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Moscow Court Upholds Extending Pretrial Detention Of Ukrainian Sailors
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WATCH: Moscow Court Upholds Extending Pretrial Detention Of Ukrainian Sailors

Live Blog: A New Government In Ukraine (Archive Sept. 3, 2018-Aug. 16, 2019)

-- EDITOR'S NOTE: We have started a new Ukraine Live Blog as of August 17, 2019. You can find it here.

-- A court in Moscow has upheld a lower court's decision to extend pretrial detention for six of the 24 Ukrainian sailors detained by Russian forces along with their three naval vessels in November near the Kerch Strait, which links the Black Sea and Sea of Azov.

-- The U.S. special peace envoy to Ukraine, Kurt Volker, says Russian propaganda is making it a challenge to solve the conflict in the east of the country.

-- Two more executives of DTEK, Ukraine's largest private power and coal producer, have been charged in a criminal case on August 14 involving an alleged conspiracy to fix electricity prices with the state energy regulator, Interfax reported.

-- A Ukrainian deputy minister and his aide have been detained after allegedly taking a bribe worth $480,000, the National Anti-Corruption Bureau said on Facebook.

*Time stamps on the blog refer to local time in Ukraine

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Here is today's map of the security situation in eastern Ukraine, according to the National Security and Defense Council (click to enlarge):

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Ex-PM Tymoshenko launches presidential bid:

By RFE/RL

KYIV -- Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko has officially announced she will run for president, with polls showing her as the front-runner in the March presidential election.

"I'm running for the presidency," she told a congress of her opposition Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) party in Kyiv on January 22.

Tymoshenko, 58, has been one of the most prominent figures on the Ukrainian political scene for the past two decades.

She was a leader of the 2004 Orange Revolution together with then-presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko.

Following Yushchenko's victory, she was appointed prime minister but was dismissed less than nine months later amid disputes with the president.

Tymoshenko served as prime minister again between 2007 and 2010 and first ran for president in 2010, but lost to Russia-friendly Viktor Yanukovych.

In 2011, during Yanukovych's term, she was sentenced to seven years in prison for corruption and was released in 2014 when pro-Europe, anticorruption protests led to Yanukovych's ouster.

The same year she ran for a second time for president but was defeated by Petro Poroshenko, who is expected to seek a new term in the March 31 election but has not announced his candidacy.

According to the latest polls, she now appears the favorite to win the presidential vote set for March 31, ahead of incumbent Poroshenko and comedian Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Tymoshenko has presented herself as a pro-NATO, pro-European Union candidate, and has declared her backing for the Ukrainian military, which has been fighting Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine since 2014.

At the start of her speech in Kyiv, she brought on stage dozens of veterans of the conflict.

Prominent figures who have endorsed Tymoshenko include Filaret, leader of one of the main Ukrainian Orthodox communities and the first speaker at the Batkivshchyna nominating congress.

Another supporter is former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, who later served as governor of Ukraine's Odesa region but is now a prominent critic of Poroshenko and lives abroad. (w/Christopher Miller in Kyiv, RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service, Reuters, AFP, and AP)

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