Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

WorldPolitics
16 Apr 2026 • 1:26 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

At least 13 people have been killed, including a 12-year-old child, in Ukraine after Russian forces unleashed a barrage of missiles and drones overnight.

Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko said four people had died in the capital, while seven people were killed in Odesa and two in the southeastern city of Dnipro, where Russian attacks set residential buildings ablaze.

Photos of the attack on Ukrainian cities showed the night sky turning orange as Ukrainian air forces tried to intercept the incoming aerial weapons.

An air raid alert remained in ‌effect in both Kyiv and Dnipro more ‌than two hours after it had been imposed in the capital as Vladimir Putin’s forces ramped up their attacks.

Just hours earlier, Ukraine said its forces had downed or intercepted at least 349 drones and 20 missiles in a daytime attack.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukrainian cities have become repeat targets for brutal attacks. "We need air defence missiles every single day – every day the Russians continue their strikes on our cities,” he said in an appeal to allies.

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Key Points

  • Death toll in attack on Ukrainian cities soars to 13
  • Twelve-year-old killed as Russian missiles hit Kyiv overnight
  • UK to send £752m and 120,000 drones to Ukraine to bolster defences against Russia
  • Kremlin says drone plans for Ukraine are pulling Europe deeper into war
  • Nato pledges $60bn in military aid to Ukraine as Zelensky pursues more arms deals

Russian attack damages port infrastructure in Odesa

06:53 , Arpan Rai

Russian overnight missile and drone strikes ⁠at Ukraine's southern city of ⁠Odesa ​damaged ⁠port infrastructure facilities, its ⁠regional ​governor said ⁠this morning.

Facades ‌and windows of at ‌least three ‌high-rise buildings, a dormitory ⁠and nearby buildings were also damaged, Oleh Kiper said on Telegram.

The ‌attack ​triggered fires ‌at ⁠certain infrastructure ⁠sites, he added.

A firefighter works at the site of recyclable materials hit by a Russian missile strike in Kyiv (Reuters)

Drone debris falls at port in Russia's Tuapse, official says

06:43 , Arpan Rai

Drone ⁠debris fell on ⁠the territory ​of ⁠enterprises ⁠at ​a ⁠port ‌in the city ‌of ‌Tuapse ⁠in Russia's Krasnodar region, a local official ‌said this morning.

Tuapse is one of Russia's major southern ports, ⁠serving as an oil product export hub and ​also ⁠handles dry bulk ‌cargo such as coal and fertiliser. It is also home to a major oil ‌refinery of the same name owned ‌by Rosneft, Russia's biggest oil producer.

Veniamin Kondratiev, governor of the Krasnodar region, said two children aged 5 and ⁠14 were killed in what he called a massive attack by Ukrainian drones.

Unverified images published by Russian media on Telegram showed the night sky illuminated red from a fire in the area. There was no ‌immediate comment from Ukraine.

Ukraine says it downs 31 missiles, 636 drones in Russian attacks over past 24 hours

06:36 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine's air force downed or neutralised 31 Russian ⁠missiles and 636 drones in attacks at ⁠the country ​over ⁠the past 24 hours, ⁠it said this morning.

"During this ‌period, the enemy launched two ‌waves of combined ‌attacks on Ukrainian territory, using ⁠ground-based and air-launched missiles, as well as attack drones," the air force said in ‌a statement ​on Telegram.

Overall, ‌it ⁠detected 703 Russian ⁠aerial targets, ‌it ​added.

Smoke rises over Kyiv following a Russian strike on April 16, 2026, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP/Getty)

Photos shows Russian drone heading for Ukrainian apartment

06:17 , Arpan Rai

A Russian Geran 2 kamikaze drone flies next to a building amid Russia’s attack on Kyiv (Reuters)A Russian Geran 2 kamikaze drone seen on its trajectory to attack a Ukrainian apartment building (Reuters)

Death toll in attack on Ukrainian cities soars to 13

06:09 , Arpan Rai

Russia unleashed missile and drone attacks on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and other cities overnight, killing 13 people, including a 12-year-old child, injuring several dozens and badly damaging buildings, officials said this morning.

In Kyiv, mayor Vitali Klitschko said four people, including the child, had died. Seven people were killed in Odesa and in the southeastern city of Dnipro, where Russian attacks set residential buildings ablaze, the regional governor said ⁠two people were killed.

Klitschko said 45 city ​residents ⁠were injured. The city came under another attack early on Thursday, he said, adding that a drone, flying very ⁠low, slammed into an 18-storey building.

Ukraine's emergency services put the death ​toll ⁠in Kyiv at five.

