The Russian shelling of a residential building in Sloviansk on Friday killed at least eight people and injured 21, according to the Donetsk regional governor. Also on Friday, Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang said that China won't sell weapons to either side in the war in Ukraine, in response to Western concerns that Beijing could provide military assistance to Russia. Follow our blog to see how the day's events unfolded. All times are Paris time (GMT+2)
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9:35pm: Ukraine secures $5 billion in further funding after meetings, prime minister says
Ukraine secured promises of $5 billion in additional funding to support its ongoing fight against Russia during "fruitful meetings" in Washington this week, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal told reporters on Friday.
Shmyhal met with representatives of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the European Investment Bank as well as top US officials, on the sidelines of the spring meetings of the IMF and the World Bank.
He said Ukraine received new pledges of additional support from Switzerland, Denmark and a number of other countries during the meetings, as well as an agreement from US aircraft maker Boeing to relieve Ukrainian companies of $200 million in previous commitments. Kyiv expected to receive more support during an upcoming conference in London, he added.
8:55pm: Death toll in Russian shelling of Sloviansk flats rises to eight, says Donetsk regional governor
The death toll in a Russian shelling of an apartment block in the east Ukrainian city Sloviansk has risen to eight including a toddler, the governor of the Donetsk region said on Friday.
"Twenty-one people were wounded and eight people died," the governor of the Donetsk region Pavlo Kyrylenko told Ukrainian television.
8:52pm: Family of detained US journalist in Russia breaks silence
The parents of detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich on Friday said that they remained optimistic for a positive outcome to his detention insisting that their son "still loved Russia."
"It's one of the American qualities that we absorbed, you know, be optimistic, believe in a happy ending," Gershkovich's mother, Ella Milman told the Wall Street Journal, speaking out for the first time since his arrest. "But I am not stupid. I understand what's involved, but that's what I choose to believe," she added.
Ella and her husband Mikhail Gershkovich fled the Soviet Union separately in 1979 and settled in New Jersey, raising their two children, Evan and a daughter Danielle.
The spying charges against Gershkovich, who had previously worked for the Moscow bureau of AFP, are the first of their kind in Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union, prompting an outcry from media outlets, rights groups and foreign governments.
8:38pm: Putin signs electronic draft bill into law
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday signed a bill to create a digital draft system, greatly facilitating mobilising Russians into the army, more than a year into the Kremlin's Ukraine offensive.
The bill cracks down on those seeking to avoid conscription. A document of the law was published on an official government information portal, Russian news agencies reported.
>> Read more: Russia’s electronic draft: As soon as they hit 'send', you've been called up
8:30pm: Asked about leaked US intel, Ukraine says remains united with US, partners
Ukraine remains united with the United States and other partners in its ongoing military fight against Russia's invasion, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal told reporters on Friday.
Asked about the leaked U.S. intelligence, Shmyhal said no Russian disinformation would disrupt Ukraine's battle for its country.
7:14pm: Airman charged as US vows to send message over documents leak
A young national guardsman was charged Friday with orchestrating the most damaging leak of US classified documents for a decade, as the government signaled it intends to make an example of the 21-year-old.
Jack Teixeira was arrested Thursday following a week-long probe into the leak of documents which unveiled US concern over Ukraine's ability to fend off the Russian invasion.
6:37pm: UN chief raises concerns with Russia about Ukraine grain deal
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has written to Russia, Ukraine and Turkey to raise concerns about the implementation of a deal that allows the safe wartime export of grain from several Ukrainian Black Sea ports, a UN spokesman said on Friday.
The move comes after the United Nations said no ships were inspected on Tuesday under the deal "as the parties needed more time to reach an agreement on operational priorities."
Inspections resumed on Wednesday.
6:05pm: Finland unveils first section of Russian border fence
Finland's border guard on Friday unveiled the first section of a 200-kilometre border fence with Russia being built after Moscow invaded Ukraine last year.
Finland joined NATO just a week ago and its 1,300-kilometre (800-mile) border has also doubled the frontier between the US-led military alliance and Russia.
Three metres (10 feet) tall and topped with barbed wire, it will cost around 380 million euros ($417 million) and is due to be completed by 2026.
"The necessity was triggered by a change in the security situation in Europe," Brigadier General Jari Tolppanen Tolppanen told reporters. "There is a need to reduce dependence on the effectiveness of Russian border control."
5:58pm: UK says Ukrainian troops forced to leave parts of Bakhmut
Ukrainian troops have been forced to withdraw from some territory in the battlefield city of Bakhmut as Russia mounts a renewed assault there, Britain said in an intelligence update on Friday.
5:50pm: Russian shelling kills five, wounds 15 in eastern city of Sloviansk, Kyiv says
The Russian shelling of a residential building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Sloviansk on Friday killed at least five people and wounded 15, the local governor said, warning that there could be people buried in the rubble.
"As of 18:00 local time (1600 GMT), there are five dead and 15 wounded," the governor of the Donetsk region, Pavlo Kyrylenko, said on Telegram. "There is a possibility that seven people, including one child, are under the rubble."
1:55pm: China vows not to sell arms to any party in Ukraine war
China won't sell weapons to either side in the war in Ukraine, the country's foreign minister has said, responding to Western concerns that Beijing could provide military assistance to Russia.
China has maintained that it is neutral in the conflict, while backing Russia politically, rhetorically and economically at a time when Western nations have imposed punishing sanctions and sought to isolate Moscow for its invasion of its neighbour.
Qin Gang is the highest-level Chinese official to make such an explicit statement about arms sales to Russia. He added that China would also regulate the export of items with dual civilian and military use.
