Russia-Ukraine updates: Putin says war was ‘unleashed’ on Russia

The Russian president delivered his annual Victory Day speech.

More than a year after Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, the countries are fighting for control of areas in eastern and southern Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's forces are readying a spring counteroffensive, but Putin appears to be preparing for a long and bloody war.

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Putin critic sentenced to 25 years

A Moscow court has sentenced one of Russia's best-known opposition leaders, whose family live in the U.S., to 25 years in prison in what is widely seen a show trial.

Vladimir Kara-Murza is the most high-profile opponent of Russian President Vladimir Putin to be jailed since Alexey Navalny.

Kara-Murza's extraordinarily harsh sentence is one of the lengthiest any opposition figure has received under Putin and illustrates how repressive Russia has become during the war in Ukraine, reverting to something much closer to the USSR where no opposition is tolerated.

Kara-Murza was convicted of treason, as well as "discrediting Russia's armed forces," a new law that effectively criminalizes criticizing the war in Ukraine. He was also convicted of belonging to a banned organization. The charges are widely seen as politically motivated.

Kara-Murza is one of Russia's best-known pro-democracy figures and a veteran critic of Putin.

Kara-Murza, who holds both British and Russian citizenship, spent many years living in the United States and his wife and children still live in Virginia. He was close to the late U.S. Sen. John McCain, who championed human rights in the former Soviet Union.

Dozens of journalists and Western diplomats attended the court hearing on Monday, including the U.S. ambassador who read out a statement condemning the sentence.

"We support Mr. Kara-Murza and every Russian citizen to have a voice in the direction of their country. Mr. Kara-Murza and countless other Russians believe in and hope for a Russia where fundamental freedoms will be upheld. And we will continue to share those hopes and work for that outcome," Amb. Lynne Tracy said.

Kara-Murza previously has survived being poisoned not once but twice. In 2015 and then again in 2017, he suffered organ failure after being exposed to an unknown toxin. Independent researchers later linked the poisoning to the same team of FSB poisoners who targeted Navalny.

He chose to return to Russia after the war began, believing it was important to continue to campaign for freedom in his country and has been an outspoken critic of the invasion.

His trial was held entirely behind closed doors, but a letter containing his closing statement to the court has been released to reporters.

"I only blame myself for one thing," Kara-Murza said in the statement. "I failed to convince enough of my compatriots and politicians in democratic countries of the danger that the current Kremlin regime poses for Russia and for the world."

"Criminals are supposed to repent of what they have done. I, on the other hand, am in prison for my political views. I also know that the day will come when the darkness over our country will dissipate.

-ABC News' Patrick Reevell


Detained WSJ reporter's parents speak out

The parents of Wall Street Journalist journalist Evan Gershkovich spoke in an interview with with the paper Friday, the first time since their son was detained in Russia in March.

Mikhail and Ella Gershkovich, who were born in the Soviet Union and married after emigrating to the U.S. separately in 1979, talked about how much he wanted to work for the Journal and cover Russia.

"He said I'm just one of the few left there," Ella Gershkovich, his mother, said of his time working in Russia during the Ukraine war.

The couple said their family is keeping hope that their son will be returned.

The couple said their family is keeping hope that their son will be released.

"It's one of the American qualities we absorbed. Be optimistic, believe in happy ending. That's where we stand right now, but I am not stupid. I understand what's involved, but that's what I choose to believe," Ella Gershkovich said.

-ABC News' Ellie Kaufman


15 dead, including 1 child, after Russia attacks Slovyansk

Russian forces shelled Slovyansk, a city in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, Friday, Andrii Yermak, the head of the office of the President of Ukraine, said on Telegram.

At least seven explosions were heard in the city in the area near a school, and three buildings were struck, Yermak said. Russia hit three five-story buildings in the attack, he added.

Fifteen people, including one child, were killed and 24 people have been wounded, officials said Sunday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shared a video of the attack on his Telegram page and condemned Russian forces.

He said there are still people trapped in the rubble.

"The evil state once again demonstrates its essence, just killing people in broad daylight, [and] ruining, destroying all life," he said.

-ABC News' Oleksiy Pshemyskiy and Ellie Kaufman


Singer Brad Paisley visits Ukraine for 1st time with Senate delegation, meets with Zelenskyy

Country singer Brad Paisley visited Ukraine for the first time on Wednesday and met with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to see firsthand what's happening in the war-torn country, according to Ukrainian fundraising platform UNITED24.

Paisley, who serves as a global ambassador for UNITED24 and its campaign to help rebuild Ukraine, performed his song "Same Here" while in St. Michael’s Square in Kyiv.

Paisley, who went with a bipartisan U.S. Senate delegation, also played for American troops in Poland, UNITED24 said.

“It’s an emotional experience seeing all of this firsthand," Paisley said during a press conference. "For me, looking around this city and being here for the first time, I’m absolutely struck by the resilience of life and the beautiful nature of the way this city is trying to thrive in the middle of conflict."


Russia detains man who spoke with WSJ reporter

Russia's security services have arrested an anti-Kremlin political commentator who the jailed Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich met with shortly before his own arrest.

Yaroslav Shirshikov has said he spent two days showing Gershkovich around the city of Yekaterinburg during a reporting trip there a couple of weeks before Russia seized Gershovich.

Shirshikov said he had been due to meet with Gershkovich again the week the reporter was arrested in the city.

This morning, local media published video showing masked security officers detaining Shirshikov in his apartment and searching it.

A local news outlet cited a security services representative saying Shirshikov may have been arrested for posting comments cheering the assassinations of two ultra-nationalist pro-war figures, Daria Dugina and the blogger Vladen Tatarsky.

The site UralLive quoted a law enforcement source that Shirshikov was detained on a charge of “justifying terrorism”, which carries a maximum sentence of 7 years prison. It linked the charge to a social media post in which Shirshikov wrote he wasn’t sad over the death of Tatarsky, who was killed in a bomb attack in St. Petersburg this month.

Shirshikov spoke to several international media outlets including ABC following Gershkovich's arrest. He said that Gershkovich had acted entirely as a professional journalist in Yekaterinburg, conducting interviews openly and doing usual reporting.

Shirshikov is a critic of the Russian government and has spoken publicly about his opposition to the war in Ukraine.

-ABC News' Patrick Reevell