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Russia-Ukraine war: Europe urged to accept Russians fleeing military draft as border crossings surge – live | Ukraine

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Title: Russia-Ukraine war: Europe urged to accept Russians fleeing military draft as border crossings surge – live | Ukraine
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Russia-Ukraine war: Europe urged to accept Russians fleeing military draft as border crossings surge – live | Ukraine

Europe should open to fleeing Russians, says European Council president

Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, has urged Europe to show an “openness to those who don’t want to be instrumentalised by the Kremlin”, according to Politico.

The remarks came following Michel’s address at the United Nations general assembly in New York on Friday, and come ahead of a key meeting of EU ambassadors on Monday within the framework of the EU Integrated Political Crisis Response (IPCR), Politico reports.

In principle I think that … the European Union [should] host those who are in danger because of their political opinions. If in Russia people are in danger because of their political opinions, because they do not follow this crazy Kremlin decision to launch this war in Ukraine, we must take this into consideration.

He added: “I agree on the idea that we should very quickly cooperate and coordinate because this is a new fact — this partial mobilisation.”

Key events

The Lithuanian foreign minister, Gabrielius Landsbergis, said the country would not be granting asylum to Russians fleeing the country.

Russians should stay and fight. Against Putin,” he wrote on Twitter on Friday.

Lithuania will not be granting asylum to those who are simply running from responsibility. Russians should stay and fight. Against Putin.

— Gabrielius Landsbergis?? (@GLandsbergis) September 23, 2022

Number of people crossing Russia-Finland border doubles, says regional mayor

The number of border crossers from Russia into Finland has doubled in recent days compared to last week, Satu Sikanen, the regional mayor for south Karelia in Finland, told BBC News on Saturday.

Yesterday, Finland’s president and the ministerial committee proposed significant restrictions on issuing visas to Russian citizens and entry to the country, said Sikanen. The number of issued visas has already been decreased, she added.

“This is a serious situation of course for our region, but I want to underline we have strong border guards, we have strong defence forces and Finland is joining Nato so we are safe.

Europe should open to fleeing Russians, says European Council president

Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, has urged Europe to show an “openness to those who don’t want to be instrumentalised by the Kremlin”, according to Politico.

The remarks came following Michel’s address at the United Nations general assembly in New York on Friday, and come ahead of a key meeting of EU ambassadors on Monday within the framework of the EU Integrated Political Crisis Response (IPCR), Politico reports.

In principle I think that … the European Union [should] host those who are in danger because of their political opinions. If in Russia people are in danger because of their political opinions, because they do not follow this crazy Kremlin decision to launch this war in Ukraine, we must take this into consideration.

He added: “I agree on the idea that we should very quickly cooperate and coordinate because this is a new fact — this partial mobilisation.”

A campaign to repatriate the body of British aid worker Paul Urey has raised more than £8,000 on GoFundMe.

Urey, from Warrington, Cheshire, died after being captured by pro-Russia separatists in April along with another Briton, Dylan Healey. Urey’s daughter, 20-year-old Chelsea Coman, created the campaign and said the return of her father’s body would bring the family closure.

The two men were later charged with “mercenary activities” by the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DNR), but in July the Russian proxy authorities announced that Urey had died as a result of “illness and stress”. Healy was one of five Britons released from Russia and reunited with their families this week.

The body was handed to Ukraine in September with “possible signs of unspeakable torture”, according to the country’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba.

“As me and my sister is only 20 and 17 years of age and still in college, we have no source of income that could pay near enough that amount,” the campaign says.

Coman and her sister, Courtney, 17, were told by the Foreign Office they would need to pay nearly £10,000 in repatriation costs.

Coman, who found about her father’s death over the news, said:

He doesn’t deserve to be out there at the minute. It would set our mind at ease to be able to lay him to rest and know that he’s not in a different country still suffering even though he’s died. We would get closure.

Queue at Russian border stretches 10km as people flee

Hours after the Kremlin shocked Russia by announcing the first mobilisation of at least 300,000 troops since the second world war has led to a rush among men of military age to leave the country.

