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Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.
Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (ARCHIVE)

Follow all of the developments as they happen

19:15 13.7.2015

19:14 13.7.2015

19:12 13.7.2015

18:32 13.7.2015
Rossia Segodnya chief Dmitry Kiselyov at the launch of Sputnik in Moscow on November 10, 2014
Rossia Segodnya chief Dmitry Kiselyov at the launch of Sputnik in Moscow on November 10, 2014

Russia Says U.K. Closes State Media Giant’s Bank Account Over Ukraine Sanctions

Russia says a London bank account held by its state-owned media behemoth Rossia Segodnya has been “closed” by British authorities in a move it linked to Ukraine-related sanctions imposed by the EU.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry said on July 13 that the media conglomerate’s account with the bank Barclay’s was closed in connection with EU sanctions against Rossia Segodnya chief Dmitry Kiselyov, who delivers bombastic anti-Western tirades on his nationally televised weekly news program.

Rossia Segodnya’s representatives “were not informed about the fate of the funds,” the ministry said in a statement.

“The situation creates hurdles for the activity of the Russian Federation’s largest information agency on British territory,” the ministry said, adding that Moscow has appealed to the British government with a “demand” to “immediately clarify the situation.”

Kiselyov is one of numerous Russians sanctioned by the EU.
Kiselyov is one of numerous Russians sanctioned by the EU.

Western nations have accused Russia’s state-owned media of disseminating “propaganda” in its coverage of Russia's conflict with Ukraine.

More than 6,400 people have been killed in a war between Kyiv's forces and Russian-backed separatists that erupted in April 2014, and hostilities persist despite a European-brokered cease-fire deal.

Kiselyov is one of numerous Russians -- including senior officials and wealthy businessmen close to Russian President Vladimir Putin -- sanctioned by the EU in connection with Russia’s role in the Ukraine conflict.

He was hit with an EU travel ban and asset freeze in March 2014 in response to the Kremlin’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea territory a month before the fighting broke out in eastern Ukraine.

The United States has sanctioned many of the same Russian individuals and companies targeted by the EU but has not imposed these measures on Kiselyov, whom the EU calls a "central figure of the government propaganda machine supporting the deployment of Russian forces in Ukraine."

The Kremlin denies it is backing the rebels despite mounting evidence to the contrary.

Russia’s state-run RIA Novosti news agency cited a Barclay’s representative as confirming that Rossia Segodnya’s account with the bank had been closed. The agency cited an unidentified source with the bank as linking the account’s closure to the sanctions against Kiselyov.

Konstantin Dolgov, the head of the Russian foreign ministry’s human rights commission, denounced the reported closure on Twitter, calling it “the latest example of a crackdown on freedom of speech and the media in Britain, which is so proud of its democracy.”

Rossia Segodnya was established by a Kremlin decree in December 2013 in a move widely seen as a Kremlin bid to establish even greater control over the state-run media’s news coverage.

The media holding integrated RIA Novosti and state radio station Voice of Russia into a single media monolith.

Kiselyov in November announced the launch of Rossia Segodnya’s Sputnik news agency as a bid to counter what he called “aggressive propaganda” that Western media outlets are “feeding the world.”

With reporting by RIA Novosti
17:43 13.7.2015
Women walk toward a Ukrainian government soldier searching for members of Right Sector in the village of Bobovyshche, near Mukacheve, on July 13.
Women walk toward a Ukrainian government soldier searching for members of Right Sector in the village of Bobovyshche, near Mukacheve, on July 13.

Has War In Ukraine Moved To A Second Front?

The violent weekend clashes between Ukrainian police and armed fighters from the Right Sector nationalist group have the potential to move the Ukrainian conflict to a new front on its westernmost border.

RFE/RL looks at the multiethnic, independent-minded region of Transcarpathia, where some residents' roots lie closer to Hungary, Slovakia, Romania -- and even Russia -- than they do to Ukraine.

Read more here.

15:15 13.7.2015

14:49 13.7.2015

Savchenko Indictment Sent To Rostov Court

An indictment against jailed Ukrainian pilot and parliament member Nadia Savchenko has been sent to the Donetsk Town Court in Russia's Rostov region, the Russian Prosecutor-General's Office reported on July 13.

The indictment is due to pave the way for a trial.

Savchenko is accused of direct participation in the killing of two Russian reporters who died last year while covering the conflict in Ukraine. She is also charged with attempted murder and illegally entering Russian territory.

Vladimir Markin, a spokesman for the Russian Investigative Committee, said that Savchenko is facing 25 years in prison.

Markin said the crime carries a punishment as long as life in prison but that women are not given life sentences according to the Russian Criminal Code.

Savchenko says she was illegally brought into Russia after being abducted by Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

Based on reporting by Interfax and TASS
14:23 13.7.2015

13:44 13.7.2015

Right Sector gunmen take boy hostage in western Ukraine

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -- Two gunmen from Ukraine's notorious nationalist militia Right Sector have briefly taken a six-year-old boy hostage in western Ukraine as a standoff between the gunmen and police entered its third day.

Two people were killed Saturday in a Right Sector gun-and-grenade attack on police in a western Ukrainian city. Police had surrounded some gunmen in a wooded area of the city of Mukacheve and have been trying to negotiate their surrender since then.

The Ukrainian Interior Ministry said in a statement Monday that police and security services had tracked two Right Sector gunmen outside Mukacheve but they took a six-year-old boy hostage and managed to escape.

Right Sector said its members were trying to confront policemen who they said were involved in contraband in the region.

13:40 13.7.2015

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