Jack the Ripper only known facial composite found in archives

The suspected face of notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper has finally been revealed after police made a chilling discovery while trawling through old archives.

While the true identity of the infamous murderer has never been discovered, the only known facial composite of the killer has now been shared.

Among dozens of artifacts, the face was found etched into the handle of a wooden walking stick, which was owned by the police officer who spent years attempting to catch him.

Scotland Yard Detective Frederick Abberline was removed from the case in 1889 after failing to find Jack the Ripper, who terrorized the streets of London’s East End.

The chilling image is the only reported facial composite of the killer, whose identity remains a mystery more than a century later.

An engraving of “Jack the Ripper.”
Getty Images

For years, the wooden cane artifact had been stored at the Police College in Bramshill, Hampshire, UK and was feared lost when the institution was shut down in 2015.

Thankfully, it was rediscovered by staff searching through memorabilia at the College of Policing’s headquarters in Ryton, West Midlands.

Now Jack the Ripper’s face has gone on display to highlight advancements in police technology to recruits.

A College of Policing spokesperson said two staff unearthed it when trawling through artifacts placed into storage following Bramshill’s closure.

“Finding this cane was an exciting moment for us,” the college’s content creator Antony Cash said.

An up-close view of the engraving depicting "Jack the Ripper."
An up-close view of the engraving depicting “Jack the Ripper.”
College of Policing

“Jack the Ripper is one of the biggest and most infamous murder cases in our history and his crimes were significant in paving the way for modern policing and forensics as it caused police to begin experimenting with and developing new techniques as they attempted to try and solve these murders, such as crime scene preservation, profiling and photography.

“This walking cane is such a fascinating artifact which represents such a historically significant time in policing.

“It’s amazing that we can put it out on display here in Ryton, alongside the original newspaper cuttings, so that our officers can see first-hand how far we’ve advanced in policing since then.’’

Jack the Ripper brutally butchered at least five women over three months in 1888.

Each victim’s throat was cut and body mutilated in a way that suggested the killer had some knowledge of human anatomy.

Half a kidney extracted from one victim was mailed to the police, along with a series of taunting notes from the purported killer calling himself “Jack the Ripper”.

Police made strenuous efforts to unmask and trap him, but to no avail.

Their failure to find the serial killer sparked public outrage, which resulted in the resignation of London’s police commissioner.

The cane was gifted to Detective Abberline after he was taken off the case.

He retired from the Metropolitan Police in 1892 after 30 years of service, and died in 1929 without ever knowing Jack the Ripper’s real identity.

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One dead, three injured in NYC shooting

One person was killed and three others injured when a gunman opened fire in The Bronx on Wednesday night, sources said.

The four victims were shot at Southern Boulevard and East Tremont Avenue in Crotona at around 6:30 p.m., according to police.

A man was killed and three other injured after a shooting in the Bronx.
Citizen

The 911 caller reported that the shooting happened in front of a chicken shop, though officials erected police tape outside a Gourmet Deli on the corner of the two major streets.

A man was pronounced dead on arrival. The other three victims are expected to survive, sources said.

Police have not disclosed information on the gunman. It was not immediately clear what sparked the shooting.

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Internal reports detail violence inside NYC shelters

The city’s homeless shelters are so out of control that terrified residents say they’d be safer on the subways — or even in prison.

City records obtained by The Post documented nearly two dozen incidents of violence and other outrageous behavior during one week in mid-September — the same period when a despondent migrant mom hanged herself in one of the taxpayer-funded facilities.

The horrors included bloody beatings, unprovoked attacks, vicious domestic abuse and meaningless fights — several of which sent victims for hospital treatment of their injuries.

“I’ve been screamed at, threatened,” said Dominic, 30, an ex-con who lives at the infamous Bellevue Men’s Shelter in Manhattan. “I did five years in Sing Sing and felt safer there than I do here. I feel safer on the subways.”