Photos posted ‌online showed fires burning out of control and smoke billowing skyward.

Klitschko said rescue teams had rescued a mother and child from a building ‌in a central district where the ‌ground floor was badly damaged. He also said missile debris had hit the sixth floor of an apartment building in the central Podil district.

Klitschko said a large fire ⁠had broken out in a building in a district in the north of the capital and four emergency medical workers were injured, while debris had fallen in several locations.

UK to send £752m and 120,000 drones to Ukraine to bolster defences against Russia

05:51 , Arpan Rai

Britain has announced a major new package of support for Ukraine, worth millions of pounds, as senior ministers engage in a series of high-level international meetings.

The aid comes as Kyiv continues to defend itself against Russia’s ongoing invasion.

In Washington DC, chancellor Rachel Reeves has confirmed a £752m payment to Ukraine, ahead of a meeting with Yulia Svyrydenko, the Ukrainian prime minister.

The payment, part of a larger £3.36bn loan, is earmarked to procure essential military equipment, including long-range missiles, advanced air defence systems, and drones.

Ms Reeves said: “This funding will help deliver the military equipment Ukraine needs as it defends itself against Russia’s unprovoked war.

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

UK to send £752m and 120,000 drones to Ukraine to bolster defences against Russia

Kremlin says drone plans for Ukraine are pulling Europe deeper into war

05:29 , Arpan Rai

European plans to step up drone supplies to Ukraine are dragging those countries ⁠deeper into a war with Russia, the Russian defence ministry said.

The ministry said it believes governments in a number of EU countries have decided to increase the production and supply of drones to Ukraine, a ⁠move Moscow views as a ​step ⁠that is escalating the conflict.

It published a list of factories and enterprises in several European countries ⁠it alleges manufacture drones or drone components, and gave ​their ⁠addresses, including sites in Britain, ‌Germany, Spain, Italy, Israel and Poland, among others.

"The European public should not only have a clear understanding ‌of the true causes of the ‌threats to their security, but also be aware of the addresses and locations of Ukrainian and joint enterprises producing UAVs and components for ⁠Ukraine within their own countries," it said.

Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, now deputy chair of Russia's Security Council, said in a subsequent post on X that the list published by the military amounted to a list of potential targets for Russia's armed forces.

"When strikes ‌become a reality depends on what comes ​next. Sleep well, European partners!" he said.

Russia's Tuapse port area hit in Ukrainian drone attacks, governor says

04:59 , Arpan Rai

At least two children aged five and ⁠14 have been killed and a number of ⁠enterprises ​in ⁠the area of ⁠Russia's Black Sea ​port ⁠of Tuapse ‌were hit in Ukrainian drone ‌attacks, local governor ‌Veniamin Kondratiev said this morning.

In his post on the Telegram messaging app, he also said several ‌residential houses ​were damaged ‌in ⁠the massive ⁠drone attacks on the ‌region.

Nato pledges $60bn in military aid to Ukraine as Zelensky pursues more arms deals

04:42 , Arpan Rai

Nato allies are looking to provide Ukraine with around $60bn (£44bn) in military and security assistance in 2026, the alliance’s secretary general Mark Rutte said in a meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group in Berlin.

The critical assistance would be delivered in addition to the €90bn (£78.2bn) loan package agreed by the European Union and would focus on priority needs, Rutte said.

“We must focus funding on the priorities – air defence, drones and extended-range ammunition. These are the big priorities,” the Nato official said.

The aid from Nato is timely as Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky said the top diplomatic priority is securing allies' help to buy and build more air defence systems.

Zelensky is also championing joint weapons production agreements, including for drones and missiles, while pushing for the European Union to move quickly on providing the promised loan.

Ukrainian defence minister Mykhailo Fedorow, chief of defence of the German Armed Forces Carsten Breuer, and Nato secretary general Mark Rutte, and Britain's defence secretary John Healey attend a meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group at the Federal Ministry of Defence in Berlin, Germany (Reuters)

Ukraine's new combat model pays off as Russia-held territory recaptured, says commander

04:21 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine’s defence minister has said its military is introducing a ‌new model of operations integrating drone warfare with infantry activity, following successful operations in the south of the country.

Top commander Oleksandr Syrskyi said Kyiv's forces had regained control of nearly 50 sq km (19 sq miles) ​of its territory from Russia in March, building on its gains since the start of the year.

“A new model of warfare is being introduced, ​drone-assault units that combine aerial and ground unmanned systems with infantry into a single integrated system," the defence ministry said in ​a brief statement on Telegram.

