Russia-Ukraine war live: thousands reportedly protest against Putin in final day of presidential election | Russia

Thousands reportedly protest against Putin re-election

Although Vladimir Putin will, once again, to win the Russian presidential election, opponents have today staged a protest against the inevitability of his ongoing grip over the Kremlin.

Supporters of the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny gathered at polling stations within Russia and beyond at midday local time for the so-called “Noon against Putin” protest. Many of them planned to spoil their ballot papers, to vote for one of the three opposition candidates, or to write in Navalny’s name.

Reports said thousands of people had taken part in the peaceful protests.

Navalny’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya, participated in a protest outside the Russian embassy in Berlin, Germany, alongside others queuing to cast their votes.

Yulia Navalnaya outside the Russian embassy in Berlin on the final day of the presidential election.
Yulia Navalnaya outside the Russian embassy in Berlin on the final day of the presidential election. Photograph: Annegret Hilse/Reuters
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Key events

Today so far

  • Vladimir Putin is poised to tighten his grip on power on Sunday with an expected landscape victory in the ongoing presidential election. Some opponents have staged a symbolic noon protest at polling stations, while the three-day vote has been hit by Ukrainian bombardments and a series of incursions into Russian territory by anti-Putin sabotage groups.

  • British defence secretary Grant Shapps was forced to abandon a trip to Ukraine’s southern city of Odesa because of a Russian missile threat. As he flew to Poland last week, Shapps was notified that a convoy carrying both the Ukrainian president and Greek prime minister had narrowly avoided a Russian missile strike.

  • Ukraine’s GDP rose by 3.6% during the first two months of this year, according to the country’s economy minister. Yulia Svyrydenko said on Sunday that this was driven by “several factors”, including investment demand and agricultural exports.

  • Russian proposals for peace are all centred around continued Ukrainian subjugation, Czech president Petr Pavel has claimed. Pavel told Czech Radio on Saturday that the Kremlin’s proposals to date have all been a “diktat”.

  • The turnout at Russia’s presidential election has surpassed 2018 levels in the final hours before the polls close. According to the TASS news agency, 67.54% of eligible voters had cast their ballots as of Sunday morning, eclipsing the 67.5% turnout seen in 2018.

  • Long-range attack drones have hit 12 Russian oil refineries during the war so far, according to a Ukrainian intelligence source. The Russian defence ministry has so far confirmed a total of 35 Ukrainian drone incursions across various regions.

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Long-range Ukrainian attack drones have hit 12 Russian oil refineries during the war so far, a Ukrainian intelligence source told Reuters on Sunday.

Officials in the southern Russian region of Krasnodar said drones, launched by the SBU domestic security service, had attacked the Slavyansk oil refinery overnight.

On Sunday morning the Russian defence ministry confirmed a total of 35 Ukrainian drone incursions, including four in the Moscow region and two in the neighbouring Kaluga and Yaroslavl regions.

More Ukrainian drones attacked the Belgorod, Kursk and Rostov regions bordering Ukraine, as well as the southern Krasnodar region.

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Ukraine’s GDP up by 3.6% in January-February, economy minister says

Investment demand and agricultural exports are two of “several factors” which have driven an increase in Ukraine’s GDP seen during the first two months of this year.

According to Reuters, economy minister Yulia Svyrydenko said on Sunday that Ukraine’s GDP rose 3.6% during this period.

“This was driven by several factors, including investment demand, favourable weather conditions for construction works, agricultural exports, (and) the operation of the Ukrainian sea corridor,” Svyrydenko said on Facebook, citing preliminary data.

She said the expansion of production capacity in the mining industry and stability in the energy sector were additional factors.

“Thanks to the positive performance of key sectors of the economy, we expect sustainable growth for the entire first quarter,” she added.

Ukraine’s GDP rose 3.5% in January, having grown by 5% in 2023 after a 28.8% fall in the previous year.

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The turnout at Russia’s presidential election is approaching 70% with hours remaining until the polls close.

At 67.54% as of Sunday morning, the number of eligible voters casting their ballots has surpassed 2018 levels according to the TASS news agency.

Turnout in 2018 was 67.5%; the highest ever turnout in a modern Russian presidential election was in June 1991, when turnout reached 74.7%.