Homeless shelter residents say they’d be safer on the subways or in prison.
Paul Martinka

A fellow resident, 34-year-old Kenneth Foster, told The Post, “It’s like the zoo let the animals out of their cages.”

“Two nights ago, one guy showed me a knife … He was like, ‘F–k with me and I f–k with you,’ and I was like, ‘I ain’t f–king with you’ and we was cool, but that’s just how it is here,” he added.

“The only good thing about this place is the hospital’s next door, so if I get a knife in the back I can just walk to the ER.”

The Post used the city’s Freedom of Information Law to obtain 424 pages of official reports about 273 “critical incidents” that took place between Sept. 16 and 21.

On Sept. 18, in the middle of that period, a 32-year-old migrant woman was found by one of her two kids hanging from a shower rod by an electrical cord in the Hollis Family Shelter in Queens.

The incidents that were considered to pose a threat to “the safety and well-being of shelter residents and/or staff” include:

  • A man being attacked in his sleep and found with a bloody nose inside the shelter at the Holiday Inn Express at 153-70 South Conduit Avenue, Queens, around 11:50 p.m. on Sept. 17. The alleged attacker resisted arrest when cops arrived and was only subdued after being Tased twice.
  • A  woman said she was threatened with a knife by a fellow resident of the Women’s Center at 427 W. 52nd St. in Manhattan when a fight erupted during a fire drill there around 11 a.m. on Sept. 19. The woman who allegedly brandished the knife was arrested after acting “aggressive toward the staff and the officers” who responded.
  • Surveillance cameras caught two staffers fighting inside the shelter at 1851 Phelan Place in The Bronx, around 8:30 a.m. on Sept. 21. Staffers found a man who was bleeding from the right side of his head and said his assailant — who fled the scene — had threatened him with a knife before bashing him with a “wet floor” sign.
  • Staffers burst into a room at a shelter in The Bronx and found a woman holding her son as they were being beaten by her partner at around 5:50 p.m. on Sept. 16. The assailant ran away, leaving the woman with a swollen face and the boy with a bruised forehead.
  • Two residents at 316 Beach 65th Street in Far Rockaway, Queens, were arrested after a fight erupted around 12:15 a.m. on Sept. 20, when one man accused the other of urinating and defecating on the floor of their communal bathroom.

A man who lives in the Queens shelter where the resident was attacked in his sleep said he recalled the incident.

Vincent, 40, added that he also left the shelter last year after the same thing happened to him.

“I was sleeping and my roommate assaulted me. Nothing was done about it and I felt safer on the street,” he said. “I left because they weren’t helping me. I stayed out in the street for a year.”

Vincent complained that the facility was “understaffed” and that “there’s not enough security.”

On Sept. 18, a 32-year-old migrant woman was found by one of her two kids hanging from a shower rod by an electrical cord in the Hollis Family Shelter in Queens.

“Every f–king night EMS is here. It’s either a fight or people OD’ing,” he said.

A security guard at the shelter declined to comment or take a message for the person in charge.

“I don’t even know who management is here. I just started last week so I’m not familiar with a lot of people,” the guard said.

The chair of the city council’s General Welfare Committee, which oversees the Department of Homeless Services, told The Post the reports documented a “horrible situation.”

“It’s pretty consistent with what we’re hearing from folks, specifically people who are living on the streets: that the shelter system is not safe enough for them,” said Councilmember Diana Ayala (D-Upper Manhattan, The Bronx).

In a statement, the Department of Social Services defended its efforts to “provide adequate security across the shelter system,” saying that it “continues to strengthen our reporting mechanisms to capture any instances that may impact the well-being of our clients.”

The department added: “Over-simplistic and misleading assumptions about the shelter system based on a week of incident reports misrepresent the actual work and system improvements that are happening on the ground.”

Despite the department’s assertions, statistics show that violence and death in the shelters is becoming more common, not less.

NY1 recently reported that the number of shelter residents who died citywide increased 58% between 2019 and 2021, while records also showed a rise in the numbers of fights, sex offenses and drug overdoses in shelters for single adults.

