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Putin annexes Ukraine territories, Kyiv vows to fight back
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday annexed four territories in Ukraine controlled by his army at a grand ceremony in the Kremlin and urged Kyiv to lay down its arms and negotiate an end to seven months of fighting.
The lavish ceremony at the Kremlin, a turning point in recent post-Soviet history, came hours after shelling killed 25 people in Ukraine's southern region of Zaporizhzhia, one of the worst attacks against civilians in months.
Putin was defiant during an address to Russia's most senior political elite, telling the West that the land grab was irreversible and calling on Ukraine's emboldened army to give up and negotiate a surrender.
"I want to say this to the Kyiv regime and its masters in the West: People living in Lugansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia are becoming our citizens forever," Putin said.
"We call on the Kyiv regime to immediately stop fighting and stop all hostilities... and return to the negotiating table," the Russian leader added.
The packed hall erupted into chants of "Russia! Russia" after the four leaders inked the deal.
Putin -- rarely seen making physical contact since the pandemic -- joined hands with his proxy leaders and they shouted along in unison on state TV.
Washington announced "severe" new sanctions against Russian officials and the country's defence industry, and said G7 allies support imposing "costs" on any nation that backs the annexation.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky immediately urged the US-led military alliance NATO for expediated membership, a move Kyiv had threatened earlier that rattled Putin in the months leading up the fight.
- No talks with Putin -
The Ukrainian leader doubled down in an address to the nation, vowing never to hold talks with Russia so long as Putin was in power.
"We will negotiate with the new president," Zelensky said.
US President Joe Biden condemned Russia's "fraudulent" declaration, vowing to keep backing Kyiv army.
"We will continue to support Ukraine's efforts to regain control of its territory by strengthening its hand militarily and diplomatically," he said.
Despite warnings from Putin prior to the annexation that he could use nuclear weapons to defend the captured territories, Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Kyiv would "continue liberating our land and our people".
Hours ahead of the ceremony, an attack in Zaporizhzhia in the south, killed at least 25 people as civilians were preparing to leave to pick up relatives, Ukrainian officials said.
Bodies of people wearing civilian clothes were strewn across the ground after the attack and windows of cars blown out, an AFP photographer said.
One man, 56-year-old Viktor, said his life was saved because he went to get a coffee.
"The waitress gave it to me. And there was a bang. She got scared and left the cafe. A few minutes later, there was another explosion. Now she is on the floor," he said.
- 'Scared' -
"I managed to hide. She did not."
"Only complete terrorists could do this," said Zelensky. "Bloodthirsty scum! You will definitely answer," he added.
But pro-Kremlin regional chief Vladimir Rogov however said Kyiv was responsible and accused Ukrainian troops of carrying out a "terrorist act".
In central Moscow, at least 10,000 people convened for state-organised annexation celebrations, with huge banners emblazoned: "Donetsk. Lugansk. Zaporizhzhia. Kherson. Russia!"
A concert in Red Square was replete with military and pomp and patriotic songs and throngs of Russians waving the national flag.
"I'm happy if they want to join Russia," Natalya Bodner, a 37-year-old lawyer told AFP. "They have more hope than we do".
"It should have been done a long time ago," a Russian serviceman Ildar Babaev from the southern region of Dagestan said.
"This is the right decision".
The four territories create a crucial land corridor between Russia and the Crimean peninsula, annexed by Moscow in 2014.
The Kremlin said it "needed to clarify" the exact borders of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia -- neither fully controlled by Moscow's forces -- that it intends to annex.
- Ukraine forces press Donetsk -
Together, all five regions including Crimea, make up around 20 percent of Ukraine, whose forces in recent weeks have been clawing back wins as part of a counter-offensive.
In Sloviansk, a city in Donetsk, a military medic who goes by the name of Coconut said the annexations were nonsense.
"If my neighbour comes to my house and announces that it's his, nobody believes it actually belongs to him," he told AFP.
In Kherson, Russian officials announced that Ukrainian strikes with US-supplied precision artillery systems had killed a senior security chief of the Russian-controlled region.
A "pinpoint" strike by Himars hit his house, Kirill Stremousov, the deputy head of the Russian proxy administration said.
It was the latest of several targeted attacks on Russian-appointed officials in the region.
Ukrainian forces are also on the doorstep of Lyman in Donetsk, which Moscow's forces pummelled for weeks to capture this summer.
The four regions' Kremlin-installed leaders formally requested annexation after claiming residents backed the move in hastily organised referendums that were dismissed by Kyiv and the West as fraudulent.
The UN Security Council will vote Friday on a resolution condemning the referendums, according to France, the council's current president, but it has no chance of passing due to Moscow's veto power.
burs/jm
F.W.Simon--LiLuX