Zürcher Nachrichten - Zelensky vows victory as 100 days of war pass in Ukraine

EUR -
AED 3.891201
AFN 72.039685
ALL 98.100849
AMD 409.437665
ANG 1.900657
AOA 966.712075
ARS 1057.796539
AUD 1.628853
AWG 1.904283
AZN 1.804062
BAM 1.956458
BBD 2.129416
BDT 126.022372
BGN 1.950776
BHD 0.399246
BIF 3069.629473
BMD 1.059406
BND 1.41779
BOB 7.28745
BRL 6.089044
BSD 1.054604
BTN 88.991622
BWP 14.387973
BYN 3.450793
BYR 20764.361575
BZD 2.125815
CAD 1.485457
CDF 3040.496022
CHF 0.935646
CLF 0.037352
CLP 1030.64317
CNY 7.665972
CNH 7.65858
COP 4658.209074
CRC 537.085653
CUC 1.059406
CUP 28.074264
CVE 110.760843
CZK 25.299733
DJF 187.802008
DKK 7.459163
DOP 64.147013
DZD 141.325824
EGP 52.371848
ERN 15.891093
ETB 129.009157
FJD 2.403422
FKP 0.836207
GBP 0.835797
GEL 2.886856
GGP 0.836207
GHS 16.908088
GIP 0.836207
GMD 75.217814
GNF 9143.7349
GTQ 8.14774
GYD 220.634184
HKD 8.246026
HNL 26.670588
HRK 7.557019
HTG 138.537888
HUF 406.568404
IDR 16782.742273
ILS 3.961459
IMP 0.836207
INR 89.410547
IQD 1388.351829
IRR 44593.05834
ISK 144.4706
JEP 0.836207
JMD 167.377857
JOD 0.751226
JPY 163.611505
KES 136.128628
KGS 91.63792
KHR 4291.654328
KMF 492.359227
KPW 953.465181
KRW 1475.678499
KWD 0.325756
KYD 0.878804
KZT 526.201891
LAK 23253.966423
LBP 94922.795608
LKR 307.256209
LRD 193.524202
LSL 19.159367
LTL 3.128151
LVL 0.640824
LYD 5.175185
MAD 10.596141
MDL 19.162624
MGA 4936.832823
MKD 61.531295
MMK 3440.910022
MNT 3599.86222
MOP 8.456242
MRU 42.296799
MUR 49.261911
MVR 16.378548
MWK 1838.06978
MXN 21.41701
MYR 4.741161
MZN 67.722574
NAD 19.159367
NGN 1767.121274
NIO 38.932883
NOK 11.657997
NPR 142.381217
NZD 1.799497
OMR 0.407884
PAB 1.054555
PEN 4.020461
PGK 4.261001
PHP 62.128885
PKR 294.314082
PLN 4.318039
PYG 8220.151812
QAR 3.856769
RON 4.976138
RSD 117.006178
RUB 105.668324
RWF 1451.386498
SAR 3.97711
SBD 8.866721
SCR 14.755111
SDG 637.227276
SEK 11.561199
SGD 1.41845
SHP 0.836207
SLE 23.995293
SLL 22215.223388
SOS 605.446447
SRD 37.508281
STD 21927.569466
SVC 9.22819
SYP 2661.789717
SZL 19.016034
THB 36.644553
TJS 11.221403
TMT 3.707922
TND 3.347386
TOP 2.481232
TRY 36.631616
TTD 7.159475
TWD 34.385467
TZS 2811.644994
UAH 43.676398
UGX 3872.301979
USD 1.059406
UYU 45.225206
UZS 13586.884811
VES 48.448686
VND 26924.808645
VUV 125.774833
WST 2.957429
XAF 656.183822
XAG 0.033996
XAU 0.000406
XCD 2.863098
XDR 0.802277
XOF 656.831773
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.692899
ZAR 19.015291
ZMK 9535.919228
ZMW 29.082151
ZWL 341.128365
  • RBGPF

    1.6500

    61.84

    +2.67%

  • BCC

    1.4500

    141.54

    +1.02%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    24.39

    -0.21%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    13.23

    +0.98%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    13.2

    -0.23%

  • RIO

    1.1400

    62.12

    +1.84%

  • RELX

    0.5900

    45.04

    +1.31%

  • CMSC

    0.0540

    24.624

    +0.22%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    62.9

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    0.3400

    33.69

    +1.01%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    6.85

    +1.02%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    8.92

    +1.68%

  • BCE

    0.4100

    27.23

    +1.51%

  • AZN

    0.1600

    63.39

    +0.25%

  • BP

    0.4400

    29.42

    +1.5%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    36.68

    +0.79%

Zelensky vows victory as 100 days of war pass in Ukraine
Zelensky vows victory as 100 days of war pass in Ukraine / Photo: Sergei CHUZAVKOV - AFP

Zelensky vows victory as 100 days of war pass in Ukraine

Ukraine's president vowed victory Friday even as Russian troops pounded the east, and the United Nations pushed to get tens of millions of tons of grain out of the country and avert a global food crisis.

