Twist As Russian General Is Gunned Down In Ukraine

A Russian General identified as Andrei Sukhovetsky who was among the troops fighting in Ukraine, has been shot dead, Africa Today News, New York had gathered.

Before his death, the deceased was the commanding general of the Russian 7th Airborne Division and a deputy commander of the 41st Combined Arms Army.

President Vladimir Putin has officially confirmed that a general had been killed in the war.

Sukhovetsky was a respected paratrooper, practised in missions in ‘hostile territory’, and reportedly had been decorated for his role in the annexation of Crimea.

Ukrainian outlet, Fakti, reported that Sukhovetsky had been in his latest role since October 2021 and had been based in Novosibirsk.

Read Also: Ukraine: You Will Pay For Your Actions – U.S Threatens Putin

Africa Today News, New York gathered that Sukhovetsky had previously commanded the 7th Airborne Assault Division in Novorossiysk for three years.

According to state-run RIA Novosti, Moscow said that 498 Russian soldiers had died and another 1,597 had been wounded since the beginning of the war.

Kyiv has claimed that the Russian death toll is at least ten times higher.

Moscow also said that more than 2,870 Ukrainian soldiers and ‘nationalists’ had been killed and about 3,700 wounded.

In a defiant televised address on Thursday morning, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Russia ‘will pay back the full price for everything that you did to us, to our country and to every Ukrainian.’

‘We will rebuild every house, every street, every city,’ he stated.

Meanwhile, Putin on Thursday pledged no let-up in his invasion of Ukraine even as the warring sides met for ceasefire talks and Kyiv appealed for relief supplies to reach shattered cities.

‘Russia intends to continue the uncompromising fight against militants of nationalist armed groups,’ Putin said, according to a Kremlin account of a call with French President Emmanuel Macron.

Ukraine on the other hand have continued to insist that corridors for medical and other supplies were the bare minimum it expected, as negotiators arrived for the talks at an undisclosed location on the Belarus-Poland border.

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK

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