The line at the border between Russia and Georgia is approximately 10km long, according to the BBC, where people have reportedly been waiting more than 20 hours to cross.

Options to flee are limited, people fleeing previously told the Guardian. Earlier this week, four of the five EU countries bordering Russia announced they would no longer allow Russians to enter on tourist visas.

“I will be driving across the border tonight,” said a 29-year-old sergeant in the Russian reserves, Oleg, on Thursday. “I have no idea when I’ll step foot in Russia again,” he added, referring to the jail sentence Russian men face for avoiding the draft.

More details of overnight attacks are emerging from Ukraine.

Oleg Sinegubov, the head of the Kharkiv regional military administration, said Russian forces had shelled settlements near the Russian border.

In the Kupyan district, five people were injured from shelling, including two children, aged 10 and 17, he said.

Sinegubov warned residents against visiting forests due to a large number of mines and unexploded ammunition. “In the past day, the pyrotechnics of the state emergency service defused 578 explosive objects in the region,” he said via his Telegram channel on Saturday.

A 45-year-old man was injured from a mine while picking mushrooms in the Chuguyiv district, he said. A similar incident happed to a 24-year-old resident of Izium, he added.

Vladimir Putin has taken a more direct position in the strategic planning for the war in Ukraine in recent weeks, according to US officials, reports the New York Times.

The Russian president rejected requests from commanders to retreat from the southern city of Kherson and pull back across the Dnieper River, according to the Times.

While such a withdrawal would preserve Russian equipment and lives, it would be another public humiliation for Putin after Ukraine successfully reclaimed large portions of territory in the Kharkiv region earlier this month.

News of Putin’s more direct strategic involvement comes after the Kremlin began mobilising 300,000 militarily reservists to serve in Ukraine. Kherson is one of four Russian-occupied provinces in Ukraine holding “referendums” on joining the Russian Federation, which began on Friday morning.

Two civilians were killed on Friday in the Donetsk region, and three people were injured, according to Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of the Donetsk oblast.

“Currently, it is impossible to establish the exact number of victims in Mariupol and Volnovas,” he said via his Telegram channel on Saturday.

Russian authorities in the occupied regions of Zaporizhzhya and Kherson have allegedly started handing out draft notices and mobilising men of conscription age who “renounced Ukrainian citizenship and received passports of the Russian federation” according to Ukraine’s ministry of defence.

“Servicemen of the Russian occupation forces continue to commit illegal actions against the civilian population and engage in looting,” the ministry’s statement said on Saturday.

“According to available information, in Melitopol, the so-called ‘kadyrivtsi’ seized a dealer’s warehouse of agricultural machinery and are trying to sell off the property.”

Earlier, we reported on president Volodymyr Zelenskiy telling Ukrainians in occupied territory to hide from Russian mobilisation, avoid conscription letters, and get to Ukraine-held land.

Here are the latest photos to come out of Ukraine and elsewhere:

Relatives of Ukrainian prisoners of war attend a rally in Kyiv demanding their release from Russian captivity.
Relatives of Ukrainian prisoners of war attend a rally in Kyiv demanding their release from Russian captivity. Photograph: Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters
A coffin is seen at an unidentified makeshift grave at the Pishanske cemetery in Izium, Ukraine.
A coffin at an unidentified makeshift grave at the Pishanske cemetery in Izium, Ukraine. Photograph: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images
A woman walks by a destroyed building in Izium, Ukraine.
A woman walks by a destroyed building in Izium, Ukraine. Photograph: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images
Two boys cheer to passing vehicles from their mimicked checkpoint at the curve of a road in Chuhuiv, Kharkiv region.
Two boys cheer at passing vehicles from their mimicked checkpoint at the curve of a road in Chuhuiv, Kharkiv region. Photograph: Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images
A woman checks her mobile phone connection as communications are still cut in Izium, Ukraine.
A woman checks her mobile phone connection as communications are still cut in Izium, Ukraine. Photograph: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images
People from the frontline city of Kupiansk wait in a bus to evacuate in Shevchenkove, Kharkiv region.
People from the frontline city of Kupiansk wait in a bus to evacuate in Shevchenkove, Kharkiv region. Photograph: Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images



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