Ukraine-Russia war latest: Huge drone attack hits Moscow region as Kremlin claims control of Ukrainian towns

WorldPolitics
10 Sep 2024 • 8:19 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

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Ukraine has launched what is likely to be its largest drone attack of the war so far, with Russian air defences saying it downed 144 of the unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) across nine different Russian regions.

At least 20 of the drones were downed over Moscow, Russian officials said, where dozens of flights were cancelled and several major airports suspended operations. Two floors of a multistorey apartment block in the southeast Moscow region of Ramenskoye were pictured destroyed.

Moscow’s mayor Sergei Sobyanin said emergency crews were dispatched to several sites across the capital region including the Zhukovo airport and to the Domodedovo district - home to one of Moscow’s largest airports. At least one child was killed and a large fire broke out in a high-rise residential building outside the capital.

It comes as Russia’s security council chief Sergei Shoigu claimed that Russia was pushing on in its offensive in eastern Ukraine. The ministry of defence, formerly run by Shoigu, claimed Russian forces had taken several towns in the Donetsk region.

They offered no evidence to substantiate these claims.

Key Points

  • Russia claims, without evidence, to have taken more territory in eastern Ukraine
  • Ukraine summons Iranian diplomat over missile transfer to Russia
  • Lammy announces joint visit to Ukraine with Antony Blinken
  • Russia suspends 30 flights amid major drone attack
  • Iran sending Russia ballistic missiles would mark ‘dramatic escalation’, warns White House

The EU buys too much defense equipment abroad, especially from the US, a major report says

13:41

Tom Watling

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Lammy announces joint visit to Ukraine with Antony Blinken

13:17

Tom Watling

British Foreign Secretary David Lammy has announced that he will travel with US secretary of state Antony Blinken to Ukraine this week.

“I can confirm that Tony and I will be traveling to Kyiv this week, the first joint visit of this kind for well over a decade,” Lammy told a press conference beside Blinken, who is visiting Britain.

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Blinken arrives in London

13:09

Tom Watling

The US secretary of state has arrived in London ahead of talks with his UK counterpart David Lammy.

The pair are expected to discuss the war in Ukraine and the situation in the Middle East.

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The Ukraine invasion has made the Russians more ferocious

12:43

Tom Watling

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Ukraine identifies Russian suspect in July attack on children's hospital

12:10

Tom Watling

Ukraine‘s prosecutor general has announced that Kyiv suspect a senior Russian air force commander of ordering a missile strike on a children’s hospital in central Kyiv in July that killed two people and caused extensive damage.

Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin did not name the individual, but said the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague had already issued an arrest warrant against him.

In March, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Lieutenant General Sergei Kobylash, saying he was the commander of Russia’s long-range aviation forces. The ICC said at the time he was suspected of war crimes including ordering strikes on Ukraine‘s energy system.

“We are continuing the investigation to find other people responsible for the strike on Okhmatdyt,” Kostin told reporters, referring to the hospital.

He stood outside the damaged clinic beside ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan, who is visiting Kyiv.

According to Kostin, the commander ordered the firing of a Kh-101 air-launched cruise missile from a Russian bomber at 10.45 a.m. on 8 July, the day of the strike.

Khan added that it appeared from various sources that a Kh-101 missile has been identified.

“It does seem from a number of sources and the work that’s been done that a missile, a Kh-101 cruise missile, has been identified,” Khan said. “A number of factors have to be looked into further.”

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Ukraine has constructive dialogue with Hungary, PM says

11:43

Tom Watling

Ukrainian prime minister Denys Shmyhal has said that Ukraine has “quite constructive” dialogue with Hungary, which has voiced opposition to Kyiv’s aspirations to join the European Union.

“I do not see a global threat on our EU path,” Shmyhal told a briefing, despite long-standing to their membership from Budapest.

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In Ukraine, a city grieves for a family killed in a deadly Russia missile attack

11:21

Tom Watling

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We have some more footage from a strike in southeast Moscow

10:54

Tom Watling

Earlier, we reported that two floors of a multistorey apartment block in southeast Moscow had been set on fire after reportedly being hit by a Ukrainian drone, according to Russian officials.

Below, we have some more pictures from the scene.