“This approach has already produced results in the south, where since February a large area of territory has been liberated, precisely thanks to the use of these advanced units,” he said.

Syrskyi made his assessment of recaptured territory in a separate statement on Telegram. He ​also said that amid improved spring weather, Russian forces had stepped up offensive operations along almost the entire 1,200km (775-mile) ​frontline.

Soldiers from the 'Taifun' unmanned aerial vehicle unit are stationed in a dugout, where they live and carry out combat missions in Kharkiv (Getty)

Three dead in major Russian attack on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities

04:15 , Arpan Rai

Russian forces attacked the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and other cities a short while ago, killing three people, including a 12-year-old child, injuring more than 20 and badly ⁠damaging buildings, officials said.

In Kyiv, mayor Vitali Klitschko said two people, including the child, had died. In the southeastern city of Dnipro, where Russian attacks set residential buildings ablaze, the regional governor said one ⁠person was killed.

"As result of ​the ⁠enemy attack on the capital, two people have been killed, a 12-year-old boy and a 35-year-old woman," Klitschko ⁠wrote on Telegram. "Ten residents have been injured. Six are being treated ​in ⁠hospital."

Tymur Tkachenko, head of ‌the capital's military administration put the injury toll in the city at 18, including a child.

An air raid alert remained in ‌effect in both Kyiv and Dnipro more ‌than two hours after it had been imposed in the capital.

Klitschko ⁠said rescue teams had rescued a mother and child from a building in a central district where the ground floor was badly damaged.

He also said a missile had hit the sixth floor of an apartment building in the central Podil district.

Klitschko said a large fire had broken out in a building ‌in a district in the north of the capital ​and four emergency medical workers were injured, while debris ‌had fallen in several locations.

A firefighter works at the site of recycling materials hit by a Russian missile strike in Kyiv (Reuters)

Netherlands to spend €250m on drones for Ukraine

04:04 , Arpan Rai

The Netherlands will spend €248m (£215m) on producing drones for Ukraine, Dutch ⁠defence minister Dilan Yesilgoz-Zegerius said.

“Drones play a crucial role on the modern ⁠battlefield. Ukrainians deploy them with ⁠incredible skill to repel the incessant Russian ⁠attacks," she said after meeting ⁠her counterparts from Nato ‌countries and the alliance's secretary general Mark Rutte in ‌Berlin yesterday.

“Thanks to ‌the good cooperation with Ukraine, we are learning directly ⁠from this. This also offers opportunities for our business community," she added. The drones will be manufactured in the Netherlands and Ukraine.

Nato allies have ‌already provided over $4.5bn in military equipment ‌for Ukraine, according ⁠to data from ⁠the US ambassador to Nato Matthew Whitaker ‌released in February.

Ukrainian service member Anatolii stands next to an AS3 interceptor unmanned aerial vehicle during training in Ukraine (Reuters)

Twelve-year-old killed as Russian missiles hit Kyiv overnight

04:01 , Arpan Rai

Russian forces attacked the Ukrainian capital Kyiv with missiles in the early hours today, killing a 12-year-old child, ⁠injuring several people, including emergency crew members, and damaging buildings, mayor Vitali Klitschko said.

"As a result of the enemy attack, a 12-year-old child ⁠has been killed," Klitschko ​wrote ⁠on Telegram. "At the moment, 10 people are injured. That includes several medics."

Klitschko ⁠said rescue teams had rescued a ​mother ⁠and child from a ‌building in a central district where the ground floor was badly damaged.

He also said ‌a missile had hit ‌the sixth floor of an apartment building in the central Podil district.

Klitschko said a large ⁠fire had broken out in a building in a district in the north of the capital and four emergency medical workers were injured, while debris had fallen in several locations.

Russian attacks also triggered major fires ‌in the southeastern city of Dnipro, ​injuring five people, regional governor Oleksandr ‌Ganzha wrote on ⁠Telegram. Pictures posted online showed buildings ablaze.

In ⁠Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city in the northeast, officials ‌said two ​people had been ‌injured in drone strikes.

Smoke rises as a missile explodes during a Russian missile strike in Kyiv (Reuters)

US-Ukrainian investment fund can get second project in summer, says official

03:56 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine's deputy economy minister has said he expects the Ukraine-US joint reconstruction fund to approve a second investment project, likely in the energy sector, this summer, with a ​third project expected before the end of 2026.

Yegor Perelygin, part of a large Ukrainian ‌delegation visiting Washington this week, told Reuters cooperation on the US-Ukraine Reconstruction Investment Fund with the US International Development Finance Corp was going well, and discussions were underway about expanding its scope.