The number of shelter residents who died increased 58% between 2019 and 2021.
Matthew McDermott

The Mayor’s Management Report from Sept. 8 also cited an unspecified “increase in fights/disputes as well as drug-related incidents, including overdoses, consistent with citywide and national trends” during the fiscal year that ended in June, compared to the same period in 2020-21.

Shelly Nortz, deputy executive director for policy at the Coalition for the Homeless, said the “best solution” would be providing people “a secure and private room of their own with prompt access to affordable permanent housing.”

“Overcrowding people in congregate settings for extended periods of time during a pandemic – often with shared bathrooms, little storage and unappetizing food – is bound to heighten tensions in local shelters,” she added.

If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts or are experiencing a mental health crisis and live in New York City, you can call 1-888-NYC-WELL for free and confidential crisis counseling. If you live outside the five boroughs, you can dial the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention hotline at 988 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.

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Pope Francis says ex-pope Benedict is ‘very sick’, asks for prayers

VATICAN CITY, Dec 28 – Former pope Benedict, 95, who in 2013 became the first pontiff in 600 years to step down, is “very sick,” his successor Pope Francis said on Wednesday.

“I would like to ask all of you for a special prayer for Pope Emeritus Benedict, who, in silence, is sustaining the Church,” Francis said in a surprise announcement in Italian at the end of his weekly general audience.

“Let us remember him. He is very sick, asking the Lord to console and sustain him in this witness of love for the Church, until the end,” Francis said, speaking in Italian.Advertisement · Scroll to continueReport an ad

Pope Francis (right) greets former Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI during a meeting on Aug. 27, 2022 in Vatican City.
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There was no immediate comment from the Vatican on the state of Benedict’s health. Phone calls to the former pope’s residence in the Vatican were not answered.

Until a few weeks ago, those who had seen Benedict said his body was very frail but his mind was still sharp.

One of the latest known photographs of Benedict was taken on Dec. 1, when he met the winners of a prize for theologians named after him. He was seated and looked exceptionally weak.

There was no immediate comment from the Vatican on Pope Benedict’s health.
via Reuters

Since his resignation Benedict has been living in a former convent inside the Vatican gardens, with his secretary, Archbishop Georg Ganswein, and a few other aides and medical staff.

Benedict announced his intention to resign on Feb. 11, 2013, shocking a meeting of cardinals. He said he no longer had the physical and mental strength to run the Church.

He formally stepped down on Feb. 28 that year, moving temporarily to the papal summer residence south of Rome while cardinals from around the world came to Rome to choose his successor.

Francis, the first pope from Latin America, was elected to succeed him on March 13, 2013.

Pope Francis leaves at the end of the weekly general audience at the Vatican, on Dec. 28, 2022.

Pope Francis arrives for the weekly general audience in Paul VI hall at the Vatican on Dec. 28, 2022.


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People attend the the weekly general audience held by Pope Francis at the Vatican on Dec. 28, 2022.


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While Francis has often praised the former pope, saying it was like having a grandfather in a home, the presence of two men dressed in white in the Vatican was at times troublesome.

Conservatives looked to the former pope as their standard bearer and some ultra-traditionalists even refused to acknowledge Francis as a legitimate pontiff.

Benedict, the first German pope in 1,000 years, was elected on April 19, 2005 to succeed the widely popular Pope John Paul II, who reigned for 27 years.

Cardinals chose him from among their number seeking continuity and what one called “a safe pair of hands”.

For nearly 25 years, as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he was the powerful head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office, then known as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF).

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Trump didn’t know White House schedule was public: ex aide

Former President Donald Trump spent nearly four years in the White House before learning his daily schedule was made public — at which point he ordered a stripped down version of the document, a former aide testified.

The surprising revelation was shared by former White House deputy press secretary Judd Deere in his testimony to the House Jan. 6 committee that was made public on Tuesday.

“Every evening we prepared and released the daily guidance for the following day of the president’s public schedule. Beginning sometime around mid to late December, the president discovered that, for the first time, my understanding, that we released a public schedule of his to the public,” Deere told the congressional panel investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. 

