2022 in Ukraine

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

2022
in
Ukraine

Decades:
See also:

The following is a list of events from the year 2022 in Ukraine.

This year most notably saw the beginning of the

Luhansk, and Sumy Oblasts, and from the previously occupied Crimea to the south into the Kherson, Mykolaiv, and Zaporizhzhia Oblasts. Ukraine's refusal to surrender its capital and support from its allies led to Russia withdrawing from its northern occupied territories in April, and successful Ukrainian eastern and southern
counteroffensives in September and November which largely stabilized the frontline.

The war continued into the following year primarily in the Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson Oblasts, despite an internationally condemned and widely unrecognized Russian referendum annexing the oblasts in September.

Incumbents

Events

Ongoing – COVID-19 pandemic in Ukraine; Russian invasion of Ukraine

January

February

March

  • 3 March (Day 8) – Eight civilians were killed in the city of Izium when the town's central hospital reportedly sustained significant damage from a Russian rocket strike.[14]
  • 5 March (Day 10) – A video posted online showed a Russian jet being shot down by Ukrainian forces near Chernihiv. Later images showed the capture of the pilot, who ejected from his plane but was injured.[15]
  • 6 March (Day 11) – Intense shelling of Izium began as Russian forces occupied Honcharivka and Pisky neighbourhoods and the city railway station, according to deputy mayor of Izium Volodymyr Matsokin.[16]
  • 7 March (Day 12)
    • Maj Gen Vitaly Gerasimov, chief of staff of Russia's 41st combined army, was killed outside of Kharkiv, according to Ukraine's defence ministry,[17] but Gerasimov was confirmed to be alive by BBC Russian when he was awarded the Order of Alexander Nevsky on 23 May 2022.[18][19]
    • Russian online outlets reported that the city of Izium was taken by Russian forces.[20] This claim does not appear to have been factual, especially because fighting broke out between Ukrainian and Russian forces the next day.[21]
  • 8 March (Day 13) – The United States banned imports of all Russian oil, liquefied natural gas, and coal in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[22]
  • 10 March (Day 15) – 2,250 civilians were evacuated from Izium as Russian forces pushed further into the city.[14]
  • 11 March (Day 16)
    • Maj Gen Andrei Kolesnikov, the Russian commander of the 29th combined army, was killed in fighting, according to official Ukrainian sources.[17]
    • The Ukrainian military claimed to have damaged or destroyed 31 Russian Battalion tactical groups (BTGs).[23]
  • 12 March (Day 17)
    • Russian troops captured the northern part of Izium.[23]
    • Russian forces conducted a new advance northeast from Kherson along the western bank of the Dnipro, as well as make limited territorial gains east of Mariupol.[23]
  • 13 March (Day 18) – Yevhen Matveyev, leader of Dniprorudne, was abducted by Russian troops, according to Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba.[24]
  • 14 March (Day 19)
    • Some information suggested China expressed some openness to providing Russia with requested military and financial assistance with the war on Ukraine, according to a US diplomat. Both China and Russia denied that Moscow asked for military assistance.[25]
    • A Russian missile attack on a military training centre in Yavoriv killed around 35 people, 15 miles away from the Ukrainian border with Poland.[26]
  • 15 March (Day 20)
    • The
      UNGA voted on a resolution demanding an immediate end to the Russian offensive in Ukraine. 141 countries voted in favor of the resolution, 35 nations abstained, and only 5 nations voted against: (Russia, Belarus, North Korea, Eritrea, and Syria) in a "sweeping show of international unity". The UNSC failed to adopt the vote though, because of the single "no" vote from Russia, a P5 member.[27]
The Mariupol Drama Theatre, turned shelter, was hit by a Russian airstrike that killed an estimated 300 people on 15 March
A portrait of Yakov Rezantsev, who reportedly became the seventh Russian general officer to be killed in Ukraine during the 2022 Chornobaivka attacks on 25 March

