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The recent war in Ukraine and Russia: Zelensky accuses North Korea of ​​sending troops to Russia to receive support from allies

The recent war in Ukraine and Russia: Zelensky accuses North Korea of ​​sending troops to Russia to receive support from allies

Zelensky signs cooperation agreement with Croatia

Volodymyr Zelensky has accused North Korea of ​​supplying troops to Russia to support its war in Ukraine.

The alliance between Russia and North Korea is “no longer just about the transfer of weapons,” said the Ukrainian president in his nightly video speech. “It’s actually about the transfer of people.”

He sought to further develop Ukraine's relations with its allies, asking for support from Western partners and “more sustainable supplies to our armed forces rather than a simple list of military equipment.”

He claimed that Russian forces tried to drive Ukrainian troops from their positions in Russia's Kursk region, but Kiev forces held firm. “Russia tried to push back our positions, but we are holding the designated lines,” the president said earlier Saturday.

Meanwhile, Russia fired 68 drones and four missiles into Ukrainian territory, the Ukrainian Air Force said on Sunday.

Kiev said Ukrainian forces attacked a fuel depot supplying the Russian army, finding a fire at the facility that stores oil and oil products.

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A Ukrainian mother's desperate plea for her children to join her in the UK after the Home Office refused

A Ukrainian refugee says she is living in a “surreal nightmare” after being refused permission to bring her two children to the UK.

Pressure is growing on ministers to open a path to family reunification for Ukrainians with temporary immigration status after rules changed without warning in February. Charities say the Home Office's “restrictive rules and poor decision-making” are “tearing families apart”.

Maria Kondratska, who arrived in Britain just months before Russia's full-scale invasion, is now appealing on human rights grounds after the Home Office rejected her request to grant her son and daughter, aged 11 and 15, refuge with her in Britain .

Tara CobhamOctober 14, 2024 7:00 am

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Ukrainian journalist Victoria Roshchyna confirmed the death in Russian custody

Ukrainian journalist Victoria Roshchyna, a 27-year-old award-winning reporter, died in Russian custody last month, Ukrainian authorities confirmed.

“I have official documents from the Russian side confirming the death of Ukrainian journalist Victoria Roshchyna, who was illegally deprived of her freedom by Russia,” Ukraine's Human Rights Commissioner Dmytro Lubinets said in a statement.

“We have every reason to believe that her death was either the result of premeditated murder or the result of the cruel treatment and violence to which she was subjected during her time in Russian captivity,” Ukrainian journalists and media workers condemned her death, CNN reported .

Namita SinghOctober 14, 2024 06:59

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BBC World Service withdrawal supports propaganda from Russia and China – Tim Davie

BBC director general Tim Davie will warn that the withdrawal of his world service due to funding cuts helped Russia and China spread “unchallenged propaganda”.

On Monday afternoon, Mr Davie will discuss the global importance of the BBC World Service, which operates in more than 40 languages, in a speech at the Future Resilience Forum, a cross-party meeting of international politicians.

As he addresses the war in Ukraine and unrest in the Middle East, Mr Davie is expected to say: “This is a critical moment of challenge for stability and democracy worldwide.”

Namita SinghOctober 14, 2024 06:32

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Ukraine considers ceding territory to Russia – report

Ukraine is considering ceding its territory to Russia to end the war, a German news agency reported The mirrorciting official sources.

A central condition for Volodymyr Zelensky's peace formula so far is that Russia gives up the occupied territory. But now Ukrainian officials are discussing abandoning the goal of fully restoring the occupied territories, the German newspaper reported.

“We believed that victory had to mean Russia’s (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s unconditional surrender,” the source reportedly said.

Factors forcing Ukraine to consider this option include uncertainty over the outcome of the US presidential election and the advance of Russian troops in eastern Ukraine.

“Whether it's (former US President Donald) Trump or (Vice President Kamala) Harris, Americans will slowly but surely retreat,” the official said The mirror.

Trump had previously criticized American aid to Ukraine and promised to “get the US out of the conflict” if re-elected.

Namita SinghOctober 14, 2024 06:10

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Russian forces are advancing near Kupyansk, the city of Donetsk and Robotyne, a think tank reports

A U.S. war think tank said Russian forces recently advanced near Kupyansk, the city of Donetsk and Robotyne in Ukraine.

According to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), Russia has recaptured nearly two dozen settlements in Kursk Oblast as of October 11, Russian military sources claim.