“He wanted to change the way we did that,” the former president’s communications aide added. 

Donald Trump spent nearly four years in the White House before learning his daily schedule was made public.
EPA

The White House daily schedule notably changed around Jan. 5, 2021, with details of Trump’s daily comings and goings at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave omitted and replaced with “boilerplate” language saying that the president would have “many calls and have many meetings.” 

“And so what became the new version of the public schedule was basically a couple of sentences about what his day would consist of, rather than specific times and titles of events and an outline form,” Deere explained. 

The guidance drafted by Deere for Jan. 6 and approved by White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany read: “President Trump will work from early in the morning until late in the evening. He will make many calls and have many meetings. The President will depart for the Ellipse at 10:50am to deliver remarks at the Save America Rally.”

The White House daily schedule notably changed around Jan. 5, 2021.
REUTERS

“The first two sentences in this are the standard boilerplate language that we began using every day. And the third sentence is the item that’s specific to the January 5 guidance for January 6,” Deere told the House select committee.

 The House panel investigating the storming of the Capitol and the 76-year-old former president’s attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election released its final report last week and found that Trump engaged in a criminal “multi-part conspiracy” in an attempt to remain commander-in-chief.

The panel referred four criminal charges to the Department of Justice, accusing Trump of insurrection, conspiracy to defraud the US, and obstruction of an act of Congress.

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Kansas theater director found dead after sex abuse allegations

A longtime children’s theater director in Kansas City was found dead on Christmas Eve – days after he resigned amid allegations of sexual abuse.

Jeff Church, 63, who had led The Coterie Theatre for over 30 years, was found dead at his home on Saturday afternoon, the Kansas City Star reported.

The cause of death has not been released.

On Thursday, KKFI 90.1 radio host Mark Manning accused Church on Facebook of assaulting him in 1991 when he was 27.

He came forward by sharing a since-deleted video by Deshawn Young, a Florida-based actor who previously lived in Kansas City, in which he described an assault.

“I am sharing this video testimonial from my friend Dashawn Young. Please be careful. This is very difficult to watch and hear,” Manning wrote.

Mark Manning, a Kansas City radio host, said he was sexually abused in 1991 at age 27.
Facebook/Mark Manning

“My emotional muscle memory was triggered in a way I did not fully expect. I lost it. I became so emotional that I wondered if I could even do my radio show,” he continued.

Manning went on to recount how Church allegedly assaulted him at the director’s home during a party after the production of “Dinosaurs.”

“I found myself pushed back on the bed, his mouth was on my body parts, my clothing seemed to disappear, and very quickly the director had penetrated me,” he wrote.

“It felt like my body was being used. How did this happen?” Manning said, adding that he had heard of many similar accounts of sexual abuse at the hands of the theater honcho.

Actor Deshawn Young posted a since-deleted video on Facebook alleging the abuse he suffered at the hands of The Coterie Theatre Director Jeff Church.
Instagram/@thatsit.thatsme
Young’s post prompted others to speak out about their experiences with the late director.
Instagram/@thatsit.thatsme

Manning told The Star that the sickening acts had been “going on for over 30 years.”

“Most of these people were young theater artists trying to find their way through their theatrical career and a person in a very great authority position of directing them and deciding who gets paid and who gets the job [was] interfering in people’s lives,” he told the paper.

He said that after he shared the lengthy post, three other people reached out to him to share their similar experiences.

On Friday, the Kansas City Pitch first published more shocking allegations against Church from more than a dozen people.

KC Comeaux, an actor who worked for Church in his early 20s, also spoke out on Facebook.

“I was sexually assaulted by Jeff Church. Many of you in Kansas City had no idea of this man’s behavior. Many of you had heard rumors. But I’m here to tell you that he is a predator,” he wrote.

“He has groomed, abused, and assaulted, numerous young men over the course of 30+ years. Myself included,” Comeaux wrote. “…this man, who has used his position of power as an Artistic Director of a renowned children’s theatre, for manipulation and sex exploitation.”

