The New Arab’s live coverage of the latest developments on the Russian invasion of Ukraine concludes for today.
Here were the key developments from today:
Nuclear plant shelled then taken
A fire at Europe's biggest nuclear power station at Zaporizhzhia is put out, with Ukraine accusing Russia of "nuclear terror" in shelling the plant.
Russian troops later take over the site of the reactors, which generate a fifth of Ukraine's electricity, after firefighters say they were prevented from reaching the blaze for hours.
West slams 'recklessness'
Western leaders lash Moscow's "recklessness" in attacking the power station, with Britain calling a United Nations Security Council meeting after Prime Minister Boris Johnson says Russia threatened "the safety of all of Europe".
Kyiv says no leaks has been detected after the Zaporizhzhia shelling.
NATO rejects no-fly zone
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg says the alliance will not impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine after Kyiv calls for one to help stop Russia's bombing of its cities.
'Numerous rapes': Kyiv
Ukraine's foreign minister claims there have been "numerous cases" of Russian troops raping Ukrainian women and calls for an international tribunal on war crimes.
More than 1.2 million flee
More than 1.2 million people have fled Ukraine into neighbouring countries since Russia invaded last week, the UN says.
Stocks plunge
European markets plunge more than three percent after Russia takes control of the continent's biggest nuclear power plant.
Moscow media blackout
Russia admits to "limiting" access to news websites including the BBC, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, independent Russian site Meduza and Germany's Deutsche Welle, with Facebook also blocked.
Jail terms for 'fake news'
Russian lawmakers approve a law imposing 15-year jail sentences for fake news about the Russian armed forces which many fear could severely curtail reporting.
Rights group raided
Police raid the offices of Russia's top rights group, Memorial, which was ordered to close late last year amid an international outcry.
Russia isolated
Russia is more isolated than ever after a historic vote at the UN Human Rights Council for a probe into violations committed during the war on Ukraine, with only Eritrea siding with Moscow.
Humanitarian corridors agreed
Russia and Ukraine agree to create humanitarian corridors to evacuate civilians from as yet unspecified cities.
Invasion going 'to plan': Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin says Moscow's advance is going "according to plan".
'Assassinate him'
Senior US Republican senator Lindsey Graham calls for "somebody in Russia" to assassinate Putin.
EU wants Ukraine membership 'as soon as possible'
The deputy head of the EU commission said Ukraine should become a member of the EU as soon as possible.
Join us tomorrow for more live updates on the Russia-Ukraine crisis.