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EU agrees fresh sanctions on Russia

Russia launches another major missile attack on Ukraine


By AP
Published : 16 Dec 2022 08:47 PM | Updated : 17 Dec 2022 06:01 PM

Russian forces launched at least 60 missile strikes across Ukraine on Friday, officials said, reporting explosions in at least four cities. At least two people were killed when a residential building was hit in central Ukraine, while electricity and water services were interrupted in the two largest cities, Kyiv and Kharkiv. Thousands rushed to subway stations to seek shelter deep underground.

Thudding blasts and gunfire from air-defense systems echoed across the country as authorities on social media reported explosions and missile strikes in Kyiv, the capital, southern Kryvyi Rih, southeastern Zaporizhzhia and northeastern Kharkiv. Air raid alarms sounded across the country, warning of a new barrage of the Russian strikes that have occurred intermittently since mid-October.

AFP adds from Brussels: The EU agreed a fresh round of sanctions on Russia over the war in Ukraine on Thursday, after complaints from hawkish eastern European leaders that some countries were trying to water them down.

The bloc's executive arm last week proposed a ninth round of sanctions on Moscow. They included blacklisting "almost 200" individuals and entities, targeting three banks, curbing mining investments and banning more Russian TV channels.

In the face of Russian strikes on Ukraine, the EU also looked to impose a ban on supplying drone engines to Russia and Iran, the latter of which has supplied warhead-equipped drones used in Moscow's attacks.

Approval of the package was held up after coastal countries including Belgium and the Netherlands asked for exemptions on previous sanctions targeting Russian fertiliser producers, which Poland and Lithuania said were unacceptable.

Officials said a compromise deal was reached on the sidelines of an EU leaders summit in Brussels and that the sanctions would be formally confirmed on Friday.

"Ambassadors agreed in principle on a sanctions package against Russia as part of the EU's ongoing support for Ukraine," the EU's Czech presidency tweeted.

Diplomats said that after the wrangling some exemptions for "food security and fertilizers" had been passed as part of the agreement.

Ahead of the deal, Ukraine's top diplomat slammed efforts to roll back any sanctions already in place on Moscow.

"Attempts to allow Russian oligarchs and companies to derogate from the already imposed EU sanctions deal a blow to the entire sanctions regime," Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tweeted.

"We strongly oppose them and thank EU members who do so too."

The EU has already imposed eight waves of unprecedented sanctions on Russia since it launched the full-scale invasion in February, including targeting its key oil exports.

But diplomats have warned that the bloc is increasingly running out of ways to hurt the Russian economy as the war drags on towards its 10th month.

The bloc has shied away from targeting gas supplies from Russia for fear of further pushing up energy prices. It has also steered clear of sectors important to individual member states, such as diamonds.

The EU, along with its partners in the G7, introduced measures last week aimed at capping the price of Russian oil sold on the world market, in a bid to limit funds for Moscow's war machine. The EU's ban on seaborne crude imports from Russia also came into force, after initially being agreed early this year.

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