April

Destroyed road and buildings in Mariupol on 11 April
A picture of the Russian cruiser Moskva from 2012, which was sunk by a Ukrainian strike on 14 April
  • 14 April (Day 50)
    • The Russian warship Moskva sinks in the Black Sea, marking a major victory for Ukraine. The Russian Navy attempted to tow the damaged ship toward Sevastopol, but it sank before reaching port.[104] New information comes out that Moskva was one of the ships involved in the Attack of Snake Island, which took place on 25 February.[100] Moskva is the largest warship to be sunk in combat since World War II.[105][106]
    • Russian troops open fire on a bus convoy evacuating residents from Borova[disambiguation needed], killing 7 people and wounding 27.[107]
    • Russian officials accuse Ukraine of sending two helicopters 10 km into Russia's
      Bryansk region, and bombing a residential building in Klimovo, injuring eight people. Ukraine denies the attack, accusing Russia of staging the incident to stir up "anti-Ukrainian hysteria".[107]
    • A number of residential areas in Kharkiv come under shelling from Russian forces, with the heaviest bombings in the direction of Izium, according to the head of Ukraine's Kharkiv region military administration Oleh Syniehubov.[100]
    • Ukrainian authorities conduct an "organized evacuation" of Barvinkove and Lozova in south of the Kharkiv region, according to Oleh Syniehubov.[100]
    • Protesters in the United States project the flag of Ukraine on the side of the Russian embassy in Washington DC. The Russian embassy responded with spotlights to try to blot the flag out.[100]
  • 15 April (Day 51)
    • There is a possibility that the Russian warship Moskva, which sunk yesterday, may have been carrying nuclear weapons when it went down, according to some Ukrainian exports. Two senior US intelligence officials dispute this claim, releasing a statement that they do not believe the ship was carrying nuclear arms.[108] There is also a possibility the warship may have had a piece of the True Cross on board when it sank as well, citing a Russian media report from 2020.[109]
    • Russian strikes are "getting more intense" across the Donetsk, Luhansk, and Kharkiv regions amid warnings of a major Russian offensive in the coming days.[110]
    • The Vizar military facility that produced and repaired anti-aircraft and anti-ship missile systems near Kyiv is bombed by Russian long-range
      Kalibr missiles, according to Russian defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov and Ukrainian witnesses. This happened in response to the Russian-claimed helicopter bombing of a residential building in Klimovo yesterday, which Ukraine denies ever taking place.[107]
    • At 4:30 pm, wide Russian rocket launcher shelling across the industrial district of Kharkiv injures at least 35 people and kills 10, including a 7-month-old baby, according to Ukraine's general prosecutor's office.[110]
    • Five civilians are killed and 15 injured in a
      cluster bomb attack in Mykolaiv, according to the city's governor Vitaliy Kim in a telegram. Ukraine and Russia were some of the few countries to not ban cluster munitions back in a 2008 UN referendum.[110]
    • Sviatoslav Shevchuk, Ukraine's ambassador to the Vatican and the archbishop of Kyiv denounces the Vatican's plan to have a Ukrainian woman and a Russian woman carry the cross together during the Good Friday mass procession there. He objected on what he saw as an idea of reconciliation, while Ukraine is still being ravaged by war unleashed by Russia.[111]
    • Ukraine announces it is sending top officials including PM Denys Shmyhal, Finance Minister Serhiy Marchenko, and central bank governor Kyrylo Shevchenko to Washington DC for the IMF and World Bank meeting next week, where discussion will focus on the Russian invasion and its impact on global economy.[111]
  • 16 April (Day 52)
    • The $800 million (€740 million) weapons package the US announced it would be sending to Ukraine on 14 April "have begun arriving," according to a White House official. The package is to be picked up at the border by Ukrainians and taken into the country. This package brings the total amount of military assistance the US has provided to Ukraine to more than $3 billion (€2.8 billion).[112]
    • St. Petersburg in Serafimovskoe Cemetery. According to Tsargrad TV, he died no earlier than 11 April 2022.[113]
    • The Russian Armed Forces claim to have "completely cleared" the city of Mariupol of Ukrainian forces. This is considered propaganda as fierce fighting continues in the city days after this claim.[114]
    • Russia claims that their troops have killed more than 4,000 soldiers in Mariupol. According to Kyiv however, the total troop losses nationwide so far in the war are between 2,500 and 3,000.[115]
    • President Zelenskyy vows to rebuild the cities and towns destroyed by war, especially Mariupol. "Of course, this is a huge amount of work. But still less than defending the state in war." Zelenskyy also added that this could be a time for the "real modernization of our cities," in the video address.[112]
    • Russian Ministry of Defense spokesperson Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov claims the Russian military shot down a Ukrainian military transport plane "delivering a large batch of weapons supplied to Ukraine by Western countries." This claim remains unconfirmed, as Russia has claimed to have destroyed more Ukrainian military aircraft than were known to be in Ukraine's inventory, according to open-source information.[112]
  • 17 April (Day 53)
