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Published 05/07/2024Published May 7, 2024last updated 05/07/2024last updated May 7, 2024Ukraine's intelligence agency says it has caught a network of Russian agents plotting to kill President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and others. Follow DW for more.
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Ukraine's security service, SBU, says it has arrested several Russian agents who were plotting to assassinate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other government officials.
The SBU said the Russian network was working within the state guard service.
Here's a look at the latest on Russia's war in Ukraine on Tuesday, May 7.
05/07/2024May 7, 2024
Ukraine's SBU says uncovers Russian assassination plot
Ukraine's SBU State Security Service says it has caught Russian agents within the Ukrainian state guard service who were plotting to kill President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other senior government officials.
"Counterintelligence and SBU investigators thwarted the FSB's (Russia's security service) plans to eliminate the president of Ukraine and other representatives of the top military and political leadership," the SBU said on Telegram.
The announcement comes a few days after Zelenskyy sacked Ilya Vityuk, the head of the SBU's cybersecurity department, amid allegations of corruption.
https://p.dw.com/p/4faIl
Skip next section Putin vows 'victory' for Russians at lavish inauguration05/07/2024May 7, 2024
Putin vows 'victory' for Russians at lavish inauguration
Russian President Vladimir Putin has told Russians at his inauguration that "we will win" despite the challenges facing the country as it continues with its all-out invasion of Ukraine.
In remarks made as he embarked on an unprecedented fifth term as president, Putin said, "We will pass through this difficult period with dignity and become even stronger."
He was apparently referring to the problems created by the sanctions packages the West has imposed on Russia for Moscow's invasion.
The ceremony at the Kremlin was boycotted by the United States and a number of other Western countries due to Russia's actions in Ukraine.
Putin, 71, won a landslide victory in March in elections that were considered neither free nor fair by most of the international community.
His most prominent opponent, Alexei Navalny, died suddenly in an Arctic penal colony a month earlier, while other leading critics and opposition figures are in jail or have been forced to flee abroad.
https://p.dw.com/p/4faOd