armour-piercing rounds containing depleted uranium – a byproduct of the uranium-enrichment process needed to create nuclear weapons.

    The rounds retain some radioactive properties but cannot generate a nuclear reaction like a nuclear weapon would, Edward Geist, a nuclear expert at research organisation RAND says. But the ammunition does carry risks even if it is not a nuclear weapon.

    Here is a look at depleted uranium munitions.

    US soldiers pack up 25mm depleted uranium rounds into ammunition cases at a base in Tikrit, Iraq, in 2004
    US soldiers pack up 25mm depleted uranium rounds into ammunition cases at a base in Tikrit, Iraq, in 2004 [File: Shawn Thew/EPA]
  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 17:23
     (17:23 GMT)

    Ukraine army says Russians left town in Kherson region

    Russian forces have left the town of Nova Kakhovka in the southern Kherson region, the Ukrainian military’s General Staff has said.

    “As of 22nd March 2023, all units of the occupying army that had been deployed in the town of Nova Kakhovka in Kherson region, have left the city,” the General Staff said in its evening report outlining conditions on the front lines.

    Volodymyr Saldo, a Russian-installed official in the town, denied the report. “I officially declare that all Russian military personnel in Nova Kakhovka, as well as in other places of deployment on the left bank of the Dnipro (Dnieper), remain in their place,” he said on social media.

    The town is located on the east bank of the Dnieper River, where Russian forces redeployed last November after abandoning positions on the west bank in the face of a counter-offensive by Ukrainian troops.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 16:52
     (16:52 GMT)

    Zelenskyy tells EU ‘delays’ in jets could extend conflict

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told EU leaders that “delays” in sending fighter jets and long-range missiles could extend the war, an EU official told AFP.

    Zelenskyy addressed a summit of his EU counterparts via video link and welcomed an EU plan to send Kyiv 1 million artillery shells over the next 12 months.

    But the president insisted delays in supplying jets and long-range missiles could drag out the conflict, the EU official said.

    Zelenskyy also urged leaders to impose more sanctions on Moscow, speed up work on Ukraine’s EU membership bid and increase support for a peace plan proposed by Kyiv.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 16:28
     (16:28 GMT)

    How did the West view Xi and Putin’s meeting?

    Xi and Putin met this week to reaffirm China and Russia’s economic ties and strengthen relations between the two powers.

    But some Western countries remain sceptical of Moscow and Beijing’s close relationship.

    “In part as a result of having this very different worldview than we do, they have a marriage of convenience,” United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    “I’m not sure if it’s conviction.”

    Al Jazeera’s Inside Story speaks to experts about how the West sees Xi and Putin’s meeting.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 15:59
     (15:59 GMT)

    NATO chief dismisses complaints over ammunition containing depleted uranium

    NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg has dismissed Russian complaints about Britain’s announcement that it will send Ukraine ammunition containing depleted uranium.

    On Wednesday, Moscow warned of a “serious” escalation of the Ukraine crisis if London sends Kyiv the armour-piercing rounds.

    “NATO allies are following international rules and international law in everything they do in their support for Ukraine,” Stoltenberg told the AFP news agency.

    “The dangerous thing is the war, which is taking thousands of lives,” he said at the operational launch of a new fleet of NATO-EU refuelling planes at a Dutch airbase.

    “The most important thing that can be done to reduce risks is for President Putin to stop the war.”

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 15:36
     (15:36 GMT)

    Sweden to seek explanation from Hungary over NATO bid

    Sweden’s prime minister says he will seek an explanation from Hungary on why the ratification of his country’s NATO membership is being delayed while Finland’s is expected to be approved next week.

    “I’m going to ask why they are now separating Sweden from Finland,” Ulf Kristersson told public broadcaster Sveriges Radio. “These are signals we have not received before, so I’m absolutely going to raise this with Orban today.”