    • Most remaining Ukrainian soldiers in Mariupol and a "large group of civilians" are forced to take shelter inside the giant
      Azovstal steel factory after Russian forces push further into the besieged city. A surrender-or-die ultimatum is proposed by Russia which urged the soldiers inside the steel factory to lay down their arms by 6 am Moscow time and to evacuate before 1 pm. This is meet by no response by the Ukrainian forces.[114][116]
    • Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba says in an interview that Mariupol has not fallen, but basically "doesn't exist anymore," because "the Russian army... [have] decided to raze the city to the ground at any cost." An estimated 10,000 civilians, and potentially many more, have died in the month-long siege according to Mariupol's mayor.[116]
    • Ukrainian government officials complete a European Union questionnaire required to begin a membership application, according to presidential aid Ihor Zhvokva. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen ceremonially gave the paperwork to President Zelenskyy during her visit to Kyiv on 8 April.[116]
    • Mykolaiv and the surrounding areas have come under continuous rocket attacks since Sunday morning, according to the regional governor Vitaliy Kim. The targets have included power grids, houses, and playgrounds, and that Kalibr missiles had disrupted water and power supplies to the city as well.[116]
    • At least 18 deaths are reported from four days of shelling in Kharkiv, according to Ukrainian officials.[116]
    • PM Denys Shmyhal argues for "more money for executing our humanitarian and social obligations," ahead of the IMF and World Bank meeting to take place in Washington DC later this week. As of now, Ukraine is running a budget deficit of about $5 billion (€4.6 billion) a month.[116]
  • 18 April (Day 54)
    • Since the withdraw of Russian troops from northern Ukraine on 1–2 April to be redeployed to the east, the awaited "Battle for Donbass" begins in Eastern Ukraine. This is confirmed by President Zelenskyy in his nightly address, saying also that "a very large part of the entire Russian army is now focused on this offensive".[117]
    • Russian forces increase their attacks on the strategic eastern cities of Mykolaiv, Mariupol, Kherson, Izyum, and Sloviansk in the new Russian offensive.[117]
    • The eastern city of Kreminna is taken by Russian forces amid the new offensive after "leveling everything to the ground" according to Ukraine officials. Russian artillery fire into the city reportedly started Sunday night into continued into Monday, killing four civilians.[118]
    • Ukraine claims to have recaptured a "number of settlements" in or near the Izium raion, according to Oleksandr Motuzianyk, a spokesman for the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense.[119] This comes after Russian forces in the city were beginning mass deportations of city residents towards mainland Russian territory.[120]
    • At least 7 people are killed and 11 injured after a Russian missile strike the hits Lviv. The missiles strike three military targets and a fourth hit a tire-fitting garage, according to the regional governor
      Maksym Kozytskyy.[121]
    • The European Union plans to establish a solidarity
      trust fund to finance "a bulk of the costs" of post-war reconstruction. The details are planned to be discuss by senior officials in Brussels and Washington to ensure the enormous amount of money is not misused, according to EU officials.[122]
  • 19 April (Day 55)
  • 20 April (Day 56)
  • 21 April (Day 57)
  • 22 April (Day 58)
    • Russia for the first time discloses its goal in Ukraine is to "fully control Ukraine's eastern Donbas region as well as southern Ukraine" to make a land bridge from Russia to Crimea, as part of the second phase of their invasion.[129] This also may be to connect Russia to self-proclaimed and Russian-backed Transnistria.[130]
    • Russian shelling disrupts an attempt to evacuate civilians heavily contested Rubizhne, stopping a bus from reaching the town, according to Serhiy Haidai, the head of the Luhansk region military administration. No evacuation corridors are currently open through Russian controlled territory due to "danger on the routes," according to Deputy PM Iryna Vereshchuk. European Council President Charles Michel, and the EU's top diplomat Josep Borrell "strongly urged" for immediate and safe humanitarian passage from Mariupol and other besieged cities in a call with Russian President Putin.[128]
    • More than 200 new graves are identified to the west of Mariupol, which can be clearly seen in photos collected by US Maxar Technologies satellite imagery.[128]
    • UN Secretary-General António Guterres "will be received by President Vladimir Putin" on 26 April after having a working meeting and lunch with the foreign minister of Russia, according to the UN.[128]
    • Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda calls on NATO to send more troops to eastern Europe, including Lithuania in case of a worst casinario Russian invasion.[128]
    • The UK announces that it will resume its diplomatic mission in Kyiv again soon, but PM Boris Johnson warns Russia still has a "realistic possibility" of winning the war in Ukraine, calling the situation there "unpredictable" at the moment.[128]
  • 23 April (Day 59)
Zelenskyy posing with Blinken and Austin during the bilateral meeting on 24 April
  • 24 April (Day 60)
    • US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin arrive in Kyiv as announced yesterday. Blinken and Austin hold a roughly 90-minute bilateral meeting with President Zelenskyy, Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, Defense Minister
