As I was saying................External Link/Members Only
Note the BBC propaganda site has no mention of Russia's claim of taking Kostyantynivka, Sly news also nothing, they report on Ukraine drone attack on St Petersburg, their article shows a screenshot of Putin at a recent video, this is the video where Putin announced the liberation of Kostyantynivka, but Sly fail to tell their readers this fact, that is called lying by omission. External Link/Members Only
A simple AI query gives the answer you are to brainwashed by Russian propaganda to acknowledges. The simple answer is the bbc has not reported it as it has not been confirmed. Here is the explanation:
The short answer is: it is not currently possible to say with confidence that Russia has taken Kostyantynivka. At the moment there are two directly contradictory claims:
* Russia says it has captured the city completely.
* Ukraine says the city remains under Ukrainian control and that Russian forces have not taken it.
This is a common feature of the war. Both sides make battlefield claims that can take days or even weeks to verify independently.
Why is there conflicting reporting?
The Russian Ministry of Defence announced on 3 July that its forces had captured Kostyantynivka, and President Putin publicly repeated the claim.
However, the following day:
* President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the claim false.
* Ukraine’s General Staff said its troops were still defending positions within and around the city.
Neither claim has yet been independently verified.
Why isn’t the BBC reporting it?
The BBC is generally quite cautious about reporting territorial gains until they can be independently verified.
The BBC has a long-standing editorial policy for the Ukraine war that generally requires one or more of:
* satellite imagery,
* geolocated videos,
* confirmation from multiple independent analysts,
* or evidence that fighting has ceased and administration has changed.
If those standards have not yet been met, they will often report something as:
“Russia claims…” or “Ukraine denies…”
rather than stating that the city has fallen.
This isn’t unique to the BBC. Reuters has done exactly the same, reporting both Russia’s claim and Ukraine’s denial without concluding who is correct.
Why have Indian media reported it?
Many Indian outlets rely heavily on international wire services, Russian statements, Ukrainian statements, or both.
Some outlets simply report:
“Russia says it has captured…”
without waiting for independent confirmation.
Others present the Russian announcement as a headline because it is newsworthy even though the underlying claim remains disputed.
That doesn’t necessarily mean the reporting is propaganda—it depends on whether they clearly distinguish between:
* Russia claims…
* and
* Russia has captured…
Those are very different statements.
What do independent analysts think?
Independent organisations that map the front line have generally been more cautious.
Most have previously assessed that Russia had made substantial advances into the city but had not yet demonstrated complete control. Some have suggested the Russian announcement may have been premature or politically timed.
Could Russia actually have taken it?
Yes.
The city has been under enormous pressure for months, and Russia has been advancing steadily in that sector. Military analysts have long regarded Kostyantynivka as one of the key objectives on the Donetsk front. Its eventual capture has been considered possible if current trends continued.
But at this moment there is insufficient independently verified evidence to state confidently that it has already happened.
My assessment
Based on the information available today:
* Russia’s claim is plausible, given the recent military situation.
* Ukraine’s denial is also plausible, especially if it still holds parts of the city or nearby defensive positions.
* The most accurate description is that the status of Kostyantynivka remains contested, pending independent verification.