Meanwhile, the ISW said Ukrainian forces had partially regained lost positions, Ukrainian military officials reported, as fierce Russian counterattacks continued on Sunday.

Tara CobhamOctober 14, 2024 06:00

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What is the mysterious Russian weapon fired by Moscow's own forces?

On October 5, videos showed a drone flying near Kostiantynivka in eastern Ukraine before it was shot down by another jet that briefly flew alongside it.

Initial reports suggested it was either a Russian jet shot down by the Ukrainian Air Force or a Russian jet that lost control and was shot down by Moscow.

However, the dropped drone was not an ordinary weapon. It was later identified as the S-70 Okhotnik-B stealth drone, also known as the Hunter, one of Russia's most advanced stealth drones designed to accompany a Su-57 fighter jet.

Namita SinghOctober 14, 2024 5:42 am

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According to Russia, more than 30,000 people have been evacuated from areas on the border with Ukraine

Some 30,415 people, including nearly 8,000 children, have been evacuated from areas bordering Ukraine due to shelling and attacks, Russia's human rights commissioner said in a statement released on Monday.

Tatyana Moskalkova, the commissioner, told the Argumenty I Fakty news agency in an interview that the evacuees were being housed in nearly 1,000 makeshift accommodation centers across Russia, Reuters reported.

Ukraine, which has been under Russian invasion since February 2022, responded with shelling and other attacks on Russia's border regions. The military said the attacks targeted infrastructure crucial to Moscow's war effort.

In August, Ukrainian forces launched an incursion into the Kursk region, taking control of dozens of settlements and holding most positions since then.

Ms. Moskalkova said she had received appeals related to more than 1,000 Russian citizens from Kursk whose whereabouts were unknown and who were allegedly detained by Ukrainian forces.

Reuters could not independently verify Moskalkova's reports. There was no immediate comment from Kyiv.

Both sides deny targeting or detaining civilians, but thousands have died in the war, the vast majority of them Ukrainians.

Namita SinghOctober 14, 2024 05:06

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Ukraine's human rights commissioner calls for a response to the alleged killings of Ukrainian prisoners of war in Kursk

Ukraine's human rights ombudsman on Sunday called on international organizations to respond to claims that several Ukrainian prisoners of war were executed in Russia's Kursk region, where Kiev launched a raid in August.

DeepState, a Ukrainian site that analyzes battlefields near the Ukrainian Defense Ministry, said Russian troops shot nine Ukrainian “drone operators and contractors” on October 10 after they surrendered.

Dmytro Lubinets said on Telegram that he had sent letters about the case to the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross, calling it “another crime committed by the Russians.”

Namita SinghOctober 14, 2024 05:01

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Review: Can Zelensky's peace plan actually work?

Remember when a virtual or real appearance by the President of Ukraine was the hottest event in London? When MPs and colleagues in Parliament jostled for standing room only to see and hear him? When the former television actor turned democratically elected president turned wartime leader captured attention with his fierce determination and allusions to Churchill? Well, those heady days of Britain reliving its finest hour through association are over.

There was no fanfare on Thursday about Volodymyr Zelensky's recent visit to London – in fact, barely an announcement. There was a red carpet, a handshake and a hug with Sir Keir Starmer at the famous Downing Street door. Around two hours of closed-door talks followed, attended by British military and security officials and Mark Rutte, the new NATO secretary general. Zelensky then left for interim visits to France and Italy before returning to Kiev. In terms of media attention in the UK, the London leg of his tour was completely overshadowed by coverage of a Category 3 hurricane in Florida, only making the front page of the BBC News website fleetingly.

Can Zelensky's peace plan actually work?

With the US election less than a month away and his support dwindling across Europe, Ukraine's president is in a last-ditch race against time to shore up support, writes Mary Dejevsky

Maria DejevskyOctober 14, 2024 05:00

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Zelensky accuses North Korea of ​​sending troops to Russia

Ukraine's president has accused North Korea of ​​supplying troops to Russia to support Vladimir Putin in his war against Ukraine.

“We see an increasing alliance between Russia and regimes like those in North Korea,” Zelensky said, adding: “It’s no longer just about the transfer of weapons.”

“It’s actually about transferring people from North Korea into the occupying forces.”

He sought to further develop relations with his Western partners “under such conditions” and called for more support on the front line.

“We are talking about more long-range capabilities for Ukraine and a more sustainable supply of our armed forces, not a simple list of military equipment.”

Namita SinghOctober 14, 2024 04:46

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