Perelygin said the fund played an important role as a "de-risking mechanism" to attract investment into the ​five key sectors: critical minerals, infrastructure, energy, telecoms and high tech, and emerging technologies.

“We think that ​we can use it as a centerpiece for funneling or taking more insurance-related mechanisms onto the market or ‌supporting strategic ⁠off-take contracts," he said in an interview with Reuters.

Ukraine's energy sector was severely damaged during intense Russian attacks this winter, leaving Ukraine to rebuild some 3 gigawatts of power this year, Perelygin said, although he declined to estimate the associated cost.

Watch: Former MI6 chief and Rusi boss discuss Russia, Trump and the future of the West

03:00 , James Reynolds

Join us as world affairs editor Sam Kiley sits down with former MI6 chief Sir Alex Younger and Dr Rachel Ellehuus, director-general of The Royal United Services Institute (Rusi) and former Pentagon official, to explore the shifting global security landscape.

In this episode of World of Trouble, The Independent’s new expert-led discussion series, our panel unpacks the fast-changing global security landscape in a discussion entitled Shifting Alliances.

They delve into the strategic importance of Russia’s actions in Ukraine, Nato’s future, and whether Europe has the strength and resolve to face the Russian challenge.

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Former MI6 chief on Russia, Trump and the future of the West

Watch: Starmer rejects Lord Robertson claim government 'complacent' on defence

02:00 , James Reynolds

How Ukraine ‘recaptured occupied territory using only robots’

01:00 , James Reynolds

Ukrainian forces retook occupied territory in an unprecedented assault using only unmanned machines, Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky said on Monday, as he praised the country’s era-defining advances in frontline technology.

The president revealed in an address that drones have carried out more than 22,000 missions on the frontlines in three months - a major shift on the modern battlefield that he cast as key to protecting human life.

“For the first time in the history of this war, an enemy position was taken exclusively by unmanned platforms – ground systems and drones. The occupiers surrendered, and the operation was carried out without infantry and without losses on our side,” the president said, referencing a groundbreaking manoeuvre in Kharkiv oblast last year.

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Russian soldiers surrendered to Ukrainian assault using only robots, says Zelensky

Ukraine's supply of US Patriot missiles 'couldn't be any worse'

Thursday 16 April 2026 00:00 , James Reynolds

Ukraine’s supply of US-produced Patriot missiles “could not be any worse” as the war in the Middle East impacts Ukrainian aid, the country’s president has warned.

Volodymyr Zelensky told German outlet ZDF that the air defence missiles were facing a critical shortage, with the Iran war reducing Ukraine’s chances of receiving foreign military aid.

“We are receiving (air defenses) slower than is possible, but we are receiving them,” he added.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (AFP/Getty)

Watch: Vance claims cutting Ukraine aid 'one of Trump administration's proudest achievements'

Wednesday 15 April 2026 23:00 , James Reynolds

Recap: Cameroon says Russia has confirmed 16 Cameroonian soldiers died in Ukraine

Wednesday 15 April 2026 22:00 , James Reynolds

Cameroon this week confirmed the deaths of 16 of its soldiers fighting in Ukraine, following a notification from Russia.

The nation's foreign affairs ministry sent a memo to the Russian Embassy, acknowledging the fatalities among Cameroonian personnel serving in what Russia terms the "special military operations zone."

The ministry stated that "necessary arrangements" were being made to inform the families of those who died.

In a separate communication issued on the same day, the ministry also invited the relatives of six other Cameroonian nationals residing in Russia to attend a meeting regarding "urgent matters," though no further details were provided.

Read the full story:

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Cameroon says Russia has confirmed 16 Cameroonian soldiers died in Ukraine

Recap: US cutting off Ukraine support ‘one of Trump’s proudest achievements’

Wednesday 15 April 2026 21:00 , James Reynolds

JD Vance said that cutting Ukraine off from US support is one of his proudest achievements of the Trump administration.

The US vice president told a Turning Point USA rally in Georgia on Tuesday that he still backed the decision to end nearly all new weapons deliveries for Kyiv, leaving Europe to pay for vital aid instead.

"I still believe that, obviously, and it's one of the things I'm proudest that we've done in this administration is we've told Europe that if you want to buy weapons, you can, but the United States is not buying weapons and sending them to Ukraine anymore,” he said.

Referencing a clash with a Ukrainian-American over his push to withdraw funding for Ukraine, Vance added: “Being an American means caring about Americans first, and that’s the perspective we should be taking in his immigration policy”.

European countries have bought the vast majority of US weapons bound for Ukraine since Donald Trump took office last January.

