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The list of damaged cultural sites during the Russian invasion of Ukraine is a list of cultural sites in Ukraine that have been verified by United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as damaged and/or destroyed during the Russian invasion of Ukraine (that started on 24 February 2022).
Ukraine estimates Russian vehicle losses in that area alone to be upwards of 2,000 in recent months, which includes tanks and armoured personnel carriers. “The situation of Ukrainian Defense ...
Russian forces are in places 4.5 km (2.8 miles) from Dnipropetrovsk Oblast. [299] Russian forces claimed to have retook the towns of Nikolskiy [300] and Novaya Sorochina north and northwest of Sudzha. [301] Geo-located footage showed that Russian forces captured the town of Skudne, north of Velyka Novosilka. [302]
The site was immediately listed as endangered because of the 2022 Russian invasion, the sites of Kyiv and Lviv were added to the endangered list as well later in the same year. [5] Three sites are transnational: the Wooden Tserkvas are shared with Poland, the Struve Geodetic Arc is shared with nine countries, and the Ancient and Primeval Beech ...
Ukraine’s authorities announced on 20 March last year that Russian troops had bombed an art school where about 400 people were sheltering. The city’s administration said many of those ...
[173] [174] In the morning of 10 September, Ukrainian soldiers posted pictures of the Ukrainian flag being raised in front of the town hall. [175] Also on 10 September, Izium, a central command post of the Russians in the region, fell to Ukrainian forces, "with thousands of Russian soldiers abandoning ammunition stockpiles and equipment as they ...
300,000+ active personnel in Ukraine [9] In June 2024: 700,000 active personnel in the area [10] Pre-invasion total: 196,600 military [11] 102,000 paramilitary [11] July 2022 total: up to 700,000 [12] September 2023 total: over 800,000 [13] Casualties and losses; Reports vary widely, see § Casualties for details.
On 10 August, Russian authorities introduced a "counter-terrorist operation" regime in Kursk, Belgorod and Bryansk oblasts. [399] [400] By the end of the first week, the Ukrainian military said it had captured 1,000 km 2 (390 sq mi) of Russian territory, while Russian authorities acknowledged that Ukraine had captured 28 settlements. [401]