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Ukrainian Security Service officers detain Major General Valeriy Shaytanov on suspicion of high treason and terrorism in Kyiv on April 14.
Ukrainian Security Service officers detain Major General Valeriy Shaytanov on suspicion of high treason and terrorism in Kyiv on April 14.

Ukraine Live Blog: Zelenskiy's Challenges (Archive)

An archive of our recent live blogging of the crisis in Ukraine's east.

20:57 23.9.2019

Sentsov says fighting against Putin regime, not Russia:

By the Crimean Desk Of RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service

KYIV -- Oleh Sentsov, the Ukrainian film director who was held in Russian prisons for more than five years, has accused Russian authorities of wanting to "enslave" Ukraine, and he called on all Ukrainians to work to end the ongoing war in the eastern part of the country.

Speaking just 16 days after his return to Ukraine, Sentsov also told RFE/RL in an interview that for him the fight was not against Russia or Russians themselves, but against what he called President Vladimir Putin's regime.

"[When I say] fight, as I said, it means, in general, to work and struggle to counteract Putin's regime that wants, in the first place, to enslave Ukraine," he said in the September 23 interview.

"This means an end to the war in the Donbas, the return of our prisoners, the return of Crimea. They are all things that every Ukrainian is obliged to fight for. It does not mean that someone is obliged to go somewhere and blow up things. That is not it," he said.

A native of Crimea, Sentsov was a vocal opponent of Russia's seizure and annexation of the Ukrainian region in March 2014. The film director was arrested on May 11, 2014, and a Russian court convicted him the following August on terrorism charges and sentenced him to 20 years in prison.

Human rights activists and Western governments repeatedly called on the Russian authorities to release Sentsov, saying his arrest and trial were politically motivated.

On September 7, Sentsov was released as part of a swap of dozens of prisoners between Ukraine and Russia. It was considered a major breakthrough for the two sides in the conflict that pits Ukrainian government forces against Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine. The fighting has killed more than 13,000 people and displaced more than 1 million since April 2014.

"I am not fighting against Russia. I am fighting against Putin's regime. This is not the same. These things should not be confused," Sentsov told RFE/RL.

"You need to understand that the problem is not in prisoners. The problem is the fact that prisoners exist because we have been attacked. That is, there is a specific issue of prisoners and a broader issue of the aggression against us. Without the aggression, there would not have been any prisoners," he said.

There's no definite figure for how many Ukrainians are being held in Russian prisons, though activists and reporters estimate the number to be in the dozens.

Senstov's first feature film, Gamer, debuted at a festival in Rotterdam in 2012, and at the time of the mass protests that roiled Ukraine in late 2013 and early 2014, he was working on his second feature film, called Rhino.

19:17 23.9.2019

19:13 23.9.2019

19:11 23.9.2019

19:10 23.9.2019

18:31 23.9.2019

17:47 23.9.2019

Trump "not at all" worried by talk of impeachment over whistle-blower case:

Donald Trump has dismissed talk of impeachment over a whistle-blower allegation that reportedly involved a plea from the U.S. president to his Ukrainian counterpart to investigate a political rival.

Asked how seriously he was taking the threat of impeachment by Congress, Trump told reporters on September 23 on arrival at the UN headquarters in New York: "Not at all seriously."

U.S. media have reported that an intelligence community whistle-blower had filed a complaint in August after becoming alarmed at Trump's alleged attempt to pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in a phone call.

On September 22, Trump confirmed he had raised the subject of former Vice President Joe Biden and his son in a July 25 call with Zelenskiy.

He said he had told Zelenskiy that "we don't want our people, like Vice President [Joe] Biden and his son," contributing to corruption already happening in Ukraine.

He denied pressuring Ukraine to investigate Biden, one of the leading Democratic contenders seeking to oppose Trump, a Republican, in next year's election.

Trump's admission about the phone call stoked calls for Democrats to launch impeachment proceedings in Congress.

"We had a perfect phone call," the president said on September 23. "Everybody knows it's just a Democrat witch-hunt." (AFP and Reuters)

16:28 23.9.2019

16:24 23.9.2019

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

13:34 23.9.2019

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