U.S. Vice President JD Vance (R) speaks with Turning Point USA spokesperson Andrew Kolvet during a Turning Point USA event (Getty)

UK to send £752m and 120,000 drones to Ukraine to bolster defences against Russia

Wednesday 15 April 2026 20:00 , James Reynolds

Britain has announced a major new package of support for Ukraine, worth millions of pounds, as senior ministers engage in a series of high-level international meetings.

In Washington DC, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has confirmed a £752 million payment to Ukraine, ahead of a meeting with Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Svyrydenko.

The payment, part of a larger £3.36 billion loan, is earmarked to procure essential military equipment, including long-range missiles, advanced air defence systems, and drones.

Ukrainian service member Anatolii stands next to an AS3 interceptor unmanned aerial vehicle, during training in Ukraine on April 10 (Reuters)

Ukraine retook 50 sq km of land in March, army says

Wednesday 15 April 2026 19:00 , James Reynolds

Ukraine has regained control of nearly 50 sq km (19 sq miles) of its territory from Russia in March, its army chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said on Wednesday.

He added that with the change of weather conditions, Moscow's forces have stepped up their offensive operations and were conducting them along virtually the entire 1,200-km front line.

Ukrainian forces  in the Donetsk region, on February 16 (AFP/Getty)

EU ready to send Ukraine 90bn euro once Hungary gives green light

Wednesday 15 April 2026 18:00 , James Reynolds

The EU is ready to supply Ukraine with its promised 90 billion euro loan as soon as Hungary drops its veto after last Sunday's election, EU Defence Commissioner Andrius Kubilius said on Wednesday.

“The people have spoken. A new wind is blowing,” Kubilius said about the election that was convincingly won by Hungary's opposition leader Peter Magyar.

“In any case, we are ready to implement the loan as soon as we get the green light,” the commissioner said.

The defeat of Hungary's ​Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Ukraine's harshest EU foe, could pave the way for the loan that Kyiv urgently needs to fund the war with Russia, and that was originally agreed on by all EU member states in December.

Incoming Hungarian prime minister Peter Magyar on Wednesday (AP)

Hungary’s new prime minister says he will ask Putin to stop the killing in Ukraine

Wednesday 15 April 2026 17:00 , James Reynolds

The incoming prime minister of Hungary, Péter Magyar, said that he will ask Vladimir Putin to end the killing in Ukraine if he speaks with the Russian president.

Addressing a media briefing a day after his landslide election victory over nationalist Viktor Orban, an ally of Putin, Mr Magyar said he hoped Moscow would be forced to end the war soon and affirmed that Ukraine is the clear victim in the conflict.

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Hungary’s new prime minister says he will ask Putin to stop the killing in Ukraine

Nato's existence not guaranteed, says former chief

Wednesday 15 April 2026 16:00 , James Reynolds

Former Nato secretary general Jen Stoltenberg warned that the military alliance’s existence is not “a law of nature” and that there are no guarantees it will survive the next ten years.

Mr Stoltenberg told Denmark’s TV2 that Trump’s threats to withdraw from Nato must be taken seriously, urging European allies to show Washington the value of the bloc to the US.

"It is not a law of nature that we have NATO forever. It is not written in stone that NATO will survive the next ten years," he told the broadcaster.

“[The US has] something in NATO that Russia and China don't have: over 30 friends and allies,” he added.

Jens Stoltenberg (file) (AFP/Getty)

Putin planning visit to China, says Kremlin

Wednesday 15 April 2026 15:00 , James Reynolds

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday that president Vladimir Putin will visit China, with dates to be announced in due course.

The president does not currently plan to meet the U.S. President Donald Trump there.

Peskov added that the Kremlin will announce the dates of the visit in due course.

China’s president Xi Jinping said in a meeting with Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov meanwhile that the two countries should work together to restore the authority of the UN and promote multilateralism in foreign affairs.

“It is necessary to strengthen multilateral cooperation, firmly support and promote multilateralism, jointly work to restore the authority and vitality of the United Nations, and closely coordinate and cooperate within the frameworks of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and BRICS to advance the development of the international order in a more just and reasonable direction,” president Xi said, according to China’s Xinhua news agency.

China's President Xi Jinping (C), North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un (R) and Russia's President Vladimir Putin in 2025 (AFP/Getty)

Kremlin declares Putin was ‘never friends with Orban’ after historic election defeat

Wednesday 15 April 2026 14:00 , James Reynolds

The Kremlin has declared that it was “never friends” with outgoing Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban, as it braces for a new era of relations with Budapest following his landslide loss to a pro-EU candidate.

