Russian-backed separatists packed civilians onto buses out of breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine on Friday, a shock turn in a conflict the West believes Moscow plans to use as justification for all-out invasion of its neighbor reut.rs/3rZnWHU 1/5
Warning sirens blared in Donetsk after it and the other self-proclaimed region, Luhansk, announced an evacuation to Russia, with women, children and the elderly going first 2/5
Hours later, a Russian UAZ jeep exploded outside the rebel government building in the city of Donetsk, capital of the region by the same name. @Reuters journalists saw the vehicle surrounded by shrapnel, a wheel tossed away by the blast 3/5
Most of the several million civilians in the two rebel-held areas of eastern Ukraine are Russian speakers, with many already granted citizenship by Moscow 4/5
Within hours of the surprise announcement, families assembled at an evacuation point in Donetsk to board buses for Russia. One weeping woman embraced her teenage children.
Ukraine's government and the separatists exchanged blame reut.rs/3rZnWHU 5/5
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
❄️ Catch up on our most-read stories from the #Olympics 👇
A Polish speed skater recalled ‘crying like crazy’ in the back of an ambulance after a 3 a.m. knock on her isolation hotel room door. Here’s what happened reut.rs/3v0FK7y@julienpretotRTR@karolosgrohmann@SNkeats
⛸ Russian star figure skater Kamila Valieva tested positive for trimetazidine before she won the team event #gold medal. Here is what you need to know about the banned drug: reut.rs/3uMdk0Q@readkrystalhu
An Atlantic storm battered Britain and Ireland with record winds of up to 122 miles per hour, killing at least one person, knocking out power for tens of thousands and shredding the roof of London's O2 arena reut.rs/3uXJIxR
Storm Eunice, which brewed in the central Atlantic and was spun up from the Azores towards Europe by the jet stream, posed a danger to life, Britain's Meteorological Office said
A single activist helped turn the tide against NSO Group, one of the most sophisticated spyware companies facing a cascade of legal action and scrutiny over allegations its software was used to hack government officials and dissidents around the world reut.rs/3JzB64r 1/5
It all started with a software glitch on Saudi women’s-rights activist @LoujainHathloul's iPhone. The glitch allowed her and privacy researchers to discover a trove of evidence suggesting the Israeli spyware maker had helped hack her phone 2/5
A mysterious fake image file within her phone, mistakenly left behind by the spyware, tipped off security researchers reut.rs/3JzB64r 3/5
U.S. President Joe Biden said there was now every indication Russia was planning to invade Ukraine, including signs Moscow was carrying out a false flag operation to justify it, after Ukrainian forces and pro-Moscow rebels traded fire reut.rs/3uX1zVr 1/6
Moscow, for its part, ejected the number two official from the U.S. embassy and released a strongly worded letter to the United States accusing Washington of ignoring its security demands 2/6
Ukraine and the pro-Russian rebels gave conflicting accounts of Thursday's shelling. Details could not be established independently. Reports from both sides suggest an incident more serious than the ceasefire violations that are regularly reported on the line of contact 3/6
Brenda Sheridan is one of many school-board members across the country to receive death threats amid controversies over COVID-19 protections, anti-racism efforts and bathroom policies 1/4 reut.rs/3HRTBAB
WARNING - OFFENSIVE LANGUAGE: Sheridan, former chair of the Loudoun County, Virginia, school board, received more than 100 hostile messages documented by Reuters, many threatening to kill her or calling for her death 2/4
WARNING - OFFENSIVE LANGUAGE: In June she received a threat saying, ‘Brenda, I am going to gut you like the fat f‑‑‑ing pig you are when I find you.’ 3/4