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The Ukrainian doctors forced to perform surgery without anaesthetic

10:32

Tom Watling

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Russia claims control over several eastern Ukrainian towns

10:09

Tom Watling

Russia has claimed to have taken a number of towns in eastern Ukraine.

The Russian defence ministry reported they had taken control of Krasnohorivka, Hryhorivka, Halytsynivka and Vodiane.

While Russia has been advancing in the direction of all those frontline towns, the MoD often prematurely claims control over towns.

World order under threat ‘not seen since Cold War’, say MI6 and CIA

09:46

Tom Watling

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Footage shows alleged Ukrainian attack in Russia

09:20

Tom Watling

Russia attacks energy infrastructure in several Ukrainian regions, Ukraine says

09:00

Tom Watling

Ukraine‘s energy ministry has said that Russian forces had attacked energy infrastructure in eight Ukrainian regions in the previous 24 hours.

The ministry said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app that the attacks had disrupted high-voltage lines and power substations in several regions.

Russia to discuss Ukraine initiatives with BRICS partners

08:45

Tom Watling

Representatives of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, which make up the BRICS alliance, will discuss initiatives on Ukraine at a security-focused meeting starting on Tuesday, the Ria news agency cited Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu as saying.

The meeting is taking place in Russia on 10 - 12 September, he said.

The Ukrainian doctors forced to perform surgery without anaesthetic

08:33

Tom Watling

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Russia says it will work with international bodies after Ukraine drone attack on Moscow

08:22

Tom Watling

Russia has claimed it will work with international organisations after alleging that Ukraine struck Moscow and western Russia in one of its biggest ever drone attacks.

State news agency Ria cited foreign ministry Maria Zakharova as saying they would open up to international organisations.

Previously, Russia has refused international help following strikes and a Ukrainian incursion into the border region of Kursk.

Pictures: Russian building on fire after Ukrainian drone strike

08:16

Arpan Rai

Ukraine struck Moscow and western Russia in one of its biggest ever drone attacks, killing at least one woman, wrecking dozens of homes and forcing the closure of major airports in the capital, Russian officials said.

Social media videos showed flames bursting out of windows of a multi-storey residential building, saying that dozens of flats were damaged in the Ramenskoye district.

“I looked at the window and saw a ball of fire,” Alexander Li, a resident of the district told Reuters. “The window got blown out by the shockwave.”

The Ramenskoye district, some 50km (31 miles) southeast from the Kremlin, has a population of around quarter a million of people, according to official data.

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Voices: Why Xi secretly hates and fears Russia – and may be about to betray Putin

08:00

Michael Sheridan

The bear and the dragon can never be friends. That is a lesson Xi Jinping heard at a young age. And it explains why the Chinese leader’s “no limits” partnership with Vladimir Putin may turn into a limitless liability – for the Kremlin.

While researching a new biography of Xi, I came across a startling declassified US document. It reveals that the man who was Xi’s mentor in his first job, at the heart of China’s military, was fiercely anti-Russian. Never trust Moscow, he told his staff.

Today, it all looks fine. The two autocrats have boasted of their alliance for more than two years now. It’s clear that Putin gave his “friend” a tip that he was about to invade Ukraine in February 2022. Since then, Xi has stood alongside him, talking peace but sending Russia weapons technology in exchange for oil and gas.

Read the full article by Michael Sheridan, longtime foreign correspondent and diplomatic editor of The Independent:

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Three Moscow airports resume flights, officials say

07:58

Arpan Rai

Moscow’s Domodedovo, Zhukovsky and Vnukovo airports resumed normal operations after flights were suspended this morning amid Ukrainian drone attacks, Russia’s aviation authority Rosaviatsia said on Telegram.

Hours earlier, Ukraine launched swarms of attack drones over the world’s biggest nuclear power, striking its capital Moscow and several western regions. Russia said it destroyed at least 20 over the Moscow region, which has a population of over 21 million, and 124 more over eight other regions.

A major road leading to the capital was partially closed.

Ukraine downs 38 Russia-launched drones overnight

07:23

Arpan Rai

The Ukrainian air force said it shot down 38 out of 46 Russia-launched drones during an overnight attack in a statement via Telegram. The air force said Russia also used two missiles in its attack.

What is happening in Ukraine’s east frontline as Putin’s forces advance?

