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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky says Patriot missiles could ‘close our skies’ but are just gathering dust

Ukrainian president’s plea comes after Russian missile killed at least four people in Zaporizhzhia

Jabed Ahmed,Arpan Rai,Tara Cobham
Wednesday 11 December 2024 05:23 EST
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Related: Vladimir Putin hints at strikes on West

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Ukraine would be able to completely defend its skies if it received around a dozen more Patriot air defence systems from Western allies, Volodymyr Zelensky has said, urging them not to let the systems “gather dust”.

Signalling his frustration, the Ukrainian president said: “I sometimes do not get it... Everyone understands that an additional 10-12 Patriot systems for Ukraine will ensure life for us and make the war for (Russian president Vladimir) Putin meaningless.

“We repeat again and again that air defences should save lives, not gather dust at storage bases,” he said.

His plea came after a Russian missile killed at least four people and injured 20 more, including a child, in the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia.

Also in the Zaporizhzhia region, a drone hit and severely damaged an official vehicle from the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, on the road to the Russian-held nuclear power plant there yesterday.

While the UN team is safe, the agency’s chief Rafael Grossi repeated his calls for “utmost restraint” from both sides.

In Russia, an overnight missile attack has damaged an industrial facility and set ablaze at least 14 of cars in Taganrog in Rostov.

Kazakhstan says Druzhba oil pipeline in Russia is unscathed after Ukrainian attacks

Kazakhstan pipeline operator Kaztransoil said on Wednesday that the Druzhba oil pipeline, which brings Russian and Kazakh oil to Europe, was not damaged during Ukrainian overnight attacks on Russian targets.

Jabed Ahmed11 December 2024 10:23

Kent animal sanctuary meets £500,000 fundraising target to rescue Ukraine lions

A cat sanctuary rescuing lions from war-torn Ukraine has successfully met its fundraising target to help provide “forever homes” for the animals.

The Big Cat Sanctuary is a Kent-based charity behind the Big Cats in Crisis campaign, and reached its fundraising target of £500,000 to help rescue five lions, Yuna, Rori, Vanda, Amani and Lira, from Ukraine to the Lion Rescue Centre in Smarden.

The money will help towards transportation costs, veterinary treatment and a new habitat, which the sanctuary started creating in July and expects to finish in the new year.

African lioness Yuna was taken to the Lion Rescue Centre, a journey spanning six countries and lasting more than four days, in August, after she suffered shell shock and psychological issues from heavy bombing.

She was found cramped in a concrete enclosure with an aggressive male, and the continued shelling left her unable to stand or walk, according to the Big Cat Sanctuary.

The three-year-old lioness has seen grass for the first time, after being rescued by the sanctuary.

The sanctuary thanked people for their donations.

(The Big Cat Sanctuary/PA Wire)
Jabed Ahmed11 December 2024 09:57

Pictured: People rescued after Russian missile strike in Zaporizhzhia

(via REUTERS)
(via REUTERS)
(via REUTERS)
Jabed Ahmed11 December 2024 09:27

Attack on Russian oil depot had no impact on oil transit to Europe, Ukrainian source says

A Ukrainian overnight attack on an oil depot in Russia's Bryansk region did not affect oil transit to Europe via Ukraine, a Ukrainian industry source has said.

Ukraine's military said on Wednesday the depot is a part of Druzhba oil export pipeline and that a "massive fire" broke out following the strike.

"The attack does not concern oil transit, as it is a facility that works to ensure the supply of diesel fuel and petroleum products. Everything is going on as planned with transit," the source told Reuters.

Jabed Ahmed11 December 2024 09:01

Ukraine strikes Russia with missiles and hits oil depot with drones

Ukraine struck a southern Russian port on the Azov Sea with missiles and triggered a fire at an oil depot in the Bryansk region of western Russia with drones, according to officials and media reports.

The extent of the damage and the exact weapons used in the attack was unclear, though Russia has repeatedly cautioned that Ukraine's use of U.S. ATACMS to strike sovereign Russian territory risks triggering a wider war.

Russia's defence ministry said its air defence units destroyed 14 Ukrainian drones overnight over the Bryansk region that borders Ukraine. It did not say what was hit.

Bryansk Governor Alexander Bogomaz said on his Telegram channel that a production facility caught a short-lived fire as result of the attack. He did not say what facility was damaged.

Ukraine's military said it had caused a "massive fire" at an oil depot with a strike on the Bryansk region.

The Soviet-built Druzhba oil pipeline, which pumps oil from the fields in Western Siberia and the Caspian Sea to the markets of Europe, runs through the Bryansk region, as does the Baltic Pipeline System (BPS) which runs to the Baltic Sea.

About 750 km (465 miles) south, the Russian port of Taganrog was hit by missiles from Ukraine, damaging an industrial facility and numerous cars, the acting governor of Rostov region said.