Text size:

More than 100 days since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his troops into Ukraine on February 24, thousands of people have been killed, millions sent fleeing and towns turned into rubble.

The advance of Russian troops has been slowed by a fierce Ukrainian resistance which repelled them from around the capital and forced Moscow to shift its aims towards capturing the east.

"Victory will be ours," Zelensky said in a video speech.

Later, in his nightly address, he dismissed the Russian army.

"At first it looked threatening. Then dangerous... And now probably just a bitter smile. Because what's left of it? ... War crimes, shame and hatred," he said.

But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said "certain results have been achieved", pointing to the "liberation" of some areas from what he called the "pro-Nazi armed forces of Ukraine".

The West has sent ever more potent weapons to Ukraine and piled on ever more stringent sanctions, with the European Union on Friday formally adopting a ban on most Russian oil imports.

Putin's alleged girlfriend, former gymnast Alina Kabaeva, was also added to an assets freeze and visa-ban blacklist.

At the same time, the United Nations said it was leading intense negotiations with Russia to allow Ukraine's grain harvest to leave the country.

- 'No problem' to export grain -

"I am optimistic that something could give in," said Amin Awad, the UN crisis coordinator for Ukraine, voicing hope for a "breakthrough."

Putin in a televised interview late Friday said there was "no problem" to export grain from Ukraine, via Kyiv- or Moscow-controlled ports or even through central Europe.

He said this could be done from the Russian-controlled ports of Mariupol and Berdyansk, or the Ukrainian-held port of Odessa, as long as Ukraine "cleared" the waters around it of mines.

Russian troops now occupy a fifth of Ukraine's territory and Moscow has imposed a blockade on its Black Sea ports.

The UN has warned that especially African countries, which imported more than half of their wheat consumption from Ukraine and Russia, face an "unprecedented" crisis caused by the conflict.

Food prices in Africa have already exceeded those in the aftermath of the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings and the 2008 food riots.

On Friday, Putin met the head of the African Union, Senegalese President Macky Sall, at his Black Sea residence in Sochi.

Sall told Putin that African countries "are victims" in the conflict.

After the meeting, Sall said he was "very reassured", adding the Russian leader was "committed and aware that the crisis and sanctions create serious problems for weak economies".

France's President Emmanuel Macron, meanwhile, declared Putin had made a "historic" error in starting the war.

But he said he should not be "humiliated," to leave room for diplomacy.

Putin's troops are now concentrating in the Donbas, in the east, where some of the fiercest fighting is centred on the industrial hub city of Severodonetsk.

- Media driver killed -

"For 100 days, they have been levelling everything", Lugansk regional governor Sergiy Gaiday said on Telegram -- though, he added, Ukraine was pushing the Russians back.

A driver transporting two Reuters journalists in eastern Ukraine was killed and the two international news agency reporters lightly wounded, a company spokesperson said.

The agency said the group was travelling "in a vehicle provided by the Russian-backed separatists and driven by an individual assigned by the separatists".

The French foreign ministry also on Friday said a French volunteer fighter in Ukraine had been killed in combat.

In areas around the capital Kyiv, which Russian troops retreated from at the end of March, some residents are still in desperate need.

At an aid distribution point in Horenka, northwest of Kyiv, a tearful Hanna Viniychuk, 67, said she had come for some basic necessities after losing her home to Russian bombardment.

"I'm grateful for this help," she said.

- 'Nothing to come back to' -

Ukrainian troops were still holding an industrial zone in Severodonetsk, Gaiday said, a situation reminiscent of Mariupol, where a steelworks was the south-eastern port city's last holdout until Ukrainian troops finally surrendered in late May.

The situation in Lysychansk -- Severodonetsk's twin city, which sits just across a river -- also looked increasingly dire.

"The shelling is getting stronger every day," he said.

In the city of Sloviansk, about 80 kilometres (50 miles) from Severodonetsk, the mayor has urged residents to evacuate as bombing intensified with water and electricity cut off.

Student Gulnara Evgaripova, 18, recounted heavy bombardments as she boarded a minibus to leave the city.

"The situation is getting worse," she told AFP.

Ekaterina Perednenko, a paramedic, said: "I am scared that there will be nothing to come back to."

burs-st/wd

M.Hug--NZN