Ukraine's presidency was accused this week of exerting pressure on the country's respected Ukrainska Pravda news outlet, an allegation lawmakers urged prosecutors to "verify" on Thursday.

The outlet accused President Volodymyr Zelensky's administration on Wednesday of "exerting pressure" in order to influence editorial policy. 

Freedom of the press is a sensitive issue in Ukraine, where authorities have made efforts to democratise since an authoritarian pro-Russian government was overthrown in 2014.

Ukrainska Pravda said the issue was "particularly outrageous" during Russia's invasion, "when our common struggle for both survival and democratic values is essential."

It accused the presidency of banning state officials from communicating with its journalists and of putting pressure on companies to "stop their advertising cooperation" with the outlet -- one of the most popular in Ukraine. 

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Lawmaker Yaroslav Yurchyshyn, the head of a parliamentary commission for freedom of expression, asked the Prosecutor's Office and the police to "verify" the accusations. 

He said that if the allegations are true, those responsible "for putting pressure on the media must be punished". 

The Mediarukh association of Ukrainian journalists urged Zelensky on Thursday to do everything possible to "end the pressure on the media by any state official." 

Ukrainska Pravda is one of Ukraine's most-read news outlets.

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The head of the Kupiansk military administration said the Russian assaults one day earlier as "very difficult" but said the Russian troops retreated and the situation was again under control.

It was bought in 2021 by Czech businessman Tomas Fiala, who owns a number of assets in the country, including another influential media outlet. 

One of its founders, Georgiy Gongadze, was kidnapped in 2000 by senior police officers and found decapitated in a forest in the Kyiv region.

This handout picture taken and released by presidential press-service displaying Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko crossing himself as he pays tribute to Belarus-born journalist Pavel Sheremet, who was killed in a car bomb in central Kiev on July 20, during farevel ceremony in Ukrainian House on July 22, 2016. Hundreds of mourners shed tears and laid flowers on July 22 at the open casket of a top reporter whose targeted car-bomb slaying sent shock waves through Ukraine's tight-knit journalistic community. July 20's death of Pavel Sheremet -- a 44-year-old columnist for Ukrainska Pravda -- came 16 years after the beheading of the investigative news site's founder that carried dark political overtones. (Photo by Mykola Lazarenko / UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SERVICE / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT

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In 2016, veteran Russian-Belarusian journalist Pavel Sheremet -- a contributor to Ukrainska Pravda -- was killed when a bomb exploded in his car in the centre of Kyiv. 

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