On Saturday afternoon, the theater announced that it had accepted Church’s resignation and planned to investigate the multiple allegations.

“We want you to know that we are taking these allegations extremely seriously and will move forward with the investigation immediately, despite the impending holidays,” it said in a statement.

Instagram/thecoterietheatre

Manning called the lurid matter a “tragedy for our community.”

“I don’t want to see a whole theater company be destroyed because of one person and the horrible things that they did over a long period of time to a lot of different people, both men and women,” he told the paper.

Church’s death comes a month after the Coterie’s executive director, Joette Pelster, died in her sleep at age 71 — a week after she announced her intentions to retire after almost 30 years.

 “Her achievements were many and her impact on the performing arts in Kansas City was immense,” theater rep David Golston told The Star last month.

It has not been confirmed whether others at the theater had known about the allegations against Church, the paper noted.

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California woman Destiny Abdrazack dead in house fire sparked by Christmas tree

A woman in California died early Christmas morning in a heartbreaking house fire sparked by an artificial Christmas tree.

Destiny Abdrazack, 22, was celebrating Christmas Eve with her fiancé’s family in their North Highlands home when an electrical short from the tree ignited a roaring fire around 2 a.m. Sunday, local NBC affiliate KCRA3 reported.

Abdrazack yelled that there were flames, awakening the five others in the house, which didn’t have working smoke alarms, according to her fiancé’s father Ernest Isom.

“She was the one who yelled fire, and that’s the sad part,” Isom told KCRA3 of the woman who was to be his future daughter-in-law. “She saved our lives.”

Abdrazack was pulled out of the burning building by firefighters, but later died at an area hospital.

The five others in the house — Isom, his wife and son and two other adults — survived.

Isom said the family had fallen asleep without turning off the Christmas tree lights.

“Unfortunately, they wanted to keep the lights on until the last minute and we all happened to fall asleep and we had an instant, seconds to get out,” he told the station. “It was fast, and that’s how quick it went. I’m talking minutes.”

Two family dogs also died in the fire and the house was destroyed.

Neighbors told the local news station that they woke up to a loud sound and looked out the window to see flames shooting out of the home.

“You could see the flickering light on the tree and that’s kind of like the telltale sign of a fire,” Richard Byers said.

He ran out of his house and grabbed a fire extinguisher while another neighbor used a garden house to try to put out the inferno to no avail.

“The fire just came right back,” Byers said. “It was too intense, moving too fast.”

His wife, Brandy Byers said when they came out of their home three doors down they saw Isom’s family standing outside shouting for help.

“They were screaming, ‘Destiny! There’s someone inside! There’s someone inside!” Brandy Byers told KCRA3. “There [was] nothing any of us could do.”

Firefighters rescued Abdrazack from the living room of the home and she was taken to an area hospital in critical condition.

Her family confirmed her death the next day and set up a GoFundMe to raise money to cover her hospital and funeral expenses.

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Biden admin pushed to ban Twitter users for COVID ‘disinformation’

The Biden White House pressured Twitter to both “elevate” and “suppress” purported COVID-19 “misinformation” — but ended up “censoring info that was true but inconvenient” to policy makers, according to the latest edition of the “Twitter files” revealed Monday.

The coercion campaign during the pandemic began with the Trump administration, but was stepped up under Biden, whose administration was focused on the removal of “anti-vaxxer accounts,” according to Free Press reporter David Zweig.

For example, in June 2021, hours after Biden publicly raged that social media companies were “killing people” for allowing purported vaccine misinformation to propagate, former New York Times reporter and noted vaccine doubter Alex Berenson was banned from the site.

Berenson responded by suing Twitter, forcing the release of internal communications that showed the White House had pressured the company to squash his account.

“It doesn’t stop infection. Or transmission. Don’t think of it as a vaccine,” Berenson had tweeted.

