Zelensky from Kherson: Ready for Peace, For All of Ukraine

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky sings the national anthem during his visit in Kherson, Ukraine November 14, 2022. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky sings the national anthem during his visit in Kherson, Ukraine November 14, 2022. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS
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Zelensky from Kherson: Ready for Peace, For All of Ukraine

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky sings the national anthem during his visit in Kherson, Ukraine November 14, 2022. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky sings the national anthem during his visit in Kherson, Ukraine November 14, 2022. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday visited Kherson, the southern city from where Russian forces were forced to retreat after months of occupation, according to sources at the Ukrainian presidency and AFP.

Ukrainian troops entered Kherson on Friday when Russian troops abandoned the southeastern city which they controlled for the past eight months.

Released photos showed Zelensky singing the national anthem as his nation’s flag was hoisted in the liberated city.

“We are moving forward,” the Ukrainian President told troops standing in formation in front of the administration building in the city's main square. “We are ready for peace, peace for all our country.”

Parents with children, some pushing baby strollers, also gathered in the main square in front of the administration building that until recently was occupied by Russian forces, according to Reuters.

Some people waved Ukrainian flags and others had the flag draped over their shoulders.

Zelensky noted that the delivery of high mobility artillery rocket systems (HIMARS) from the United States had made a big difference to Ukraine's war effort.

“I’m really happy, you can tell by the reaction of the people, their reaction is not staged,” said the President.

Minutes before he arrived, nearby shelling could be heard in the center of Kherson. After he finished speaking, several more blasts of artillery gunfire echoed over the city.

In Moscow, the Kremlin affirmed on Monday that Kherson is still part of Russia.

When asked about Zelensky’s visit to the city, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “No comment. This is Russian territory.”

Zelensky said Russian troops committed “atrocities” during their occupation of the area, while local residents speak of the extensive damage left behind in the southern Ukrainian city by the Kremlin's retreating forces.

On Sunday, residents of Kherson celebrated the end of Russia's eight-month occupation, waving flags and beeping their car horns, according to AFP reporters.

Ruined buildings and destroyed military vehicles could be seen at the entrance to the strategic Black Sea port city where battles raged just days ago.

A smell of burning wood wafted through the air.

On Sunday, Zelensky said the bodies of the killed are being found, both civilians and military.

“We will find and bring to justice every murderer,” he stressed.

He said investigators have already documented more than 400 war crimes, without clearly specifying the area in which they were found.

Meanwhile, many residents — some wrapped in Ukrainian flags — queued to get food and to use Starlink satellite internet to connect with relatives.

Oleksiy Danilov, Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine said that Russian servicemen, who never made it to withdraw from the liberated Kherson region along with their units have changed into civilian outfits, trying to evade arrest and accountability for war crimes.

The official Ukrainian news agency, Ukrinform, quoted Danilov as telling the national telethon, that a certain part of the Russian servicemen change into civilian clothes in order to hide and avoid accountability.

Lately, Ukraine’s defense forces liberated 179 towns and villages on the right bank of the Dnipro and 4,500 square kilometers of formerly Russian-occupied territories.

Observers say Russia’s retreat from Kherson represents a major setback for Moscow as it was the only regional capital it had captured since the beginning of its invasion of Ukraine in February, the German news agency wrote.

At the humanitarian level, essential supplies have been delivered to thousands of people in the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson for the first time since Russia’s invasion, UN humanitarians announced on Monday.

They said aid workers brought food, water, hygiene kits, shelter materials and critical household items, such as bedding, thermal blankets and solar lamps, to more than 6,000 people in the city.

Only 80,000 of the pre-war population of 280,000 remain.

More convoys are planned as the UN reported that the city is lacking electricity, water, food and medicine.



Speculation Grows That Austrian Far Right Leader Herbert Kickl Will Be Asked to Form Govt

A horse-drawn cart passes the Federal Chancellery during the Austrian People's Party (OeVP) meeting, in Vienna, Austria, 05 January 2025. (EPA)
A horse-drawn cart passes the Federal Chancellery during the Austrian People's Party (OeVP) meeting, in Vienna, Austria, 05 January 2025. (EPA)
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Speculation Grows That Austrian Far Right Leader Herbert Kickl Will Be Asked to Form Govt

A horse-drawn cart passes the Federal Chancellery during the Austrian People's Party (OeVP) meeting, in Vienna, Austria, 05 January 2025. (EPA)
A horse-drawn cart passes the Federal Chancellery during the Austrian People's Party (OeVP) meeting, in Vienna, Austria, 05 January 2025. (EPA)

Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen on Sunday announced that he would meet with far-right politician Herbert Kickl as speculation grows that he will ask the Freedom Party leader to form a government.

Van der Bellen made the announcement after meeting with Chancellor Karl Nehammer and others at his presidential palace. Nehammer has announced his intention to resign after coalition talks between his conservative Austrian People's Party and the center-left Social Democrats collapsed over the budget.

Nehammer has ruled out working with Kickl, but others within his party are less adamant. Earlier Sunday, the People's Party nominated its general secretary, Christian Stocker, as interim leader, but the president said Nehammer would remain chancellor for now.

Van der Bellen said that he had spent several hours talking to key officials, after which he got the impression that “the voices within the People's Party who exclude working with the Freedom Party under its leader Herbert Kickl have become quieter.”

The president said that this development has “potentially opened a new path," which has prompted him to invite Kickl for a meeting on Monday morning.

Kickl's Freedom Party topped the polls in the autumn's national election with 29.2% of the vote, but Van der Bellen tasked Nehammer with putting together a new government because no other party was willing to work with Kickl.

That decision drew heavy criticism from the Freedom Party and its supporters, with Kickl saying that it was “not right and not logical” that he did not get a mandate to form a government.

Stocker addressed reporters on Sunday afternoon and confirmed that he had been appointed “unanimously” by his party to serve as interim leader. “I am very honored and happy,” he said.

He also welcomed the decision by the president to meet with Kickl and said that he now expects that the leader of the party that emerged as the clear winner from the last election would be tasked with forming a government.

“If we are invited to negotiations to form a government, we will accept this invitation,” Stocker added.

In the past, Stocker has criticized Kickl, calling him a “security risk” for the country.

In its election program titled “Fortress Austria,” the Freedom Party calls for “remigration of uninvited foreigners,” for achieving a more “homogeneous” nation by tightly controlling borders and suspending the right to asylum via an emergency law.

The Freedom Party also calls for an end to sanctions against Russia, is highly critical of Western military aid to Ukraine and wants to bow out of the European Sky Shield Initiative, a missile defense project launched by Germany. The Freedom Party has also signed a friendship agreement in 2016 with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s United Russia Party that it now claims has expired.

Kickl has criticized “elites” in Brussels and called for some powers to be brought back from the European Union to Austria.

Austria was thrown into political turmoil on Friday after the liberal party Neos pulled out of coalition talks with the People's Party and the Social Democrats.  

On Saturday the two remaining parties, who have only a one-seat majority in Parliament, made another attempt to form a government — but that also ended in failure after a few hours, with negotiators saying they were unable to agree on how to repair the budget deficit.