Ukraine updates: Majority of Germans again peacekeeping drive

Skip next section Transnistria suffering ‘severe’ energy crisis after Russia halts gas supplies

January 2, 2025

Transnistria suffering ‘severe’ energy crisis after Russia halts gas supplies

Transnistria, the breakaway region of Moldova is suffering a “severe” energy crisis after Russia halted gas supplies, pro-Russian separatist officials said.

Russia had announced that it would halt gas deliveries to Moldova over a financial dispute between Chisinau and Russian energy firm Gazprom.

It also comes after Ukraine did not renew a five-year deal that expired on Wednesday. Kyiv had previously allowed Russia to continue sending gas across its territory to countries in Central and Eastern Europe.

“The crisis is so severe that there is no need to list which enterprises have stopped. All industrial enterprises have stopped, except for those engaged in food production,” said Sergei Obolonik, who serves as the self-proclaimed republic’s economy minister.

Separatist leader Vadim Krasnoselsky said that more than 70,000 households had no gas and over 1,500 apartment blocks had no hot water or heating. “It is difficult, but we will not allow social collapse,” he said.

The largely Russian-speaking region has been de-facto controlled by pro-Moscow forces since the collapse of the Soviet Union but is internationally recognized as part of Moldova.

Government-controlled areas of Moldova have secured power imports from neighboring Romania

https://p.dw.com/p/4olmo

Skip next section Ukraine jails man for 15 years for treason

January 2, 2025

Ukraine jails man for 15 years for treason

A Ukrainian court sentenced a man to 15 years prison for high treason and justifying Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Ukraine’s internal security agency (SBU) said in a post on Telegram.

The SBU said that the man “tried to pass to the aggressor the coordinates of local warehouses with fuel and lubricants” which could assist in aerial attacks.

It said that he had been “hiding at home” in order to avoid being drafted into the Ukrainian army.

He was accused of having “glorified” Russia’s invasion of Ukraine during a live stream in which he also set fire to a Ukrainian flag.

The 35-year-old man lived in the southwestern Chernivtsi region.

https://p.dw.com/p/4ollv

Skip next section Ukraine wants to restart diplomatic ties with Syria — Zelenskyy

January 2, 2025

Ukraine wants to restart diplomatic ties with Syria — Zelenskyy

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Kyiv was working to establish ties with the new government in Syria.

“We are preparing to resume diplomatic relations with Syria and cooperation in international organizations,” Zelenskyy said.

Ukraine cut ties with Damascus in June 2022 after regime of Bashar Assad recognized the independence of two self-declared breakaway republics in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions.

Assad’s regime was overthrown on December 8, after which the former Syrian leader fled to allied Russia.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian Agriculture Minister Vitaliy Koval said that Ukraine had already sent a shipment of food aid to the eastern Mediterranean country and vowed that Kyiv would provide “long-lasting” support.

Koval said that the wheat delivery would feed around 167,000 people for a month.

“Today, at the level of government dialogue, we clearly understand that support should be sustainable and not a one-off, but rather long-lasting and predictable,” Koval said in a televised interview, adding that Syria was also interested in receiving sugar, meat and vegetable oil from Ukraine.

Ukraine is a major exporter of wheat and sunflower oil.

https://p.dw.com/p/4olYM

Skip next section One killed in Zaporizhzhia attack

January 2, 2025

One killed in Zaporizhzhia attack

At least one person was killed in Ukraine’s southern Zaporizhzhia region, local authorities said, following a Russian bomb attack on the village of Stepnohirsk.

The village lies just a few kilometers from the front line and comes amid an escalation of aerial attacks that claimed two lives in Kyiv on New Year’s Day.

“A five-story building was destroyed. A man was killed. Rescuers removed his body from under the rubble,” Zaporizhzhia’s Ukrainian governor Ivan Fedorov wrote on Telegram.

Zaporizhzhia, home to one of Ukraine’s key nuclear power plants, has been the scene of fierce fighting for years. The regional capital, Zaporizhzhia city, is still under Ukrainian control. However, authorities fear that Russia is planning a fresh offensive to take the city.

Inside Zaporizhzhia — a nuclear plant in the midst of war

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https://p.dw.com/p/4okgz

Skip next section More than half of Germans support international peacekeeping force

January 2, 2025

More than half of Germans support international peacekeeping force

A YouGov survey carried out on behalf of German news agency dpa found that 56% of participants supported the creation of an international peacekeeping force in Ukraine if a ceasefire is achieved in the conflict. 

However, respondents were less keen on direct German involvement in the war, with only 23% in favor of German soldiers being part of such a peacekeeping force.

About 33% fully opposed German participation, and 19% were completely against the creation of any kind of peacekeeping force.

Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, and there are no signs that a sustainable ceasefire between the two countries will be enacted anytime soon. US President-elect Donald Trump, who will take office on January 20, has vowed to end the conflict during his term, but has not outlined concrete steps on how this would be achieved.  

es/wd (AP, AFP, dpa, Reuters)

https://p.dw.com/p/4okf4