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Ukraine-Russia latest: Putin faced ‘bloodiest month’ of war in September as Zelensky pitches victory plan

Putin casualties reach more than 600,000 in Ukraine since the war began in 2022, says US

Arpan Rai,Jabed Ahmed
Friday 11 October 2024 03:44
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Zelensky signs co-operation agreement with Croatia

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September proved to be the bloodiest month of attrition with 36,000 casualties for Vladimir Putin since the Russian invasion began in 2022, latest US intelligence assessment shows.

Russia suffered more than 1,200 casualties a day at an average – totalling to at least 36,000 casualties, according to the US and British military analysts, the New York Times reported. Officials in the West have called September the costliest month for Moscow’s troops but did not give an exact number of Russian casualties.

Russia has not released an official number of casualties of its forces in Ukraine and treats the information as a state secret.

Away from the frontline, Volodymyr Zelensky is promoting his “victory plan” in a widespread Europe visit that he said “aims to create the right conditions for a just end to the war” against Russia.

Yesterday, he met with prime minister Keir Starmer, Nato secretary general Mark Rutte, French president Emmanuel Macron and Italian premier Giorgia Meloni.

He is now set to meet Pope Francis today for a half-hour audience and then he will meet German chancellor Olaf Scholz in Berlin.

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Zelenskyy to seek more war support from a dozen countries in southeast Europe

Zelenskyy to seek more war support from a dozen countries in southeast Europe

Ukraine’s president is again seeking political and other support from a dozen countries in southeast Europe at a summit on Wednesday in Croatia, whose president isn’t attending in a sign of the divided views on the war with Russia

Tom Watling10 October 2024 06:01
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Ukraine says North Korean arsenal destroyed in drone attack

Ukraine’s military said it struck a Russian weapons arsenal, including those Russia got from North Korea, in the Bryansk region.

The Institute for the Study of War cited Ukrainian military officials as saying that the facility stored glide bombs, missile and artillery systems, and North Korean- and Iranian-provided weapons.

Arpan Rai10 October 2024 05:43
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How it felt to cross the Russian border on a Ukrainian tank

How it felt to cross the Russian border on a Ukrainian tank

In a career which has spanned four decades, journalist Askold Krushelnycky has seen first-hand the brutality of the Russian regime. But as Ukraine establishes a foothold in Kursk, could the tide finally be turning?

Tom Watling10 October 2024 05:00
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More weapons for Ukraine in 2014 could have avoided full-scale war, ex-Nato chief says

Nato allies could have averted Russia’s full-scale invasion by arming Ukraine in 2014, former Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenberg said.

“I continue to believe that if we had armed Ukraine more after 2014, we might have prevented Russia from invading — at least we would have increased the threshold for a full-scale invasion,” he told Politico.

A staunch ally of Kyiv, Mr Stoltenberg expressed regret at the end of his term over the alliance’s insufficient response to Russian aggression in 2014, which included the illegal occupation of Crimea.

“I worked hard to try to convince Nato allies to do more, to provide more military support, more training,” Mr Stoltenberg said.

“Some allies did, but it was relatively limited, and that was very difficult for many years because the policy in Nato was that Nato should not provide lethal support to Ukraine,” he added.

“If we had delivered a fraction of the weapons we have delivered after 2022, we may have actually prevented the war,” Mr Stoltenberg said.

Arpan Rai10 October 2024 04:56
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Britain bolsters sanctions regime on Russia with new trade unit

Britain launched a trade sanctions unit with new powers to penalise companies that fail to comply with restrictions on exporting services to Russia.

The UK government has announced sanctions on more than £20bn ($26bn) worth of trade with Russia since it invaded Ukraine in 2022, and said the Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation would support companies in complying with those sanctions.

“This new unit will help ensure businesses comply with trade sanctions and take decisive enforcement action where needed so that, together with business, we can continue to exert maximum pressure on Putin’s regime,” business and trade secretary Jonathan Reynolds said in a statement.

The government said that the OTSI would have powers to fine companies that breached sanctions, and also be empowered to publicise them – essentially “naming and shaming” the firms involved.

Arpan Rai10 October 2024 04:27
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Ukrainian Oscar winner Mstyslav Chernov: ‘I am the first director to admit I wish I never won this award’

Ukrainian Oscar-winner Mstyslav Chernov: ‘This is not for me, this is for Mariupol’

Documentary 20 Days in Mariupol becomes the first Ukrainian film to win at the Academy Awards after it won the award for Best documentary feature film at the 2024 Oscars

Tom Watling10 October 2024 04:16
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Six killed in Russian ballistic missile attack on Odesa

At least six people were killed and eight were injured in a Russian ballistic missile attack on the port infrastructure of Ukraine’s southern Odesa region, governor Oleh Kiper said.

The injured were all Ukrainian nationals and four of them are in serious condition, Mr Kiper said.

Deputy prime minister Oleksiy Kuleba said a Panamanian-flagged container ship, the Shui Spirit, sustained damage in the attack.

“An insidious enemy is trying to disrupt the work of the Ukrainian grain corridor, killing civilians and destroying infrastructure,” the minister wrote in his post.

This attack on the port of Chornomorsk is the third in the region in the past four days.

Arpan Rai10 October 2024 04:04

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