As the war in Ukraine marks 200 days, the country has reclaimed broad swaths of the south and east in a long-anticipated counteroffensive that has dealt a heavy blow to Russia.
USAID Administrator Samantha Power told reporters that such moves will increase international and local trust in the government's intentions.
“Assistance alone would not put an end to this country's woes,” Power said. “I stressed to the Sri Lankan president in my meeting earlier today that political reforms and political accountability must go hand in hand with economic reforms and economic accountability.”
She said that international investor confidence will increase as the government tackles corruption and proceeds with long sought governance reforms. "As citizens see the government visibly following through on the commitment to bring about meaningful change, that in turn increases societal support for the tough economic reforms ahead,” she said.
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The counterattack began in the final days of August and at first focused on the southern region of Kherson, which was swept by Russian forces in the opening days of the invasion. But just as Moscow redirected attention and troops there, Ukraine launched another, highly effective offensive in the northeastern region of Kharkiv.
Facing the prospect of a large group of its forces becoming surrounded, Moscow ordered a troop pullback from Kharkiv, in a dramatic change of the state of play that posed the biggest challenge to the Kremlin since it launched the invasion Feb. 24.
A man who stalked CSI Miami actress Eva LaRue for over a decade, threatening to rape and kill both her and her daughter was sentenced to prison last week after the FBI caught him through DNA he left on fast food straw.
James David Rogers, 58, of Heath, Ohio, was sentenced on Thursday to 40 months in federal prison, according to a Department of Justice press release.
Russia’s military acknowledged on Saturday that it was withdrawing from Kupyansk and Izyum, saying it was regrouping forces to defend Donetsk, which Moscow sent irregular troops to seize in 2014.
Ukrainian troops took most of Kupyansk on Saturday, but the situation in Izyum couldn't be immediately determined. Despite Russia saying it was withdrawing, there was no evidence Ukrainian forces had penetrated to the center of the city, indicating that some Russian forces may be trapped there and fighting.
Since launching an offensive last week, Ukraine has made rapid-fire gains, taking back in a matter of days swaths of territory in the country’s east that Russians seized over the course of months.
“These days, the Russian army is showing its best side—its back,” said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a statement on his Telegram channel.
Ukraine’s flushing out of Russian forces from the western bank of the Oskil River relieves the pressure on the cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk to the south. The Ukrainian mayor of Lyman to the northeast of Slovyansk said late Saturday that Russia still held the city but that Ukrainian troops were fighting on the outskirts.
Russia had for months been advancing in Ukraine’s east after launching its invasion. After Ukraine repelled Russian forces from Kyiv, the capital, in spring, Moscow began leveling cities in the east with waves of artillery and air power. Russian troops then marched into the cities, sometimes fighting Ukrainian forces street by street to secure control.
But the grinding offensive against dogged Ukrainian resistance exhausted Russian troops. In July, Ukraine began striking Russian ammunition depots and command posts with long-range missiles provided by the U.S. Russia moved thousands of troops to the south of Ukraine as Kyiv touted an offensive there, leaving them stretched on the eastern front.
From March 2007 to June 2015, Rogers mailed about 37 handwritten and typed letters to LaRue's California home in which he threatened both LaRue and her daughter, it was revealed.
LaRue, 55, an actress also known for her longtime role on 'All My Children,' was midway through her second full season on 'CSI: Miami' when the first letter showed up at her house in 2007. Many more followed over the next 12 years.
'I am going to f**king stalk you until the day you die,' said one, according to a 2019 federal indictment of Rogers.
'There will be no place on this earth that I ... (can't) find you. I am going to rape you,' another letter read, as the stalker also threatened to rape and impregnate LaRue's daughter.
Each letter was signed with the name 'Freddie Krueger,' the fictional serial killer from the horror film series 'A Nightmare on Elm Street.'
Over the years, the FBI collected DNA from the envelopes but were not able to identify the culprit until 2019 with the help of genetic genealogy - the same method used to catch the Golden State Killer the previous year.
Ukraine's military says its forces have retaken over 3,000 sq km (1,158 sq miles) during a rapid counter-offensive in eastern Ukraine.
The remarkable advance, if confirmed, means Kyiv's forces have tripled their stated gains in little over 48 hours.
On Thursday evening, President Zelensky put the figure at 1,000 sq km, and then 2,000 sq km on Saturday evening.
The BBC cannot verify the Ukrainian figures, and journalists have been denied access to the frontlines.
On Saturday, the eastern counter-attack saw Ukrainian troops enter the vital Russian-held supply towns of Izyum and Kupiansk.
But UK defence officials have warned that fighting has continued outside those towns. And officials in Kyiv said Ukrainian forces were still fighting to gain control of a number of settlements around Izyum.
Russia's defence ministry confirmed its forces' retreat from Izyum itself and Kupiansk, which it said would allow its forces "to regroup" in territory held by Moscow-backed separatists.
The Russian ministry also confirmed the withdrawal of troops from a third key town, Balaklyia, in order to "bolster efforts" on the Donetsk front. Ukrainian forces entered the town on Friday.
At the same time, the head of the Russia-installed administration in the Kharkiv region recommended that its people evacuate to Russia "to save lives".
- Shock and joy in Ukraine's liberated villages
Unverified footage on social media appeared to show long queues of traffic building up at border crossings. The governor of the Belgorod border region in Russia, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said "thousands" of people had crossed into the country.
Mr Gladkov said on Saturday that mobile catering, heating, and medical assistance would be available to people fleeing the Ukrainian advance.
Meanwhile, Gen Valerii Zaluzhnyi, commander of Ukraine's military, said his forces had advanced to within 50km (31 miles) of the Russian border.
The pace of the counter-attack has caught the Russians off guard, and Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov - a staunch supporter of President Vladimir Putin - appeared to question the Russian retreat.
In a message posted to Telegram, Mr Kadyrov said if there was not a change in Russian fortunes, he would be forced to question the country's leadership to explain the situation.
But Russians still hold around a fifth of the country, and few imagine a swift end to the war. And Mr Kadyrov himself insisted "Russia will win" and "Nato weapons" would be "crushed".
In an interview with the Financial Times, Ukraine's defence minister Oleksii Reznikov hailed his troops, but warned of the potential for a Russian counter-attack.
"A counter-offensive liberates territory and after that you have to control it and be ready to defend it," Mr Reznikov said. "Of course, we have to be worried, this war has worried us for years."
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