Nato chief in surprise Ukraine visit as US fails to condemn Sumy attack – Europe live

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Peace talks on Ukraine ‘not easy,’ but Nato stands with Ukraine amid ‘outrageous’ Russian attacks, Rutte tells Zelenskyy in Odesa

Speaking in Odesa, Rutte strongly condemned the Russian attack on Sumy as “simply outrageous” and “part of a terrible pattern of Russia attacking civilian targets and infrastructure,” as he assured Zelenskyy of Nato’s continued support.

Nato secretary general Mark Rutte and Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shake hands during a joint press conference, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Odesa, Ukraine. Photograph: Nina Liashonok/Reuters

In a statement, published in the last few minutes by Nato, he said that “Ukraine’s people deserve real peace – real safety and security in their country. In their homes,” and said he wanted to use his visit to “affirm … this simple message: Nato stands with Ukraine.”

“I also know that some have called Nato’s support into question in the last couple of months. But let there be no doubt. Our support is unwavering,” he said.

He said in his remarks that he spoke with Zelenskyy about “the important talks that president Trump is leading with Ukraine as well as with Russia to try to end the war and secure a durable peace.”

He acknowledged that “these discussions are not easy – not least in the wake of this horrific violence – but we all support president Trump’s push for peace.

“So let me say again – to the people of Ukraine: We stand with you. And look forward to a day that the brave men and women of this incredible country can enjoy freedom without fear,” he said.

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80th anniversary of liberation of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp

A wall with the inscription ‘Bergen-Belsen 1940 to 1945’ is pictured at the site of the former prisoner of war and Nazi concentration camp in Bergen-Belsen, northern Germany. Photograph: Focke Strangmann/AFP/Getty Images

On a different note, today marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp by British forces on 15 April 1945 and our Athens correspondent Helena Smith spoke with one of the survivors, Lola Hassid Angel.

For a long time, Lola Hassid Angel did not want to talk about the horrors of her childhood. Her experiences of the second world war had not been light: by the age of eight, the Holocaust survivor had “reached adulthood”, seen things she should never have seen, heard sounds she should never have heard, been confronted by terrors she could neither forgive nor forget.

Which is why the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen by British forces on 15 April 1945 is as much a cause for joy as for the horror to come flooding back.

“But it’s also different,” Angel, now 88 and a great-great-grandmother, admitted over tea in her apartment in Athens. “Now I want to tell the whole world what happened. And that’s because I want all these men who lead us to know what war really looks like. The Germans had a zeal for death; they had turned it into a science.”

Read Helena’s story here:

You can also read Richard Nelsson’s compilation of how the Guardian’s David Woodward, Manchester Guardian war correspondent, covered these events in 1945.

And we recently reviewed Sam Mendes’s debut documentary What They Found, which combines two precious artefacts held at the Imperial War Museum in London: 35mm film, shot by Sgt Mike Lewis and Sgt Bill Lawrie of the British Army Film and Photographic Unit, before and during the liberation of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp near the town of Celle in northern Germany in April 1945 and audio interviews given by the cameramen in the 1980s.

By their own admission, Lewis and Lawrie are not prepared for what is inside the camp gates, having only heard rumours about what the Nazis have been doing to Jews and other minorities. A little like viewers of this film who may have read and heard about the Holocaust, but who have not before encountered moving images of the unique terror of Belsen, what Lewis and Lawrie are about to see will change them and stay with them for ever.

The official commemoration of the liberation will take place on 27 April.

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