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.



Rescuers Dig for Survivors of Vanuatu Earthquake

A handout photo made available by the Vanuatu Police Force shows rescue teams conducting search and rescue operations following an earthquake in Port Vila, Vanuatu, 17 December 2024 (issued 18 December 2024). EPA/Vanuatu Police Force
A handout photo made available by the Vanuatu Police Force shows rescue teams conducting search and rescue operations following an earthquake in Port Vila, Vanuatu, 17 December 2024 (issued 18 December 2024). EPA/Vanuatu Police Force
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Rescuers Dig for Survivors of Vanuatu Earthquake

A handout photo made available by the Vanuatu Police Force shows rescue teams conducting search and rescue operations following an earthquake in Port Vila, Vanuatu, 17 December 2024 (issued 18 December 2024). EPA/Vanuatu Police Force
A handout photo made available by the Vanuatu Police Force shows rescue teams conducting search and rescue operations following an earthquake in Port Vila, Vanuatu, 17 December 2024 (issued 18 December 2024). EPA/Vanuatu Police Force

Vanuatu's capital was without water on Wednesday, a day after reservoirs were destroyed by a violent magnitude 7.3 earthquake that wrought havoc on the South Pacific island nation, with the number of people killed and injured expected to rise.
The government's disaster management office said early Wednesday that 14 deaths were confirmed, but hours later said nine had been verified by the main hospital. The number was “expected to increase" as people remained trapped in fallen buildings, a spokesperson said. About 200 have been treated for injuries, The Associated Press reported.
Frantic rescue efforts that began at flattened buildings after the quake hit early Tuesday afternoon continued 30 hours later, with dozens working in dust and heat with little water to seek those yelling for help inside. A few more survivors were extracted from the rubble of downtown buildings in Port Vila, also the country's largest city, while others remained trapped and some were found dead.
A near-total telecommunications collapse meant people struggled to confirm their relatives' safety. Some providers began to reestablish phone service but connections were patchy.
Internet service had not been restored because the submarine cable supplying it was damaged, the operator said.
The earthquake hit at a depth of 57 kilometers (35 miles) and was centered 30 kilometers (19 miles) west of the capital of Vanuatu, a group of 80 islands home to about 330,000 people. A tsunami warning was called off less than two hours after the quake, but dozens of large aftershocks continued to rattle the country.
The Asia-Pacific head of the International Federation of Red Cross, Katie Greenwood, speaking to The Associated Press from Fiji, said it was not clear how many people were still missing or killed.
“We have anecdotal information coming from people at the search and rescue site that are fairly confident that unfortunately those numbers will rise,” she said.
The capital’s main medical facility, Vila Central Hospital, was badly damaged and patients were moved to a military camp. Clement Chipokolo, Vanuatu country director at the Christian relief agency World Vision, said health care services, already strained before the quake, were overwhelmed.
No water in Port Vila While power was out in swathes of Port Vila, the biggest fear among aid agencies was the lack of water. Two large reservoirs serving the capital were totally decimated, the National Disaster Management Office said.
Resident Milroy Cainton said people were joining large queues to buy water in stores, but could only purchase two or four bottles at a time. “People are not really concerned about electricity, they're just concerned about water,” he said.
UNICEF was recording a rise in diarrhea among children, a sign that they had begun to drink tainted water, said the chief of the Vanuatu office, Eric Durpaire. Officials told residents of areas where water had been restored to boil it.