Mr Orban, who enjoyed warm relations with Russian president Vladimir Putin and was a persistent thorn in Ukraine’s side as it sought financial backing for its war effort from a divided Europe, was swept aside by Peter Magyar and his centre-right Tisza party.

Here’s how Hungary’s new leader could reshape support for Ukraine on the continent:

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Kremlin declares Putin was ‘never friends with Orban’ after historic election defeat

UK to send £752m and 120,000 drones to Ukraine to bolster defences against Russia

Wednesday 15 April 2026 13:55 , James Reynolds

Britain has announced a major new package of support for Ukraine, worth millions of pounds, as senior ministers engage in a series of high-level international meetings.

The aid comes as Kyiv continues to defend itself against Russia’s ongoing invasion.

In Washington DC, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has confirmed a £752 million payment to Ukraine, ahead of a meeting with Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Svyrydenko.

The payment, part of a larger £3.36 billion loan, is earmarked to procure essential military equipment, including long-range missiles, advanced air defence systems, and drones.

Ukrainian service member Anatolii stands next to an AS3 interceptor unmanned aerial vehicle, during training in Ukraine on April 10 (Reuters)

EU ready to send Ukraine 90bn euro once Hungary gives green light

Wednesday 15 April 2026 13:47 , James Reynolds

The EU is ready to supply Ukraine with its promised 90 billion euro loan as soon as Hungary drops its veto after last Sunday's election, EU Defence Commissioner Andrius Kubilius said on Wednesday.

“The people have spoken. A new wind is blowing,” Kubilius said about the election that was convincingly won by Hungary's opposition leader Peter Magyar.

“In any case, we are ready to implement the loan as soon as we get the green light,” the commissioner said.

The defeat of Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Ukraine's harshest EU foe, could pave the way for the loan that Kyiv urgently needs to fund the war with Russia, and that was originally agreed on by all EU member states in December.

Incoming Hungarian prime minister Peter Magyar on Wednesday (AP)

How Ukraine ‘recaptured occupied territory using only robots’

Wednesday 15 April 2026 13:00 , James Reynolds

Ukrainian forces retook occupied territory in an unprecedented assault using only unmanned machines, Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky said on Monday, as he praised the country’s era-defining advances in frontline technology.

The president revealed in an address that drones have carried out more than 22,000 missions on the frontlines in three months - a major shift on the modern battlefield that he cast as key to protecting human life.

“For the first time in the history of this war, an enemy position was taken exclusively by unmanned platforms – ground systems and drones. The occupiers surrendered, and the operation was carried out without infantry and without losses on our side,” the president said, referencing a groundbreaking manoeuvre in Kharkiv oblast last year.

Here’s how it happened:

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Russian soldiers surrendered to Ukrainian assault using only robots, says Zelensky

The latest: Kyiv calls on Israel to block Russian vessel

Wednesday 15 April 2026 12:30 , James Reynolds

Ukraine has called on Israel to detain a Russian vessel allegedly carrying grain taken from occupied Ukrainian territory, escalating a diplomatic row over alleged wartime looting.

The Russian ship ABINSK is loaded with 43,765.18 tonnes of wheat, claimed to have come from the occupied territories of Ukraine, according to Ukrainian journalist Kateryna Yaresko and the SeaKrime project.

Foreign minister Andrii Sybiha raised the issue directly with his Israeli counterpart, Gideon Sa’ar, warning that the vessel docked at Port of Haifa forms part of Moscow’s wider war effort.

Sybiha stressed that the “illegal export of stolen agricultural products” must not be allowed to continue.

Zelensky arrives in Norway to sign agreement to expand drone cooperation

Wednesday 15 April 2026 11:30 , Shweta Sharma

Volodymyr Zelensky arrived in Norway on Wednesday and signed an agreement to strengthen their bilateral defence cooperation, including by producing Ukrainian drones in the Nordic country.

Zelensky said he discussed cooperation in the production and use of drones in detail with his Norwegian counterpart.

“Our experience is already being used in the Middle East and the Gulf. We are improving defense against 'shahed' drones, and we believe this should also be done in Europe,” he said.

Prime minister Jonas Gahr Stoere told a joint press conference with Ukrainian ‌president Volodymyr Zelensky: “We can ⁠learn from the experiences that Ukraine is ​making ⁠in this hard-won fight ‌against the Russian aggression.”

"It is crucial ‌that we learn from these experiences," he said.

UK to send £752m payment to Ukraine

Wednesday 15 April 2026 10:45 , Shweta Sharma

Britain will announce extra support for Ukraine worth millions of pounds on Wednesday as senior ministers hold a series of meetings with their international counterparts.

