Russia launched an overnight drone attack on Kyiv after a 12-day break, a Ukrainian military official said on Sunday, with air defence systems destroying all targets on their approach. Follow our live blog for all the latest developments on the war in Ukraine. All times are Paris time (GMT+2).
1.04pm: ‘Thin-armoured’ French tanks impractical for attacks, says Ukraine commander
A Ukrainian commander has criticised the highly mobile AMX-10 RC infantry fighting vehicles – sometimes described as light tanks – supplied by the French government as “impractical” for front-line attacks, claiming one four-man crew had already died because of the vehicle’s thin armour.
Kyiv said in April that the French vehicles, which are designed for armed reconnaissance and attacks on enemy tanks, were already in service.
But a 34-year-old battalion commander within the 37th Marine Brigade who uses the call sign Spartanets said the tanks’ “thin armour” means they can be used as fire support, but not in front-line assaults.
“Unfortunately, there was one case when the crew died in the vehicle,” the major told AFP on Friday.
“There was artillery shelling and a shell exploded near the vehicle, the fragments pierced the armour and the ammunition set detonated.”
The crew of four inside were all killed, he said.
“The guns are good, the observation devices are very good. But unfortunately there is thin armour and it is impractical to use them in the front line (attack),” Spartanets said.
AMX-10s were developed in the 1970s, and French armed forces have begun to replace them with more modern vehicles called Jaguar.
11:18am: Prigozhin-controlled media group shuts down
Yevgeny Prigozhin’s media holding group is to shut down, the director of one of its outlets said, highlighting the mercenary chief’s worsening fortunes a week after the collapse of a brief rebellion staged by his Wagner Group fighters.
Patriot Media, whose most prominent outlet was the RIA FAN news site, had taken a strongly nationalist, pro-Kremlin editorial line, while also providing positive coverage of Prigozhin and his Wagner Group.
“I am announcing our decision to close down and to leave the country’s information space,” RIA FAN director Yevgeny Zubarev said in a video clip posted late on Saturday on the holding’s social media accounts.
Zubarev gave no reason for the decision.
Under a deal that halted the mutiny, Prigozhin, a former ally of President Vladimir Putin, was allowed to go into exile in Belarus and his men given the choice of joining him, being integrated into Russia’s armed forces or returning home.
11:10am: Ukraine shot down three missiles and eight drones overnight – air force
Ukraine’s air force said Sunday it had shot down three cruise missiles and eight attack drones deployed by Moscow’s forces overnight, in Russia’s first attack on Kyiv in 12 days.
Ukraine’s air force said that it had destroyed “all air targets” – eight Iranian drones and three Kalibr cruise missiles.
“Eight Shaheds were launched from the southeast, and three Kalibr missiles were launched from the Black Sea,” the air force said in a statement.
Ruslan Kravchenko, head of the Kyiv regional military administration, said that three private houses were damaged by falling debris in the Kyiv region.
A man sustained a leg injury, Kravchenko added.
11:00am: Poland to bolster security on border with Belarus, interior minister says
Poland will send 500 police officers to its border with Belarus, Minister of Interior Mariusz Kaminski said on Sunday.
The Polish Border Guard on Sunday said that 187 people tried to cross into Poland from Belarus illegally on Saturday.
“Due to the tense situation on the border with Belarus I have decided to bolster our forces with 500 Polish police officers from preventive and counter-terrorism units,” Kaminski wrote on Twitter.
“They will join 5,000 border guards and 2,000 soldiers guarding the security of this border.”
9:15am: ‘Everywhere is a target’ as Russia relaunches drone attacks
Reporting in the midst of a fresh air raid alert in Kyiv, FRANCE 24 correspondent Emmanuelle Chaze says that the overnight kamikaze drone attacks on the capital – which Ukrainian authorities say they successfully shot down – has shown that Russia doesn’t seem to have reassessed its strategy in the wake of the failed Wagner rebellion.
8:45am: At least one person injured in drone attack, says Kyiv official
Three private houses were damaged as a result of falling drone debris in the Kyiv region, injuring one person, the military head of the region, Ruslan Kravchenko, said on his Facebook page. The capital was targeted by an overnight drone attack for the first time in almost two weeks.
4:05am: Ultra-nationalists aim to restrict travel for Russian officials’ families
The ultra-nationalist Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) is working on a bill that would temporarily ban the travel of close relatives of high-ranking officials to “unfriendly countries”, the RIA state news agency reported on Sunday.
Russia considers all countries that have hit it with sanctions over its military campaign in Ukraine to be “unfriendly”.
Citing a member of the Russian Duma, Sergei Karginov, RIA reported that restrictions may also affect, among others, law enforcement officers, judges, top managers of state corporations, and the board of directors of the Central Bank.
“Now, when Russia is forced to confront a group of Western countries led by the United States that provoked a conflict in Ukraine, such journeys … are not only inadmissible, but also dangerous,” RIA cited Karginov as saying.
2:51am: Russia launches first overnight drone attack on Kyiv in 12 days
Russia launched an overnight drone attack on Kyiv after a 12-day break, a Ukrainian military official said on Sunday, with air defence systems preliminarily destroying all targets on their approach.
“Another enemy attack on Kyiv,” Serhiy Popko, a colonel general who heads Kyiv’s military administration, said in a post on the Telegram channel. “At this moment, there is no information about possible casualties or damage.”
Reuters witnesses heard blasts resembling the sound of air defence systems hitting targets. There was no immediate information about the scale of the attack.
Key developments from Saturday, July 1:
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said Saturday that his visit to Kyiv on the first day of Spain’s EU presidency showed the bloc’s “unequivocal” commitment to Ukraine’s bid to join the 27-nation bloc. And US CIA director William Burns said that disaffection with the war in Ukraine presented the spy agency with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to recruit new intelligence assets.
Read yesterday’s liveblog to see how all the day’s events unfolded.
(C) France M?dias Monde graphic studio
(FRANCE 24 with AFP, AP and Reuters)