“Think of it — at best — as a therapeutic with a limited window of efficacy and terrible side effect profile that must be dosed IN ADVANCE OF ILLNESS,” he also wrote.

As recently as this month, Lauren Culbertson, Twitter’s Head of US Public Policy released a summary of meetings with the White House detailing its alleged pressure campaign, according to Zweig.

Former New York Times reporter and noted vaccine doubter Alex Berenson was banned from Twitter in June of 2021.

Culbertson said in her notes that the administration was “very angry” that Twitter had not taken more aggressive action in silencing vaccine critics and wanted the company to do more, files showed.

Among those whom Twitter did clamp down on was Dr. Martin Kulldorff, an epidemiologist at Harvard Medical School

Kulldorff had tweeted in March 2021 that both children and adults who had been previously infected with COVID did not need the vaccine. That was flagged by the site as “misleading” — even though it was in line with the vaccine policies of “numerous other countries,” Zweig wrote.

That incident was just the icing on the cake, according to the journalist, who uncovered “countless instances of tweets labeled as ‘misleading’ or taken down entirely, sometimes triggering account suspensions, simply because they veered from CDC guidance or differed from establishment views.”

The latest revelations came after previous “Twitter Files” found the FBI and CIA had meddled in the company, and prompted it to bow to political pressure, including convincing Twitter to censor The Post’s exposé on how Hunter Biden used his father’s name to secure questionable business arrangements overseas in the weeks before the 2020 election.

This is a developing story



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South Korea scrambles jets as North Korean drones intrude

South Korea scrambled warplanes and attack helicopters and fired warning shots on Monday after North Korean drones violated its airspace, the South Korean military said.

South Korea tracked the drones crossing from North Korea over what is known as the Military Demarcation Line between the two countries after detecting them in the skies of the western city of Gimpo at around 10:25 am, the military said.

The drones are the first confirmed to have come from the isolated neighbour since 2017, when a North Korean drone believed to be on a spy mission crashed and was found on a mountain near the border.

In 2014, a North Korean drone was also discovered on a South Korean border island.

At least one drone came down farther and flew over South Korea’s capital Seoul in the latest intrusion, News1 agency reported, citing an unnamed military official.

The military said it tried to shoot down the drones, but it was not clear if it was successful, and whether any of them were armed.

South Korea’s transport ministry said earlier that flights departing from its Incheon and Gimpo airports were suspended following a request from the military.

The suspension began at 1:08 p.m. at Gimpo and at 1:22 pm at Incheon and lasted for about an hour before flight departures resumed at around 2:10 pm, a ministry official told Reuters.

While scrambling to counter the drones, a South Korean KA-1 light attack aircraft crashed shortly after departing its Wonju base in the country’s east, a defense ministry official said. Its two pilots were able to escape before the crash and are now in the hospital.

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Russian missiles rain down on Ukraine towns on Christmas day

Russian forces bombarded scores of towns in Ukraine on Christmas Day as Russian President Vladimir Putin said he was open to negotiations, a stance Washington has dismissed as posturing because of continued Russian attacks.

Russia on Sunday launched more than 10 rocket attacks on the Kupiansk district in the Kharkiv region, shelled more than 25 towns along the Kupiansk-Lyman frontline, and in Zaporizhzhia hit nearly 20 towns, said Ukraine’s top military command.

Russia’s defense ministry said on Sunday that it had killed about 60 Ukrainian servicemen the previous day along the Kupiansk-Lyman line of contact and destroyed numerous pieces of Ukrainian military equipment.

Reuters was not able to independently verify the reports.

Putin’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine – which Moscow calls a “special military operation” – has triggered the biggest European conflict since World War Two and confrontation between Moscow and the West since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

Despite Putin’s latest offer to negotiate, there is no end in sight to the 10-month conflict.

A Ukrainian rocket is launched in response to Russia’s latest attack on Christmas day.
REUTERS

“We are ready to negotiate with everyone involved about acceptable solutions, but that is up to them – we are not the ones refusing to negotiate, they are,” Putin told Rossiya 1 state television in an interview broadcast on Sunday.

An adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Putin needed to return to reality and acknowledge it was Russia that did not want talks.

“Russia single-handedly attacked Ukraine and is killing citizens,” the adviser, Mykhailo Podolyak, tweeted. “Russia doesn’t want negotiations, but tries to avoid responsibility.”

Russian attacks on power stations have left millions without electricity, and Zelensky said Moscow would aim to make the last few days of 2022 dark and difficult.

“Russia has lost everything it could this year. … I know darkness will not prevent us from leading the occupiers to new defeats. But we have to be ready for any scenario,” he said in an evening video address on Christmas Day.

Ukraine has traditionally not celebrated Christmas on Dec. 25, but Jan. 7, the same as Russia. However, this year some Orthodox Ukrainians decided to celebrate the holiday on Dec. 25 and Ukrainian officials, starting with Zelensky and Ukraine’s prime minister, issued Christmas wishes on Sunday.

Ukrainian servicemen ride in a tank on Dec. 25.
REUTERS

The Kremlin says it will fight until all its territorial aims are achieved, while Kyiv says it will not rest until every Russian soldier is ejected from the country.

Asked if the geopolitical conflict with the West was approaching a dangerous level, Putin on Sunday said: “I don’t think it’s so dangerous.”

Kyiv and the West say Putin has no justification for what they cast as an imperial-style war of occupation.

BELARUS MISSILES

Russian-supplied Iskander tactical missile systems, which are capable of carrying nuclear warheads, and S-400 air defense systems have been deployed to Belarus and are prepared to perform their intended tasks, a senior Belarusian defense ministry official said on Sunday.

“Our servicemen, crews have fully completed their training in the joint combat training centres of the armed forces of the Russian Federation and the Republic of Belarus,” Leonid Kasinsky, head of the Main Directorate of Ideology at the ministry, said in a video posted on the Telegram messaging app.

“These types of weapons (Iskander and S-400 systems) are on combat duty today and they are fully prepared to perform tasks for their intended purpose,” Kasinsky added.

It is not clear how many of the Iskander systems have been deployed to Belarus after Putin said in June that Moscow would supply Minsk with them and the air defense systems.

The news follows Putin’s visit to Minsk on Dec. 19 amid fears in Kyiv he would pressure Belarus to join a fresh ground offensive and open a new front in his faltering invasion.

Russian forces used Belarus as a launch pad for their abortive attack on the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, in February, and there has been a growing flurry of Russian and Belarusian military activity in recent months.

The Iskander-M, a mobile guided missile system code named “SS-26 Stone” by NATO, replaced the Soviet-era “Scud”. The guided missiles have a range of up to 300 miles and can carry conventional or nuclear warheads.

That range reaches deep into neighbours of Belarus: Ukraine and NATO member Poland, which has very strained relations with Minsk.

The S-400 system is a Russian mobile, surface-to-air missile (SAM) interception system capable of engaging aircraft, UAVs, cruise missiles, and has a terminal ballistic missile defense capability.

The interior of an apartment can be seen after a Russian missile strike destroyed part of a building on Christmas day.
REUTERS

Blasts were heard at Russia’s Engels air base, hundreds of miles from the Ukraine frontlines, Ukrainian and Russian media reported on Monday.

Russia’s governor of Saratov region, home to the Engels air-base, said law enforcement agencies were checking information about “an incident at a military facility”.

“There were no emergencies in residential areas of the (Engels) city,” Roman Busargin, the governor of the region, said on the Telegram messaging app. “Civil infrastructure facilities were not damaged.”

The air base, near the city of Saratov, about 450 miles southeast of Moscow, was hit on Dec. 5 in what Russia said were Ukrainian drone attacks on two Russian air bases that day. The strikes dealt Moscow a major reputational blow and raised questions about why its defenses failed, analysts said.

Ukraine has never publicly claimed responsibility for attacks inside Russia, but has said, however, that such incidents are “karma” for Russia’s invasion.

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