Russian aid convoy rolls towards Ukraine despite warnings from Kiev
Around 280 trucks carrying more than 1,800 tonnes of “humanitarian supplies” including medical equipment, baby food, sleeping bags, and electric generators head towards Ukraine border

A convoy of nearly 300 trucks carrying what Russia says is humanitarian aid for victims of fighting in eastern Ukraine moved slowly towards the border on Wednesday despite concerns by Kiev and the West over the shipment, Russian officials said.
But Kiev again insisted it would not allow the convoy on its territory.
“No humanitarian convoy of Putin’s will be allowed to cross the territory of the Kharkiv region,” Ukraine’s interior minister Arsen Avakov wrote on Facebook. “Provocation by the cynical aggressor will not be permitted on our territory.”
Around 280 trucks are carrying more than 1,800 tonnes of “humanitarian supplies”, including medical equipment, baby food, sleeping bags, and electric generators, according to Russian media.
President Vladimir Putin has justified sending the aid due to the “catastrophic” situation in the besieged rebel strongholds of Lugansk and Donetsk, where officials have warned of a looming humanitarian disaster because of shortages of food, water and power.
But there are concerns by Kiev and the West that Moscow could use the operation as a cover for sending in troops.