In Washington DC, chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to confirm a £752m payment to Kyiv ahead of a meeting with Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Svyrydenko.

The payment, part of a £3.36bn loan, is intended to help pay for weaponry including long-range missiles, air defence systems and drones.

Ms Reeves said: "This funding will help deliver the military equipment Ukraine needs as it defends itself against Russia's unprovoked war.

"I am proud that the UK is a leading partner in providing vital support to Ukraine, and we will continue to step up to do more while keeping pressure on Russia."

Meanwhile, defence secretary John Healey will use a meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group (UDCG) to announce the UK's biggest ever drone package for Ukraine that will see 120,000 drones delivered to the country.

The package will include long-range strike drones, reconnaissance drones, logistics drones and those with maritime capabilities, with many produced by UK-based companies.

Mr Healey said: "This big boost of battle-proven drones will give Ukrainian forces the capability they need to defend their people and fight back against Russian aggression."

Hungary’s new prime minister says he will ask Putin to stop the killing in Ukraine

Wednesday 15 April 2026 10:00 , Shweta Sharma

The incoming prime minister of Hungary, Péter Magyar, has said that he will ask Vladimir Putin to end the killing in Ukraine if he speaks with the Russian president.

Addressing a media briefing a day after his landslide election victory over nationalist Viktor Orban, an ally of Putin, Mr Magyar said he hoped Moscow would be forced to end the war soon and affirmed that Ukraine is the clear victim in the conflict.

Mr Magyar, the leader of the centre-right Tisza party, said he would not call the Russian president, but he has previously publicly recognised that he would need to hold talks with Putin and that Budapest would need to continue buying Russian oil and gas for the time being.

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Hungary’s new prime minister says he will ask Putin to stop the killing in Ukraine

Wednesday 15 April 2026 09:15 , Shweta Sharma

Russian soldiers surrendered to Ukrainian assault using only unmanned robots, says Zelensky

Wednesday 15 April 2026 08:30 , Shweta Sharma

Ukrainian forces retook occupied territory in an unprecedented assault using only unmanned machines, Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky said on Monday, as he praised the country’s era-defining advances in frontline technology.

The president revealed in an address that drones have carried out more than 22,000 missions on the frontlines in three months - a major shift on the modern battlefield that he cast as key to protecting human life.

“For the first time in the history of this war, an enemy position was taken exclusively by unmanned platforms – ground systems and drones. The occupiers surrendered, and the operation was carried out without infantry and without losses on our side,” the president said, referencing a groundbreaking manoeuvre in Kharkiv oblast last year.

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Russian soldiers surrendered to Ukrainian assault using only robots, says Zelensky

Ukraine targets Russian military trucks with autonomous 'Hornet' drones – video

Wednesday 15 April 2026 08:00 , Shweta Sharma

Ukrainian forces are striking Russian military trucks with a “Hornet”-type suicide drone equipped with an automated targeting system, a Ukrainian government–run platform said, citing a video.

The video, circulating on social media since Monday, shows the drone locking onto and hitting the vehicles, reportedly without manual guidance in the final moments of the strike.

The system is believed to use onboard targeting assistance, allowing it to track and maintain its trajectory even in the face of battlefield interference.

The Independent could not verify the authenticity of the video.

“Hornet” drones are typically linked to Ukrainian-developed FPV and loitering munitions produced by volunteer-led initiatives such as the Wild Hornets group, the news website launched by the Ukrainian government in 2022 to support the war effort, reported.

These compact, high-speed platforms carry explosive payloads and are designed to hit targets directly, including moving vehicles.

Newer versions increasingly feature elements of automated targeting, reflecting a broader shift in Ukraine’s drone warfare strategy.

Kyiv has focused on scaling up production while improving precision and resilience, particularly in strikes aimed at disrupting Russian logistics and supply lines.

Russia fired 300 drones and three ballistic missiles overnight

Wednesday 15 April 2026 07:45 , Shweta Sharma

Russia launched a large-scale overnight attack on Ukraine, firing more than 300 drones and three ballistic missiles, Ukrainian officials said, with port infrastructure in the south among the targets.

Ukraine’s air force said 324 drones were launched from Tuesday evening, with 309 shot down or neutralised.

All three missiles and at least 13 drones struck targets in nine locations, it said.

In the southeastern city of Dnipro, three people were injured and a nine-storey apartment block was damaged, regional governor Oleksandr Hanzha said, a day after a missile strike there killed five and wounded nearly 30.

