A Russian missile attack killed two people and blew out apartment windows in the southern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia on Saturday, city council official Anatoly Kurtev said. Earlier in the day, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited “advanced positions” of Ukraine’s special forces near Bakhmut, the eastern city that Russian forces seized in May. Read our liveblog to see how the day's events unfolded. All times are Paris time (GMT + 2).
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10:30pm: Turkish 'gas hub' still on the agenda, says Putin
A proposed Russian "gas hub" in Turkey is still on the agenda, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday.
Russia wants to set up an electronic platform for gas sales in Turkey, he added.
Putin last year proposed the idea of creating a Russian "gas hub" in Turkey as Moscow works to reroute its energy exports after European countries sharply cut their imports from Russia in response to its actions in Ukraine.
According to Putin, he and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan have agreed to hold phone talks on Wednesday.
Putin also said that Russian companies will get more profit thanks to Moscow's withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal, as grain prices have risen.
Russia will share the profit with the poorest countries thanks to free delivery of its grain, he added.
10:28pm: Putin claims no serious changes on front
Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday that there were no serious changes and no intensification of actions on the Ukrainian front for now.
He was speaking at a press conference after meeting African leaders in St Petersburg on Friday. He said Ukraine had lost 415 tanks and 1,300 armoured vehicles since June 4.
The numbers cited by Putin could not be independently verified.
10:13pm: Russia not rejecting talks with Ukraine, says Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday that Russia did not reject talks on Ukraine, and that an African peace initiative as well as a Chinese one could be a basis for peace.
The Russian president was speaking at a press conference after meeting African leaders in Moscow on Friday. He also said that it was hard to implement a ceasefire when the Ukrainian army was on the offensive.
8:09pm: Two killed in Russian strike on Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine local authorities say
A Russian air strike killed two people in the city of Zaporizhzhia in southern Ukraine on Saturday, local authorities said.
"An enemy missile hit an open area. Unfortunately, a man and a woman were killed," said city council official Anatoly Kurtev.
Another woman was wounded, he said in a post on Twitter, which is being rebranded as X.
"The shock wave shattered the windows of a very tall building, and damaged an education centre and a supermarket," he said.
Ukrainian media showed images of the aftermath of the attack, including the destroyed frontage of a supermarket with empty shelves that had been plunged into darkness by the blast.
The Ukrainian armed forces said the Russian army had launched "five missiles and carried out 19 air strikes" during the day.
They had fired "multiple rocket launchers 30 times" on Ukrainian positions and inhabited areas. Their account could not be independently verified.
7:41pm: Saudi Arabia to host Ukraine talks in August
Saudi Arabia is set to host talks on Ukraine among Western countries, Ukraine and key developing countries, including India and Brazil, early next month, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday.
The meeting would bring senior officials from up to 30 countries to Jeddah on August 5 and 6, the report said, citing diplomats involved in the discussion.
4:26pm: 17 members of Ukraine's special forces awarded Hero of Ukraine title since Russian invasion
Seventeen members of Ukraine’s special operations forces have been awarded the title of Hero of Ukraine since Rusisia’s 2022 invasion, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Saturday – 13 of them posthumously.
Zelensky’s comments came during a visit to Ukrainian special forces in "advanced positions" near the devastated city of Bakhmut.
The Ukrainian president said he was not at liberty to disclose details of the special forces' current operations, but that its members recently helped recapture the village of Staromaiorske from Russian forces on the southern front.
"The guys inflict especially tangible blows on Russian terrorists," he added.
2:33pm: Polish PM says Wagner troops moving closer to border, offers no evidence
A group of a hundred soldiers from the Russian Wagner Group have moved closer to the Belarusian city of Grodno near the Polish border, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said on Saturday.
Earlier this month, Poland began moving more than 1,000 troops to the east of the country amid rising concerns that the presence of Wagner fighters in Belarus could lead to increased tension on its border.
"The situation is getting increasingly dangerous ... Most likely they (the Wagner personnel) will be disguised as the Belarusian border guard and help illegal migrants get to the Polish territory (and) destabilise Poland," Morawiecki said at a press conference in Gliwice, western Poland.
"They will most likely try to enter Poland pretending to be illegal migrants and this poses additional threats," Morawiecki said.
He did not give the source of his information on the Wagner movements. Anton Motolko, founder of the Belarusian opposition Hajun project, which monitors military activity in the country, told Reuters his group had not seen any evidence of the Wagner Group moving closer to Grodno.
1:45pm: Russian army says struck Ukraine command post in Dnipro
Russia said Saturday its forces struck a command post in Ukraine's Dnipro the previous day after Kyiv said a missile hit an apartment block there, wounding nine people.