      Oleksiy Reznikov, and Interior Minister Denys Monastyrsky, according to a senior State Department official. Blinken and Austin have become the highest-level US officials to travel to Ukraine since the Russian invasion began.[133]
    • Russia is forcibly deporting Mariupol citizens to Primorsky Krai, according to the Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights.[133]
    • Ukraine is observing and preparing for a possible Russian offensive in the Kherson region, citing bolstered defenses in the area. Oleksandr Vilkul, military head of Kryvyi Rih, said in a televised statement "we are waiting for their possible transition to the offensive in the coming days. But we know more about them than they think; we understand all their plans; and we are fully prepared for any development in the situation".[133]
    • Nine Russian missiles strike Kremenchuk, according to Dmytro Lunin, head of the Poltava Regional Military Administration.[133]
    • The
      Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) is working to "facilitate the release" of several of its Special Monitoring Mission (SMM) members who have been "deprived of their liberty in Donetsk and Luhansk," OSCE posted on Twitter.[133]
    • President Zelenskyy congratulates new French President Emmanuel Macron on his reelection, calling him a "true friend of Ukraine". "I appreciate his support and I am convinced that we are moving forward together towards new common victories," Zelenskyy also said in a Twitter post.[133]
    • Australian PM
      ANZAC Day in their respective countries.[133]
  • 25 April (Day 61)
    • Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov insists Russia is striving to lower the risk of nuclear war, but said that the danger "is real, and it cannot be underestimated," in a Russian television conference.[134]
    • Russia plans to stage a referendum in the occupied Kherson region. President Zelenskyy hails his people's refusal to give their backing to Russia's forces, "[they have] showed that Ukraine will definitely win," Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address.[134]
    • Russian troops take control of the Kherson City Council, weeks after first occupying Kherson, according to two members of the city government. "Armed men entered the building... took the keys and replaced our guards with their own," said Kherson Mayor Igor Kolykhaev.[134]
    • A nighttime curfew for Kyiv goes into effect from 10 pm to 5 am Monday to Friday this week, due to "provocative actions" from Russia, according to Oleksandr Pavliuk, the head of the Kyiv Regional Military Administration, in a Telegram post.[134]
    • The village of Novotoshkivske is completely demolished by intense fighting for the town for more than a week, and Russian airstrikes. The Luhansk regional administrator Serhiy Hayday commented, "Unfortunately, there are almost no houses left in Novotoshkivka. Our [troops] retreated a little, but not much, because there was no longer anything to hold on to".[134]
    • UN Secretary-General António Guterres leaves for Moscow to hold a working meeting and have lunch with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov tomorrow. Guterres is also scheduled to travel to Kyiv and meet with President Zelensky and Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba on 28 April.[134]
  • 26 April (Day 62)
    • Russia struggles to find enough people to facilitate a popular vote in Kherson to create a Kherson People's Republic, and cannot hold a referendum. Russia does succeed though in replacing the local government, just 24 hours after ousting the city council yesterday, installing "the so-called 'Head of the Kherson Regional Administration,'
      Volodymyr Saldo, and the 'Head of the Kherson City Administration,' Oleksandr Kobets," according to the regional administrator Hennadiy Lahuta.[135]
    • Heavy fighting in eastern Ukraine takes place. Russian forces launch missile attacks against Avdiivka, striking the central hospital, schools, and high-rise buildings, Krasnohorivka is left without electricity after Russian forces damaged a transformer, and Ukrainian forces repel a Russian attempt to attack Marinka, according to head of Donetsk regional military administration Pavlo Kyrylenko.[135]
    • Russian President Putin says a there was a "serious breakthrough" during talks in Istanbul, with Ukrainian negotiators not bringing up security and international borders, but the situation changed "dramatically" following "a provocation in the village of Bucha, to which the Russian army has nothing to do," said Putin to UN Secretary-General António Guterres in Moscow.[135]
    • The United States pledges a new "even heavier weapons" package for Ukraine during a meeting at a German air base, disregarding a threat from Russia that their support for Ukraine could lead to nuclear war.[136]
    • Germany announces that it will send 50 anti-aircraft armored vehicles to Ukraine, the first time since the beginning of the war, just one day after the British government announced that it would provide Ukraine with additional anti-aircraft capabilities as well, according to US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin in a news conference.[135]
    • Work begins in Kyiv on dismantling the
      People's Friendship Arch to "Russian-Ukrainian friendship,"[135] as the monument has lost all of its ideological meaning, according to Kyiv's mayor Vilati Klitschko.[137]
  • 27 April (Day 63)
  • 28 April (Day 64)
