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Ten-year-old Sasha stands in a bomb shelter in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.
Ten-year-old Sasha stands in a bomb shelter in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (Archive)

Follow all of the latest developments as they happen.

Final News Summary For September 29

-- We have started a new Ukraine Live Blog. Find it here.

-- Ukraine is marking 75 years since the World War II massacre of 33,771 Jews on the outskirts of Nazi-occupied Kyiv.

-- German Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to stabilize a fragile cease-fire in Ukraine and do all he could to improve what Merkel called a "catastrophic humanitarian situation" in Syria.

-- Russia's Supreme Court has upheld a decision by a Moscow-backed Crimean court to ban the Mejlis, the self-governing body of Crimean Tatars in the occupied Ukrainian territory.

* NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv (GMT/UTC +3)

08:44 23.3.2016

08:42 23.3.2016

08:37 23.3.2016

08:37 23.3.2016

21:45 21.3.2016

That concludes our live-blogging of the Ukraine crisis for today. Check back here tomorrow morning for more of our continuing coverage.

20:42 21.3.2016

20:14 21.3.2016

16:59 21.3.2016

16:58 21.3.2016

16:56 21.3.2016

RFE/RL's News Desk just filed this update to the Savchenko trial verdict:

Savchenko Rejects Verdict As Murder Trial Wraps Up In Russia

By RFE/RL

A lawyer for Nadia Savchenko said the jailed Ukrainian military pilot will reject any verdict in her high-profile murder trial, as a Russian judge began delivering the decision.

Prosecutors want Savchenko sentenced to 23 years in prison on charges of complicity to murder over the deaths of two Russian journalists in war-torn eastern Ukraine, in a trial widely denounced by the defiant pilot, her country’s government, and the West as politically motivated.

"She is not interested in the verdict. She believes that it has nothing to do with justice," Nikolai Polozov told journalists outside the courtroom in the small southern Russian city of Donetsk, near the Ukrainian border, where the judge began reading the verdict on March 21.

The ruling will not be official until the judge finishes reading his conclusions, which is expected later on March 21 or on March 22.

But Judge Leonid Stepanenko’s words pointed to a guilty verdict.

He told the courtroom that Savchenko, 34, had "deliberately inflicted death on two persons, acting by prior conspiracy, and on the motives of hatred and enmity."

The judge also accused her of being part of a "criminal group" and of aiming to kill an "unlimited number of people."

Read more here.

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