In Cherkasy, four people sought medical help following a separate drone attack, while in Zaporizhzhia a 74-year-old woman was killed in shelling that also damaged nearby buildings and businesses.

Further strikes hit port infrastructure in the southern Odesa region, damaging administrative and warehouse facilities, governor Oleh Kiper said.

Kremlin declares Putin was ‘never friends with Orban’ after historic election defeat

Wednesday 15 April 2026 07:34 , Shweta Sharma

The Kremlin has declared that it was “never friends” with outgoing Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban, as it braces for a new era of relations with Budapest following his landslide loss to a pro-EU candidate.

Mr Orban, who enjoyed warm relations with Russian president Vladimir Putin and was a persistent thorn in Ukraine’s side as it sought financial backing for its war effort from a divided Europe, was swept aside by Peter Magyar and his centre-right Tisza party.

What the future holds for the Russia-Hungary relationship is unclear, but in light of Mr Orban’s collapse in public support, Moscow now appears to be distancing itself and playing down the loss of its most influential ally in the European Union.

“We were never friends with Orban,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters, according to The Guardian. Hungary’s official designation is as an “unfriendly country”, he added, explaining that Russia therefore did not congratulate Mr Magyar on his election win.

Image from: Ukraine-Russia war latest: Child among 13 killed as Putin’s forces attack Kyiv and other cities overnight

Kremlin declares Putin was ‘never friends with Orban’ after historic election defeat

Xi calls China-Russia ties 'precious' in current international context

Wednesday 15 April 2026 07:00 , Shweta Sharma

Chinese president Xi Jinping said Wednesday that the stability and certainty of China-Russia relations are particularly "precious" in the face of an international landscape intertwined with change and chaos.

During a meeting with Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov in Beijing, Xi said the strong vitality and exemplary significance of the friendship treaty between the two countries stand out even more under such a backdrop.

 (Reuters)

He said foreign ministries from both countries would need to fully implement the consensus reached between him and Russian president Vladimir Putin, calling for strengthening strategic communication and close diplomatic coordination.

He also urged them to promote the comprehensive strategic partnership between Beijing and Moscow to "stand higher, walk more steadily and go further.

 (Getty)

"Xi touted the value of the two nations' ties, but he did not specify what he referred to as chaos and changes in the international context, as uncertainty still lingers about how long the Iran war would last.

Kremlin tells Russians internet shutdowns are temporary after crackdown ruffles elite

Wednesday 15 April 2026 06:31 , Shweta Sharma

The Kremlin told Russians on Tuesday that mobile internet shutdowns that have disrupted the lives of millions are temporary and will eventually be lifted amid anger in Moscow’s elites.

Authorities shut down the mobile internet in Moscow for nearly three weeks in March and regularly block it elsewhere, citing the risk of Ukrainian drones using it to guide attacks. The Federal Security Service (FSB), the main successor agency to the Soviet KGB, is in charge of internal security.

Meta's WhatsApp has been completely blocked and it has become extremely ⁠difficult to use the Telegram messenger service - which has long been ​Russians' ⁠preferred digital ecosystem - after both messengers were accused of not complying with Russian law.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry ⁠Peskov said that "security considerations" dictated the need to take certain measures, but that they were temporary.

"It is ​clear that ⁠restrictions on internet access cause inconvenience for many ‌citizens, but... once the need for these measures has passed, internet access will, of course, be fully restored and returned to normal," said Peskov.

It comes amid anger by businesses and bankers over losses because of the shutdown.

Several senior business-oriented ‌current and former officials and bankers had reportedly lobbied president Vladimir Putin to moderate the crackdown.

Ukraine calls on Israel to detain Russian vessel with stolen wheat

Wednesday 15 April 2026 06:30 , Shweta Sharma

Ukraine has urged Israel to take action over a Russian vessel it alleges is carrying stolen Ukrainian grain.

Kyiv says the ship, ABINSK, was loaded via smaller vessels operating from ports in Russian-occupied territory, citing an investigation by a Ukrainian journalist.

Ukrainian officials argue the export of looted agricultural produce is helping to sustain Russia’s economy amid the war.

Foreign minister Andrii Sybiha raised the issue with his Israeli counterpart, calling for steps to prevent what Ukraine describes as illegal trade.

He stressed “that the illegal export of stolen Ukrainian agricultural products is part of Russia’s broader war effort. Such illegal trade with stolen goods must not be allowed.”

Ukrainian representatives had earlier appealed to Israeli authorities to block the vessel from docking, and have since asked that it be prevented from leaving port.

Israel has not publicly commented on the claims.