    Helsinki’s and Stockholm’s NATO applications were accepted simultaneously at a June summit of the military alliance, but the bids need to be ratified by all 30 NATO members, and Turkey and Hungary have yet to do so.

    Orban’s ruling Fidesz party has said parliament will ratify Finland’s bid on Monday but “will decide on the case of Sweden later”.

    Earlier on Thursday, the Turkish parliament’s foreign affairs committee approved Finland’s NATO bid.

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  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 15:15
     (15:15 GMT)

    Doctors Without Borders finds mass destruction of health facilities in Ukraine

    The international medical aid group Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières, or MSF) reveals in a new report the widespread destruction of health facilities in Ukraine due to Russia’s invasion.

    MSF has warned the warring countries to uphold “international humanitarian law and their obligations to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure”.

    “Despite requests to work on both sides of the frontline, MSF is only able to operate in areas under Ukrainian control, and our observations are limited to those areas,” MSF said in a statement.

    “The use of landmines is widespread in frontline areas, but to see them placed in medical facilities is shocking: a remarkable act of inhumanity,” said Vincenzo Porpiglia, project coordinator for MSF activities in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region. “It sends a clear message to those who come in search of medicines or treatments: Hospitals are not a safe place.”

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 14:55
     (14:55 GMT)

    Turkish parliamentary committee approves Finland’s NATO bid

    The Turkish parliament’s foreign affairs committee has approved a bill ratifying Finland’s bid to join NATO, state broadcaster TRT Haber reports.

    The bill still needs to be approved by the parliament’s general assembly.

    Sweden, which applied to join the bloc simultaneously with Finland, has yet to be approved by Turkey.

    INTERACTIVE- NATO in Europe with Sweden and Finland

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 14:32
     (14:32 GMT)

    Western sanctions target ordinary people: Russian PM

    Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said Western sanctions against Moscow target ordinary people.

    “At the very beginning, the West tried to assure us that the sanctions were not directed against our citizens. And then there were no illusions about this, but now even a person far from global politics understands that the main goal was the Russian people,” Mishustin said in an address to the State Duma.

    He said Moscow was hit by sanctions of unprecedented scale that, as a result, provoked mass unemployment.

    “Russia’s opponents were unscrupulous in means. Blasted Nord Stream gas pipelines. Froze our accounts, switched off [the] system of international payments, tried to block all banks and other economic activities,” he said.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 14:12
     (14:12 GMT)

    Who controls what?

    Here are four maps we update daily, charting the latest war developments.

    INTERACTIVE-WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN UKRAINE

    INTERACTIVE-WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN SOUTHERN UKRAINE

    INTERACTIVE-WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN EASTERN UKRAINE

    INTERACTIVE Ukraine Refugees

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 13:45
     (13:45 GMT)

    Slovakia delivers four MiG-29 jets to Ukraine

    Slovakia has delivered the first four MiG-29 jets it pledged to donate to Ukraine, with the remaining planes to be delivered in the coming weeks, the Slovak Defence Ministry said.

    Slovakia last week joined fellow NATO member Poland in announcing the delivery of jets to Ukraine.

    In total, Slovakia said it would donate 13 of the Soviet-made planes.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 13:33
     (13:33 GMT)

    Finland will not send Hornet jets to Ukraine

    Finland’s defence minister said he did not want to donate Hornet fighter jets to Ukraine, despite Kyiv’s request.

    “My view as Finland’s defence minister is that we need these Hornets to secure our own country,” Antti Kaikkonen told a news conference in Helsinki.

    “I view negatively the idea that they would be donated during the next few years. And if we look even further, my understanding is that they begin to be worn out and will have little use value left,” he said.

    Finland is replacing its old Hornet fleet with F-35 fighters it ordered in 2021, but the delivery is still two to three years away.

    Finland will, however, send three more Leopard 2 tanks, Kaikkonen told a news conference.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 13:08
     (13:08 GMT)

    Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 393

    Click here for a roundup of the key events from day 393 of the war.