The ongoing election, which has been hit by Ukrainian bombardments and a series of incursions into Russian territory by anti-Putin sabotage groups, will end in a landslide victory for Vladimir Putin who is running virtually unopposed.

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Grant Shapps abandons Odesa trip after Kremlin became aware of travel plans

British defence secretary Grant Shapps was forced to abandon a trip to Ukraine’s southern city of Odesa because of a Russian missile threat.

As he flew to Poland from RAF Northolt last week, Shapps was notified that an armoured convoy carrying both the Ukrainian president and Greek prime minister narrowly avoided a Russian missile strike while visiting the port city on 6 March.

Shapps arrived in Kyiv the following day for talks with president Volodymyr Zelenskiy on 7 March, after which the planned onward journey to Odesa was called off.

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Georgia breakaway state has discussed becoming part of Russia, according to report.

The self-titled independent state of South Ossetia has discussed becoming part of Russia, the Russian news agency RIA has claimed.

South Ossetia broke away from Georgian rule in a war in 1991-92. In 2008, Russia recognised as independent both this state and the separate breakaway region of Abkhazia.

This came after Russian troops repelled a Georgian attempt to retake South Ossetia in a five-day war in 2008.

According to a report by Reuters, RIA cited the head of South Ossetia’s parliament as confirming on Sunday that discussions over becoming part of Russia have taken place.

The two regions make up a fifth of Georgia’s territory.

“We are discussing all these issues in close coordination with Russia, taking into account our bilateral relations and treaties,” Alan Alborov, the chairman of South Ossetia’s parliament, has been quoted as saying by RIA.

“When we come to this idea together with the Russian Federation (about joining the Russian Federation), we will do it.”

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Putin responsible for ‘parody’ election marred by propaganda and vote fixing

Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine reveals a man ‘cut off from political and military realities’, whose obsession with supposed western plotting and a return to a pre-Soviet imperial Russia drives his quest to be all-conquering.

An expected landslide for Putin in the ongoing election has been made possible by the lack of credible rivals and huge levels of spending on propaganda, vote-fixing in occupied Ukraine, and unopposed nationwide campaigning.

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Here are some of the latest images of Belgorod coming in via news agency wires:

Emergency personnel work in the aftermath of a Ukrainian missile attack in Belgorod, Russia. Photograph: Governor Of Belgorod Region/Reuters
Belgorod in the aftermath of a Ukrainian missile attack. Photograph: Governor Of Belgorod Region/Reuters
Military personnel seen in the aftermath of a Ukrainian missile attack in Belgorod, Russia. Photograph: Governor Of Belgorod Region/Reuters
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Russian proposals for peace have been a ‘diktat’, the president of the Czech Republic has claimed.

It is impossible to imagine Russia and Ukraine negotiating a peace agreement because Russia’s proposals are all centred around continued Ukrainian subjugation, according to Czech president Petr Pavel.

The Kyiv Independent has reported comments made by Pavel to Czech Radio on Saturday, in which he claimed that “all Russian proposals so far have been in fact a diktat”.

“The Kremlin has presented its list of conditions that it as an aggressor has no right to put forward.”

Ukraine has maintained throughout that the peace talks should be held on the basis of its 10-step peace formula, which includes a full withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine. Russia has rejected this proposal.

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Russia responds to Macron’s ceasefire request with weapons demand

Russia’s response to Emmanuel Macron’s request for a ceasefire in Ukraine during the Olympic games has been to ask France to stop supplying weapons to the country.

The French president made the request in an interview from Paris on Saturday, with Reuters reporting that Macron said a ceasefire is “what has always happened”.

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova responded to this request by urging the French president to cease weapon supplies, the TASS news agency reported.

Zakharova also said Macron should have proposed the same ceasefire to the sides of the conflict in the Middle East.

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Putin critics call for protests at polling stations

Critics of Vladimir Putin and his Kremlin regime have called for massive protests at Russian polling stations on Sunday, the final day of a presidential election that is guaranteed to cement his hardline rule.

The three-day vote has already been hit by Ukrainian bombardments and a series of incursions into Russian territory by anti-Putin sabotage groups.

