Protests against Russian occupation have broken out in the port city of Kherson, Ukraine’s only big city to have been captured in the war so far.
About 2,000 people marched through the city centre, waving flags and singing the Ukrainian national anthem.
They shouted patriotic slogans including “Russians go home” and “Kherson is Ukraine”.
Other cities around the world have been hosting big anti-war demonstrations in support of Ukraine.
Kherson, a key port on the Black Sea and the Dnieper River, fell to Russian troops earlier this week.
Videos of the protest on social media show Russian troops firing into the air to deter the approaching crowd.
One local resident, Yevhen, told the BBC the protest was a march for freedom and Ukrainian independence.
When asked whether Ukrainian forces were trying to retake Kherson, he said: “Every night we hear about six or 10 explosions. It sounds like mortars. We don’t know who is bombing whom.”
He added: “We are trying not to go outside because Russian troops are stopping cars, checking what is in the cars. They are even checking phones, searching for evidence of helping the Ukrainian army.”
Other locals have told the BBC that Russian soldiers have a list of Ukrainian activists they want to capture.
Elsewhere in the country on the 10th day of the invasion, the Russian defence ministry said its units had opened humanitarian corridors to let civilians leave the cities of Mariupol and Volnovakha, which are under siege by its forces.
However, Ukrainian authorities said Russia was not observing the ceasefire and attacks were continuing, so mass evacuations had been postponed.
In other developments:
- President Vladimir Putin has said he will not impose martial law in Russia
- He also warned Western countries against imposing a no-fly zone over Ukraine. For his part, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has condemned Nato for ruling out the no-fly zone. However, Western leaders say introducing the measure would be an escalation
Russian forces continued to shell Mariupol on Saturday, despite agreeing to a ceasefire just hours earlier, local residents told the BBC.
“I’m right now in Mariupol, I’m on the street, I can hear shelling every three to five minutes,” said Alexander, a 44-year-old engineer.
Mariupol, a port city of about 400,000 people, is a key strategic target for Russia because seizing it would allow Russian-backed separatist forces in eastern Ukraine to join forces with troops in Crimea, the southern peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014.
Russia has not commented on the renewed shelling, but its defence ministry said civilians had not used the escape routes from Mariupol and Volnovakha and accused Ukrainian authorities of preventing people from leaving, Russian state media said.
- LIVE: Latest updates from on the ground
- THE BASICS: Why is Putin invading Ukraine?
- SCENARIOS: Five ways the war in Ukraine might end
- INNER CIRCLE: Who’s in Putin’s entourage, running the war?
- IN DEPTH: Full coverage of the conflict
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