    • The bodies of 1,150 civilians are announced to have been recovered in Ukraine's Kyiv region since Russia's invasion started, according to Kyiv regional police chief Andriy Nebyton, adding that "50–70% died of firearm wounds, shot with automatic rifles."[140]
    • US President Biden requests congress to approve a new $33 billion aid package to Ukraine. "The fight in Ukraine is the fight for freedom, and it not be cheap but it will be more costly if the world caves into Russian aggression," Biden said. Due to a lawmaker recess, enough agreed bipartisan support to pass, and the need to draft legislative language mean this package, if passed, will take a long time.[141][140]
    • Deputy PM Iryna Vereshchuk announces another successful prisoner swap with Russia, "13 officers and 20 soldiers, including 5 wounded... we are also returning 12 of our civilians home." The number of Russians swapped remains unannounced.[140]
    • Major Russian natural gas customers Germany and Austria are working on ways to accept the Russian ultimatum that final payments for gas must be made in rubles, to avoid the fate of being entirely cut off, which Poland and Bulgaria suffered yesterday. German Vice Chancellor and Economy Minister Robert Habeck has said they are working towards no longer relying on Russian oil imports, announcing Germany is now importing only 35% compared to 55% of its gas from Russia before.[140]
    • UN Secretary-General António Guterres visits with President Zelenskyy and Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba in Kyiv, according to deputy spokesperson Farhan Haq. Guterres on his visit went to Borodianka and "expressed his sadness in seeing the destroyed buildings there," to the massacre site outside of St. Andrew's Church in Bucha, and the destroyed Lipki residential complex in Irpin.[140]
    • Europe's human rights parliament adopts a resolution calling on all member and observer states to set up an international criminal tribunal to investigate and prosecute Russian politicians and soldiers allegedly committing war crimes in Ukraine.[140]
  • 29 April (Day 65)
    • Despite orders from Russia on 21 April that the Azovstal Steel Plant in besieged Mariupol should be sealed and not stormed, storming attempts by Russian forces persist, but are blocked by Ukrainian forces, and "intense" and "relentless bombardment" continues, according to Azov regiment commander Sviatoslav Palamar, currently stuck inside of the steel plant. Palamar went on to say in a video that even though food and ammunition are running low, "we do not consider giving up... if there is no other choice left but giving up, we won't give up".[142]
    • Reports come out that Russia bombed Kyiv just one hour after UN Secretary-General António Guterres visited with President Zelenskyy yesterday. Kyiv's Mayor Vitali Klitschko said the attack was Putin's way of giving "his middle finger" to Guterres.[143]
    • A Russian air strike destroys a major railway bridge connecting Sloviansk and Lyman across the Donets river, according to Sentinel-2 satellite imagery. This comes after reports that Russian forces "appear to be advancing" toward Sloviansk and Baranivka, according to US defense officials.[142]
    • Ukrainian forces are becoming more serious on people accused of helping Russian troops. In the Kharkiv region alone, nearly 400 have been detained under anti-collaboration laws since the invasion began.[143]
    • White House press secretary
      US marine Willy Joseph Cancel is killed fighting alongside Ukrainian forces. "We know Americans are looking for ways to help... but we do encourage Americans to find other ways to do so... rather than traveling to Ukraine to fight," she also said.[142]
    • The US begins additional training of Ukrainian forces at another of "roughly three" US military installations in Germany, according to the US Defense Department.[142]
  • 30 April (Day 66)
    • A ceasefire, conducted by the servicemen of Azov, to allow the evacuation of civilians from Mariupol is announced to start at 6 am local time, but begins at 11 am due to multiple delays. This comes after new Maxar Technologies satellite imagery shows nearly every building at the Azovstal steel plant has been destroyed.[144]
    • Multiple explosions are reported by soon after 6 pm by Ukrainian media and witnesses in Odesa. The attack partially destroyed one of the runways at Odesa's airport. Another witness reported that at least one combat plane flew over the city.[144]
    • President Zelenskyy announces that 69% of de-occupied settlements now have "full-fledged local self-government" again, adding the work of humanitarian offices has already begun in 93% of liberated settlements. Zelenskyy also announces that the Ukrainian army has already destroyed more than 1,000 Russian tanks, nearly 200 Russian aircraft, and almost 2,500 armored fighting vehicles.[144]
    • Efforts by Russian forces to increase Russian over Ukrainian identity take place. In Tommak, the coat of arms of Ukraine is removed from outside of the mayor's office, Russian supermarket chain MERA replaces the existing Ukrainian one in Melitopol, and a statue of former Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin is re-erected in Nova Kakhovka, according to Deputy PM Mykhailo Fedorov.[144]
    • Kherson's overthrown mayor, Ihor Kolykhaiev, has said that he doesn't believe the change from
      hryvnia to roble will be possible, seeing as the only working banking system in the region uses hryvnia.[145]
    • A newly released Russian video shows a submarine in the Black Sea launching cruise missile attacks on Ukraine, confirming earlier Ukrainian military claims.[144]