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Opening summary

Welcome to our live coverage on Ukraine. It is just after 10.30am in Kyiv and 11.30am in Moscow. Here are the headlines:

  • Russia accused Ukraine of using “terrorist activities” to try to disrupt its presidential election and former president Dmitry Medvedev decried as “traitors” the scattered protesters who started fires at voting booths and poured dye into ballot boxes. A Ukrainian drone dropped an explosive close to a polling station in the annexed Zaporizhzhia region of Ukraine, Russian state news agency Tass said. No injuries or damage were reported and Reuters could not independently verify the incident.

  • The Slavyansk oil refinery in Russia’s Krasnodar region caught on fire on Sunday after a Ukrainian drone attack and one person died from a suspected heart attack, local officials said. Videos online showed explosions and fire, along with the sound of drones approaching the site.

  • On Sunday morning, the Russian defence ministry reported 35 Ukrainian drone incursions, including four in the Moscow region and two in the neighbouring Kaluga and Yaroslavl regions. More Ukrainian drones attacked in the Belgorod, Kursk and Rostov regions bordering Ukraine, and in the southern Krasnodar region, the defence ministry said.

  • Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, praised the Ukrainian military for its new “long-range capability”, in a statement posted on Saturday night. “What our own drones are capable of is a true Ukrainian long-range capability. Ukraine will now always have a strike force in the sky,” he said on social media.

  • Zelenskiy’s comments followed Ukrainian drones striking two Rosneft oil refineries in Russia’s Samara region, leaving one facility on fire on Saturday, the region’s governor said. The Volga river region’s Syzran refinery was on fire, Dmitry Azarov said on Telegram. Officials also confirmed an attack on the Novokubyshev refinery. Numerous other attacks during the past week have caused major damage to Russian oil refineries.

  • Attacks continued on Russia’s Belgorod oblast, with the Russian ministry of defence claiming air defence shot down 15 rockets. A man and a woman were killed in Belgorod oblast on Saturday, and another person was killed by Ukrainian shelling in the Russian city of Grayvoron, regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said on the Telegram messaging app. The fresh bombardments on Saturday prompted authorities to close schools and shopping centres.

  • Five people were wounded when a Ukrainian drone hit a car in the village of Glotovo, two kilometres (1.25 miles) from the Ukrainian border, Gladkov said. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told state media Vladimir Putin was being “constantly briefed” by his military leaders on the situation at the border. Putin is all but certain of victory in the election after dissent has been crushed.

  • Russia’s defence ministry said on Saturday that Ukrainian “reconnaissance groups” had attempted an incursion from Ukraine’s Sumy region. That followed an armed incursion claimed by Ukraine-based Russian opponents of the Kremlin on Tuesday in the Belgorod and Kursk regions. Russia’s defence ministry claimed its security forces killed 30 fighters. In contrast, the Russian Volunteer Corps – one of the groups that claimed to have crossed the border on Tuesday – released a video saying it had captured 25 Russian soldiers.

  • Resistance forces set off an explosion near a polling station in Russian-occupied Skadovsk in the Kherson oblast, injuring five Russian soldiers, the national resistance centre of Ukraine said. The explosion forced Russian administration in Skadovsk to cancel voting at polling stations and allow it only at places of residence, the centre said.

  • There had been 11 attempts to set fire to polling stations in Russia, along with 19 cases of ballot boxes being spoiled with greenery and paint, Nexta reported. Russian authorities have proposed eight-year prison sentences for those involved.

  • The death toll in the Russian attack on civilian infrastructure in Odesa rose to 21 after an injured emergency worker died in hospital. The ballistic missile attack blasted homes in the southern city on Friday, followed by a second missile that targeted first responders, officials said. It was Moscow’s deadliest attack in weeks and caused the British defence secretary, Grant Shapps, to abandon a trip because of a Russian missile threat. More than 50 people were still in hospital, Odesa deputy mayor Svitlana Bedreha said on Saturday, according to Ukrainian state media.

  • Russian shelling killed a 51-year-old man in the Donetsk oblast and injured another, regional governor Vadym Filashkin said. Russians shelled the Donetsk oblast about 11,000 times this week, Filashkin said.

  • There has been a record growth in the number of Russian men ages 31 to 59 with disabilities, the UK defence ministry said in its daily intelligence briefing. “The increase in the number of men with disabilities was most likely due to the growth in military invalids,” the UK defence ministry said. “This is almost certainly the case. A significant majority of the over 355,000 casualties that the Russian armed forces have suffered as a result of the conflict in Ukraine have been wounded personnel.”

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