“According to preliminary information, no one was hurt,” Yuri Slyusar said on the Telegram messaging app.

Slyusar said 14 cars had caught fire, but he did not disclose details on what else was hit or how big the attack was.

Jabed Ahmed11 December 2024 08:42

Ukraine's military says it struck oil depot in Russia's Bryansk region

Ukraine's military has said that it struck an oil depot in Russia's Bryansk region overnight.

The Ukrainian military said that a "massive fire" broke out following the strike, in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

Jabed Ahmed11 December 2024 08:26

Russia claims Ukraine attacked cars used to carry IAEA experts

Russia has claimed Ukraine's armed forces launched a series of strikes on a convoy of cars on Tuesday, which had been used to transport experts from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

IAEA Director General Mariano Grossi said that a drone hit and severely damaged an official vehicle of the agency on the road to Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant on Tuesday.

Tara Cobham11 December 2024 08:02

Zelensky made case for security guarantees at meeting with Trump

President Volodymyr Zelensky used his first meeting with Donald Trump since the US election to explain Ukraine's need for security guarantees in any negotiated end to the war with Russia, two sources familiar with the 7 December discussions said.

French President Emmanuel Macron hosted the meeting in Paris, during which Ukraine's leader sought to build a rapport with Trump, whose promise to end the conflict swiftly has raised concerns in Kyiv that it could be largely on Moscow's terms.

The three leaders, who talked for 35 minutes without advisers, did not discuss specific details of any vision for peace, but Trump repeated that he wanted an immediate ceasefire and negotiations to end the war quickly, four of the people said.

The meeting offered some early clues as to how negotiations on ending the conflict might play out, although the process that would involve Russian President Vladimir Putin is fraught with difficulty and the role of the United States as yet unclear.

Trump behaved in a friendly, respectful and open manner and appeared to be in listening mode, one of the sources said. Trump's team did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this article.

Neither Trump nor officials close to him dealing with Ukraine have been forthcoming on how exactly they envisage a solution to the war and to Ukraine's insistence that it has to receive security guarantees as part of any settlement.

That has created a mounting sense of uncertainty in Kyiv that has been compounded by months of steady Russian territorial gains in Ukraine's eastern Donbas region and nightly drone attacks on cities far behind the front lines.

"Some key points were mentioned during the meeting, for example, it was said that peace needs guarantees because a ceasefire alone isn't enough, Putin could break it again, as he has done before, without proper guarantees," a source in the Ukrainian president's office said.

Asked how that was received, the source said, referring to Trump, "He's thinking about all the details."

France's President Emmanuel Macron (centre) walks with US president-elect Donald Trump (right) and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (left) after a meeting at the Elysee Presidential Palace in Paris on 7 December
France's President Emmanuel Macron (centre) walks with US president-elect Donald Trump (right) and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (left) after a meeting at the Elysee Presidential Palace in Paris on 7 December (AFP via Getty Images)
Tara Cobham11 December 2024 07:30

US Treasury transfers $20bn in Ukraine loan funds to World Bank facility

The US Treasury says it has transferred the $20bn US portion of a $50bn G7 loan for Ukraine to a World Bank intermediary fund for economic and financial aid to the war-torn country.

The disbursement prior to president-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration in January is aimed at protecting the funds from being clawed back by his administration. Mr Trump has complained that the US is providing too much aid to Ukraine and said he will end the war quickly, without specifying how.

The Treasury said the disbursement makes good on its October commitment to match the European Union’s commitment to provide $20bn in aid backed by frozen Russian sovereign assets alongside smaller loans from Britain, Canada and Japan to help the Eastern European nation fight Russia’s invasion.

The $50bn in credit for 30 years will be serviced with the interest proceeds from some $300bn in frozen Russian sovereign assets that have been immobilised since Russia invaded in February 2022. The G7 democracies have been discussing the plan for months and agreed on terms in October, prior to Trump’s election.

Arpan Rai11 December 2024 06:30

UK animal sanctuary reaches half a million goal to rescue Ukraine lions

A cat sanctuary that rescues lions from war-torn areas Ukraine has successfully met its fundraising goal to offer “forever homes” for the animals.

The Big Cat Sanctuary, the Kent-based charity behind the Big Cats in Crisis campaign, raised £500,000 to help rescue five lions, Yuna, Rori, Vanda, Amani, and Lira, from Ukraine to the Lion Rescue Centre in Smarden.

The funds will cover transportation fees, veterinary treatment, and the construction of a new habitat, which the sanctuary began in July and hopes to complete by the new year.

One African lioness, Yuna, was has seen grass for the first time since being rescued by the sanctuary after significant trauma.

Steffie Banatvala11 December 2024 06:00

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