"On the evening of July 28, the Russian armed forces attacked a command post of the Ukrainian armed forces in the city of Dnepropetrovsk with high-precision weapons," the Russian defence ministry said, referring to Dnipro by its earlier name. "The designated target has been hit."
1:23pm: Russia has received around 30 peace proposals on Ukraine, says TASS agency
Russia has received around 30 peace initiatives on Ukraine through official and unofficial channels, the TASS news agency reported on Saturday, citing Russia's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova.
1:19pm: Zelensky visiting 'advanced positions' of Ukrainian special forces near Bakhmut
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Saturday he was visiting "advanced positions" of Ukraine's special forces near the eastern city of Bakhmut as Kyiv ramps up its counteroffensive.
"The Bakhmut direction, advanced positions of the Special Operations Forces," Zelensky said on messaging app Telegram, adding he arrived to congratulate Ukraine's "warriors on their professional day, to honour their strength".
Zelensky said he was not at liberty to disclose details of the special forces' current operations.
He said he heard a commander's report and spoke with the troops, praising their "truly heroic" performance.
Photos published by Zelensky on Twitter showed him meeting troops and looking at maps in a dimly lit, windowless concrete-walled room.
Ukrainian authorities have said Kyiv's troops are gradually moving forward near Bakhmut, which Russian forces seized in May.
10:59am: Kremlin says four African heads of state to join Putin at Russia's Navy Day Parade
Four African heads of state will attend Russia's annual Navy Day Parade in St. Petersburg on Sunday, the Kremlin said on Saturday, with five more African countries also sending other representation.
African leaders pressed Putin on Friday to move ahead with their plan to end the Ukraine conflict and to renew a deal crucial to Africa on the safe export of Ukrainian grain, which Moscow tore up last week.
7:48am: Blinken says Russian defence minister’s visit to Pyongyang aimed at securing weapons for Ukraine war
Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Saturday said that the United States believes Russia's Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu is in North Korea to secure supplies of weapons for Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
Following Shoigu's arrival on a rare trip to Pyongyang, Blinken said that Russia is scrambling to buy arms from allies across the world.
"I strongly doubt he's there on holiday," Blinken told reporters in Australia.
"We're seeing Russia desperately looking for support, for weapons, wherever it can find them to continue to prosecute its aggression against Ukraine," he said. "We see that in North Korea, we see that as well with Iran, which has provided many drones to Russia that it's using to destroy civilian infrastructure and killed civilians in Ukraine."
While in North Korea, Shoigu met the country's leader Kim Jong Un, in what Pyongyang's state media described as "a friendly talk".
Kim met Shoigu and a high-ranking Chinese delegation in Pyongyang on Wednesday ahead of Korean War anniversary celebrations.
7:09am: Ukrainian soldiers observed using North Korean rockets, Financial Times reports
Ukrainian soldiers were observed using North Korean rockets that they said were seized by a "friendly" country before being delivered to Ukraine, the Financial Times reported on Saturday.
Ukraine's defence ministry suggested the arms were captured from the Russians, the newspaper said.
The United States has accused North Korea of providing arms to Russia, including alleged shipments by sea, but has not offered proof and North Korean weapons have not been widely observed on the battlefields in Ukraine.
North Korea and Russia deny conducting arms transactions.
The North Korean weapons were shown by Ukrainian troops operating Soviet-era Grad multiple-launch rocket systems near the destroyed eastern city of Bakhmut, a site of lengthy brutal fighting, the report said.
7:04am: Two children among at least nine injured in Russian missile strike on Dnipro
A Russian missile struck an apartment block in the central Ukrainian city of Dnipro on Friday, Kyiv officials said, injuring at least nine people including two children.
"Dnipro. Another terrorist attack," said Sergiy Kruk, head of the Ukrainian State Emergency Service, on Telegram.
"Currently, we know of nine injured, including two children. Work continues."
Internal Affairs Minister Igor Klymenko earlier reported "a Russian strike on a multi-storey building in Dnipro", saying five people had been injured.
Key developments from Friday, July 28:
A Russian missile strike hit a multi-storey residential building and a government building in the city of Dnipro on Friday, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said. “Dnipro. Friday evening. A high-rise building and the Security Service of Ukraine's building were hit,” Zelensky said. No one was killed in the strike. The initial injury toll stood at three.
At least 15 people were injured in an explosion near a cafe in the southwestern Russian city of Taganrog near the border with Ukraine, the regional governor said Friday. “Rescuers are at the scene. There are no dead. There are several injured to whom ambulances have been dispatched,” Rostov Governor Vasily Golubev said on Telegram, later adding that 15 people suffered “light injuries”.
Read yesterday's liveblog to see how the day's events unfolded.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP, AP and Reuters)