May

June

  • 1 June (Day 98)
  • 2 June (Day 99)
    • "Some success" is reported in the fight for control of Severodonetsk that Ukrainian forces are keeping their ground, and that street fighting still continues, according to President Zelenskyy in a video message.[148]
    • The armed forces including the AZOV Dnipro unit launch an offensive from several vantage points into Russian occupied areas in the Kherson region. Head of the Kherson Regional State Administration
      Gennady Laguta proudly announces the liberation of 20 settlements in around 8 km (5 miles) of Russian occupied territory.[148]
    • The cities of Bakhmut and Slovyansk and the highways connecting to them are the main areas under bombardment from Russian forces according to head of the Donetsk military administration Pavlo Kyrylenko.[148]
    • Around 22 million tons of grain are reported to be stuck in ports due to lack of Russian cooperation causing major grain insecurity issues in Asia and Africa. Russia has also been caught stealing and illegally selling Ukrainian grain to third parties in other nations.[148]
    • The US confirms it has carried out a handful successful cyber operations in support of Ukraine in "offensive" and 'defensive" ways.[148]
  • 3 June (Day 100)
  • 4 June (Day 101)
    • The All Saints church in Sviatohirsk, whose original temple dates back to the year 1526, is the most recent of 113 churches to be "destroyed" by Russian artillery, according to Zelenskyy.[151]
    • Hundreds more people flee Sloviansk and Severodonetsk as the Russian army is "throwing all its reserves into" the capturing of the cities, with more reinforcements arriving, according to the Luhansk regional military administration.[151]
    • Heavy fighting continues in the east, with Russian air activity in the region "remaining high," but has "failed to have a meaningful impact on the conflict" as of recently according to the UK Ministry of Defense.[151]
    • Foreign Minister Kuleba reacts angrily to French President Macron's comment that "we must not humiliate Russia". Kuleba said in response that it is "Russia that humiliates itself. We all better focus on how to put Russia in its place. This will bring peace and save lives".[151]
    • Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov, speaking at the GLOBSEC-2022 forum in Bratislava in Slovakia, says it is "hard to predict when the war will end, but my optimistic projection is that it may end by the end of the year".[151]
  • 5 June (Day 102)
    • Zelenskyy visits troops on the frontline border of the Luhansk-Donetsk regions, specifically "Lysychansk" and "Soledar," Zelenskyy said in his nightly address. "I am proud of everyone I met, shook hands with, communicated with and supported," Zelenskyy also said.[152]
    • Head of the Luhansk region military administration Hayday announces the "good news" that "half of the city (of Severodonetsk) is really controlled by our defenders," which is a major advance compared to early in the week, with Russians controlling 80% of the city.[152]
    • No territory was regarded as lost, but it is reported Russian forces resumed their offensive near Sviatohirsk, suffering losses.[152]
    • Russians forces conducted an offensive in Bila Krynytsia which was recently retaken by Ukrainian forces. Head of the regional military administration Oleksandr Vilkul said Russian units had returned to "previously occupied positions".[152]
    • Wales defeats Ukraine 1–0 to secure a slot in the 2022 FIFA World Cup. As a gesture of generosity, 100 tickets were handed out to Ukrainian refugees living in the area before the beginning of the match.[152]

September

December

Deaths

See also

References

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