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In a video posted on social media early Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky denied that he ordered the military to stand down. We will not surrender our weapons. We will defend our state.

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The State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate of Ukraine said on Sunday that Russian bombs struck a radioactive waste burial facility.

The organization wrote in a post on its official Facebook page. The missiles hit the radioactive waste disposal site of the Kyiv branch of the State Specialized enterprise because of the mass bombing of Kyiv.

There was no threat of radiation to people outside of the protection zone surrounding the burial site, according to the organization.

The agency said that the automated radiation monitoring system failed, but the missiles had been caught by the cameras.

As soon as the bombing is over, portable devices will be used to assess the extent of the radiation. The State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate did not respond to the request for comment.

A plume of smoke and flames is seen in the distance.
A burning oil depot that was reportedly hit by shelling near the military airbase Vasylkiv in Ukraine. (Maksim Levin/Reuters)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said it was a difficult night after a Russian strike.

The country's second-largest city was attacked overnight. Russian troops are accused of blowing up a natural gas line.

An oil depot in Vasylkiv was set ablaze after a missile strike. People were warned to stay indoors and windows were shut after the explosion. The transmission of natural gas was continuing despite the explosion of the Kharkiv pipeline, according to the Gas Transmission System Operator of Ukraine. One of the main transmission routes for gas from Russia to Europe is through Ukraine.

More than 200 Ukrainian civilians have been killed by the Russian invasion, according to a defense official. Russian President Vladimir Putin said that his country's nuclear arsenal had been put on alert in response to sanctions. Putin said on Sunday that NATO countries were making aggressive statements against them. He said that he had ordered the Kremlin's nuclear deterrence on a special regime of duty.

  • The leader of the country has released a number of videos on social media to assure his citizens that he has no plans to leave the country. Zelensky's video was posted on Saturday. Zelensky spoke outside Gorodetsky House, a building next to the presidential office. Don't believe fake news. I'm here. We will not surrender our weapons. We will defend our country. He said that our weapons are our strength. Our country. Our children. We will protect them all.

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  • The streets of central Kyiv were almost completely empty on Sunday, with residents ordered to stay in shelters as Russian forces continued to shell the city's outskirts. On the fourth day of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the capital was still in the hands of the government, with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy standing up for his people. A heavy guard of black-clad police armed with assault rifles watched over hundreds of stranded passengers at the main railway station in Kyiv.

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  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday that a Ukrainian delegation would meet with a Russian delegation near the Ukrainian-Belarusian border for peace talks without preconditions. Russia's advance on Kyiv has stopped about 20 miles.

  • White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said on Sunday that the order to put Russian nuclear forces on high alert was part of a pattern of threats by Moscow. The United States is willing to give more assistance to Ukraine.

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  • Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a televised statement on Sunday that he was ordering Russia's nuclear deterrent forces on alert, as he continues his unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. Subscri.

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  • The secretary-general of the United Nations opened the most recent meeting of Earth's leaders with a gloomy assessment of the planet's state of affairs. The message to the U.N. General Assembly by the UN Secretary-General is even more relevant with the Russian military invasion of Ukraine. The anti-democratic trend has seen strongmen, some elected, push their nations toward dictatorship and ignore once-solid democratic norms.

  • Despite the arrests of hundreds of protesters each day, Russian anti-war activists took to the streets again on Sunday to protest Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The demonstrators held pickets and marched in city centers, chanting "No to war!" as President Putin ordered Russian nuclear deterrent to be put on high alert. Protests against the invasion started in Russia on Thursday and have continued ever since, even as Russian police have moved swiftly to crack down on the rallies and detain protesters.

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  • The Russian health ministry has compiled lists of medical professionals to be deployed, according to a document sent to the UK.

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  • As Europe faces the most brutal conflict on the continent since World War II, it is clear that the impact from Russian President Vladimir Putin's war will not be contained within Ukraine's borders. Margaret Brennan talks with the former U.S. envoy to Ukraine about the limits of diplomacy and the strength of the Western alliance.