    Keep reading:

    • What are depleted uranium munitions the UK is sending to Ukraine?
    • ICC concerned by Russia’s ‘threats’ over Putin warrant
    • Blinken dismisses Xi-Putin ties as ‘marriage of convenience’
    • World Bank says $411bn cost to rebuild war-torn Ukraine
    Rescuers work at a site of a residential building
    Rescue workers at a residential building damaged by a Russian missile strike in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine  [Stringer/Reuters]
  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 12:48
     (12:48 GMT)

    Wagner Group forces are deporting residents in Bakhmut: Ukraine

    According to the Ukrainian government, forces from Russia’s Wagner Group of mercenaries are allegedly deporting residents from the suburbs of Bakhmut.

    The Special Operations Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said, “Militants forcefully take local residents to captured areas of [the] Luhansk region, where they are filtered. After that, they are deported to Perm and other remote regions of the Russian Federation.”

    The statement added that this is a “typical story” where Ukrainians are deported under evacuation and “assimilated” in Russian areas.

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  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 12:28
     (12:28 GMT)

    Hungary says it will not arrest Putin despite ICC warrant

    Hungary would not arrest Putin if he enters the country, Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s chief of staff says.

    Gergely Gulyas said the Rome Statute, which established the ICC, has not been built into the Hungarian legal system.

    “We can refer to the Hungarian law, and based on that, we cannot arrest the Russian president … as the ICC’s statute has not been promulgated in Hungary,” Gulyas said.

    He said Hungary’s government “had not formed a stance” on the ICC’s arrest warrant for Putin on war crimes charges.

    “These decisions are not the most fortunate as they take things towards further escalation and not towards peace,” Gulyas said. “This is my personal subjective opinion.”

    Orban has been a longtime ally of Putin’s. Since the start of the Ukraine war, he has condemned Russian aggression but not Putin. Hungary has also not sent weapons to Ukraine and has insisted on maintaining economic and diplomatic ties with Russia.

    FILE PHOTO: Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting of the collegium of the Prosecutor General's office in Moscow, Russia, March 15, 2023. Sputnik/Pavel Bednyakov/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY
    Russian President Vladimir Putin faces arrest if he travels to a country that is party to the ICC, which issued an arrest warrant against him last week [Pavel Bednyakov/Sputnik/pool via Reuters]
  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 12:12
     (12:12 GMT)

    Russian leaders should be tried in absentia: Ukraine

    Russian leaders should be put on trial for the invasion of Ukraine even if they cannot be arrested and brought to court in person, Kyiv’s top prosecutor says.

    Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin spoke to the Reuters news agency as international support is growing for the creation of a special tribunal that would prosecute Russian leaders for the invasion.

    The special tribunal should go after “the highest political and military leadership, including Putin, for the crime of aggression,” Kostin said during a stopover in The Hague after meeting with the chief prosecutor of the ICC, which issued an arrest warrant for Putin last week.

    “I believe that it could be [held] in absentia because it’s important to deliver a matter of justice for international crimes even if perpetrators are not in the dock,” he said.

  • live-orange
    23 Mar 2023 - 11:50
     (11:50 GMT)

    Zelenskyy promises to ‘restore everything’ in Kherson visit

    Zelenskyy has posted footage of a visit he has made to the Black Sea port of Kherson, where he has promised to “restore everything” in a city that Russia occupied for eight months.

    The Ukrainian leader said on Telegram that he discussed providing electricity during his visit to Kherson, which fell to the Russians a year ago and was retaken in November.

    “We considered the restoration of electricity supply in the de-occupied territories and the repair of equipment destroyed due to Russian shelling,” he said.

    “We have to ensure full restoration and protection of our energy sector,” he wrote.

    Burning residential building
    A burning residential house is seen after a Russian military strike, in Kherson, Ukraine [Head of Ukraine’s Presidential Office Andriy Yermak via Telegram/Handout via Reuters]

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