“Regarding the export of military items, China adopts a prudent and responsible attitude,” Qin said at a news conference alongside visiting German counterpart Annalena Baerbock. “China will not provide weapons to relevant parties of the conflict, and manage and control the exports of dual-use items in accordance with laws and regulations.”
1:15pm: Finnish embassy in Moscow receives letter containing powder
Finland's embassy in Moscow has received a letter containing an unknown powder and has reported the matter to the Russian authorities, Russian news agencies report.
Relations between Moscow and Helsinki have deteriorated sharply since Finland formally joined NATO on April 4, becoming the 31st member of the US-led military alliance. Finland shares a long land border with Russia.
The embassy received three letters on Thursday, one of which contained a powder, the RIA news agency reported.
"In line with the security rules of the Finnish foreign ministry, the letters in question were handed to official representative organs of Russia which will study the matter," RIA quoted the embassy as saying.
11:15am: China defence minister to visit Moscow next week
Chinese Defence Minister Gen. Li Shangfu will visit Russia next week for meetings with counterpart Sergei Shoigu and other military officials, China's Defence Ministry has said.
Li’s visit underscores China’s strengthening engagement with Russia, with which it has largely aligned its foreign policy in an attempt to reshape the world order to diminish the influence of the United States and other Western democracies.
China has refused to criticise Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and blamed the US and NATO for provoking Moscow. During a 2022 visit to Beijing, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping issued a joint statement declaring a “no limits” relationship between the two countries.
Li will also visit Russia’s military academy during his April 16-19 trip, Defence Ministry spokesperson Col. Tan Kefei said.
The trip follows an official visit to Moscow last month by Xi that emphasised how China is increasingly becoming the senior partner in the relationship as it provides Russia with political cover and an economic lifeline during its war on Ukraine.
10:50am: Russia puts Pacific Fleet on high alert in surprise inspection
Russia has put its Pacific naval fleet on high alert as part of a surprise inspection aimed at building its defensive capabilities, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has said.
"The main objective of this inspection is to increase the ability of the Armed Forces to repel the aggression of a probable enemy from the direction of ocean and sea," Shoigu said on state television.
The drill will also simulate an enemy landing on Russia's Sakhalin island and on its southern Kuril Islands, some of which are claimed by Japan in a territorial dispute dating back to the end of World War Two.
Chief of General Staff Valery Gerasimov said Russia's naval forces would be deployed to training areas and would carry out combat exercises as part of the drill.
10:25am: Russian oil exports jump despite sanctions
Russian oil exports jumped to their highest level in almost three years in March despite Western sanctions, but revenues were down sharply from last year, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has said.
The West has imposed a slew of sanctions against Russia since Moscow invaded Ukraine in February 2022, including price caps on its crude and oil products and EU embargoes.
Russia retaliated by slashing its production by 500,000 barrels per day, and its partners at the OPEC+ oil cartel shocked the markets by announcing their own output cuts earlier this month.
The IEA said total oil shipments from Russia rose by 600,000 bpd to 8.1 million bpd last month. While Russia's oil revenues rebounded by $1 billion to $12.7 billion, they were still down 43 percent compared to a year ago.
9:45am: Ukraine bans its national teams from competing with athletes from Russia, Belarus
Ukraine has banned its national sports teams from competing in Olympic, non-Olympic and Paralympic events that include competitors from Russia and Belarus, the sports ministry has said in a decree.
The decision, criticised by some Ukrainian athletes, comes after the International Olympic Committee (IOC) angered Kyiv by paving the way for Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete as neutrals despite Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Ukraine had previously warned its sports federations that it would strip them of their status as governing bodies if their athletes competed on the international stage with Russians and Belarusians.
Some Ukrainian athletes, including Olympian skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych, have criticised the ban, saying it will lead to the destruction of Ukrainian sports.
"If Ukrainian representatives are not present at competitions, then we completely vacate the international sports grounds and give the Russian/Belarusian representatives the opportunity to promote their narratives and propaganda," he wrote on Twitter.
4:09am: Russia claims Bakhmut has been surrounded
Russia said Thursday it had cut off Ukrainian forces inside Bakhmut, while Kyiv insisted supply lines were still open into the town, scene of the most brutal battle of the war.
AFP was unable to verify the status on the ground in the eastern town, which has turned into the longest and bloodiest fight since Russia invaded Ukraine last year.
The Russian army said its airborne troops were "blocking the transfer of Ukrainian army reserves to the city and the possibility of retreat for enemy units". It also said that Wagner mercenary units were advancing in Bakhmut.
But the Ukrainian army told AFP it had communication with its troops inside Bakhmut and was able to send them munitions. "This does not correspond to reality," Sergiy Cherevaty, spokesman for Ukraine's eastern forces said, referring to Russia's claims. "We are able to ... deliver food products, ammunition, medicines, all that is necessary, and also to recover our wounded." The Ukrainian general staff nevertheless acknowledged a "difficult" situation in Bakhmut.
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Key developments from Thursday, April 14:
The European Union added Russia's Wagner mercenary group to its sanctions list for "actively participating in the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine" as US authorities made an arrest in connection with the leak of confidential documents.
A Ukrainian army spokesman rejected Moscow's claims of "blocking" Kyiv's forces from getting in or out of the frontline hotspot of Bakhmut, while Russian paramilitary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin also said it was premature to claim Russia had encircled Ukrainian forces in the war-torn city.
>> Read our live blog for all of yesterday’s developments as they unfolded
(FRANCE 24 with AP, AFP and Reuters)