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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has thanked the EU for banning nearly all oil from Russia .
In a video address on Tuesday, Mr Zelenskyy said that the EU’s decision to cut most of Russia's oil imports means that Moscow will not be able to spend tens of billions of euros “to finance terror".
“Strategically, it puts the Russian government on the sidelines of modern economy,” he said.
“Having such aggressive policy and a course of isolation from the civilised world, Russia simply won’t be able to adapt. It means it will lose and lose economically.”
Mr Zelenskyy said Ukraine would be pressing for more sanctions , as there should be no significant economic ties between the free world and Russia.
“As soon as the sixth package starts working, we will immediately start working on the seventh one.”
Rescuers carry the body of civilian from a residential building damaged by shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine. Reuters
Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, is feeling the strain after coming under heavy Russian bombardment. Reuters
Ukrainian troops help an elderly man out of a damaged apartment building after an air strike in the city of Slovyansk in Donbas region. AFP
A school bus carrying Ukrainian refugees leaves Kharkiv. EPA
The pain of war hits this woman hard shortly after her apartment building in Slovyansk was damaged by Russian shelling. AFP
A crater scars the road surface in Slovyansk, Donbas. AFP
A Russian soldier oversees the loading of steel on to a Russian ship at Mariupol port in Ukraine. AP
European Council President Charles Michel, right, and Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas, left, talk before the second day's session of an extraordinary meeting of EU leaders to discuss Ukraine, energy and food security, in Brussels. AP
Rescuers extinguish a fire at a meat factory, amid fighting in Mykolaiv, Ukraine. Reuters
A man waits to collect water in Mariupol. AFP
Ukrainians cross a makeshift bridge built next to a destroyed structure, in the Kharkiv region. EPA
A destroyed tank in Mariupol. AFP
People charge electronic devices outside a theatre building, in Mariupol. Reuters
Pensioner Gennady Ivanov, 83, sits outside a residential building heavily damaged by shelling, in Mariupol. Reuters
Ukrainian firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a house that was hit by Russian strikes, in Kharkiv. AP
Russian Navy sailors of the Black Sea Fleet prepare to raise a sunken Ukrainian warship at the sea port, in Mariupol. AP
A Ukrainian soldier in the city of Lysytsansk, in the eastern region of Donbas. AFP
A boy, Yarik, plays in a playground in front a building destroyed during attacks, in Irpin. AP
Two Ukrainian soldiers enjoy a tender off-duty moment near the village of Stoyanka, Kyiv region. GettyImages
A girl in Kyiv looks at Russian weapons used in the attack on Ukraine. Reuters
Children play on a destroyed car in a residential area of Mariupol. AFP
Demonstrators hold Ukrainian flags at a charity telethon in support of Ukraine, in Berlin. Reuters
Ukrainian servicemen near Zaytseve village in Donetsk, Ukraine. EPA
A shell hole near a destroyed building in Zaytseve village. EPA
In the Saltivka district of Kharkiv, writing on the vans reads "warning, shelling" and "warning, passing by for civilians is prohibited". AFP
A heavily damaged residential building in the Saltivka district of Kharkiv. AFP
Ukrainian servicemen inspect a Russian amphibious vehicle near Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine. AP
A rocket launcher belonging to a "Donetsk People's Republic" militia is fired from its position not far from Panteleimonivka, eastern Ukraine. AP
The damaged building of the economics department of Karazin National University in Kharkiv. AFP
Karazin National University in Kharkiv came under heavy Russian bombardment. AFP
Ukrainian troops approach a destroyed military vehicle in the village of Rus'ka Lozova, north of Kharkiv. AFP
A bridge is a destroyed near Rus'ka Lozova, north of Kharkiv. AFP
A building after a Russian military strike in the town of Marinka, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, in Donetsk region. Reuters
An employee mows the lawn near a destroyed warehouse refrigerator, belonging to the Chanta factory, in Novi Petrivtsi, near Kyiv. AFP
Defiant Ukrainian service members ride on top of a military vehicle, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, on the road connecting Kostiantynivka and Bakhmut, in Donetsk region. Reuters
Vladimir Mihailovich, a solar plant manager, surveys a crater after the business in Merefa on the outskirts of Kharkiv was hit by Russian shelling. Reuters
A KA-52 helicopter gunship fires rockets on a mission at an undisclosed location in Ukraine. AP
Locals walk past a road damaged by shelling in a residential area in Kharkiv. EPA
Diana, on the train, waves to her mother Viktoriya and sister Kseniya as she leaves Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine. AP
Yana Skakova and her son Yehor, who fled from Lysychansk, sit in an evacuation train in Pokrovsk, eastern Ukraine. AP
He denounced as "sheer madness" the Russian air strike on the city of Severodonetsk on Tuesday, which led to the release of toxic nitric acid fumes.
Mr Zelenskyy said the Ukrainian military would fight to restore its territorial integrity but would not rush its action so as to avoid unnecessary losses.
“Ukraine will never act like Russia, which has thrown its people into the hell of fighting only because Moscow wished to make gains in just a few days or by a certain date,” he said.
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Updated: May 31, 2022, 11:58 PM