07:00

Alexander Butler

Since 6 August, when Ukraine began its cross-border attack, Russian forces have advanced several miles towards the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, in the Donetsk region.

If Russia eventually seizes it, it will be the largest population centre it has taken since Bakhmut last May, after months of heavy urban warfare.

Nevertheless, the loss of Pokrovsk could have an even costlier effect.

The city, a logistical hub for the country’s military, sits at the junction of two major roads through the region. Its capture is seen as key to the Russian military prosecuting Vladimir Putin’s objective of taking the Donetsk and Luhansk regions in eastern Ukraine, known as Donbas.

Russia’s military appears to have thrown resources at the effort, possibly at the expense of defending its own civilians in Kursk. As one analyst put it, Putin’s “eye of Sauron”, a reference to Lord of the Rings, has been trained on Donetsk, and particularly Pokrovsk, even as his own country is being invaded.

Our foreign affairs reporter Tom Watling has more in this report:

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Russia says there can be no peace talks until Ukrainian forces are out of Kursk

06:53

Arpan Rai

Russia will not hold any talks with Kyiv until Ukrainian forces have left Russian territory, said Sergei Shoigu, the secretary of Russia’s security council, according to the TASS news agency.

Shoigu’s comments closely mirror those repeatedly made by Ukraine itself, which says there can be no peace until Russia’s army leaves its lands.

A month ago Ukraine launched a bold incursion into Russia’s Kursk region even as it struggled to hold back the Russian advance in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region.

In the latest update yesterday evening, Volodymyr Zelensky said he received a report from his top general, Oleksandr Syrskyi, on fighting in the northeast Kharkiv region and on Kyiv’s incursion into Russia’s Kursk.

Ukrainian forces, he said, were “getting Russia used to a clear understanding of where its land is and where its neighbour’s land is”.

David Knowles, The Telegraph’s Ukraine war podcast host, dies

06:25

Arpan Rai

David Knowles, founder and co-host of The Telegraph’s Ukraine war podcast, has died at the age of 32, the newspaper confirmed yesterday.

The award-winning journalist passed away in Gibraltar on Sunday “following what was believed to be a cardiac arrest,” The Telegraph said in an obituary.

Knowles was the co-host of the weekly podcast Ukraine: The Latest, launched at the beginning of the Russian invasion in February 2022. The podcast won Best News Podcast at the Publisher Podcast Awards this year.

Knowles had joined the British newspaper in 2020 as deputy head of social media. He was later promoted to head of social media.

“David was a talented and popular journalist who was perhaps best known for helping to make our Ukraine podcast such a success. Before that, he was an impressive leader of our social media team. We would like to offer our sympathy to his family and friends,” said Chris Evans, the editor of The Telegraph.

Voices: Ukraine’s attack on Russia started as a triumph – but could turn into a catastrophe

06:00

Alexander Butler

Ukraine took more than 300 square miles of the Kursk region in the first month of its counter-invasion of Russia, raising morale at home and challenging a growing sense in the West that stalemate was the best Kyiv could hope for.

Yet as a daring incursion looks set to become an open-ended occupation, doubts are growing about its long-term wisdom.

Russian historian and author Mark Galeotti shares his concerns in this piece:

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Two killed in fire at Russian oil pipeline

05:41

Arpan Rai

Two people died in a fire that broke out at an oil pipeline in Russia’s Orenburg region, TASS state news agency reported today, citing the regional prosecutor’s office.

An investigation into the cause of the fire is underway, TASS reported.

It was not clear when the fire broke out, but there were unofficial reports of the incident on some Russian Telegram channels yesterday.

Russia suspends 30 flights amid major drone attack

05:27

Arpan Rai

Russia grounded more than 30 flights this morning as its air defences downed at least 15 drones around Moscow. Russian officials said at least one child was killed and a large fire broke out in a high-rise residential building outside the capital.

Moscow’s mayor Sergei Sobyanin said emergency crews were dispatched to several sites across the region and near the Zhukovo airport and to the Domodedovo district - home to one of Moscow’s largest airports, he said.

Russia’s RIA agency reported that Zhukovo was closed for air traffic following the suspension of more than 30 domestic and international flights there and at other airports that serve the Russian capital.

More than 60 drones were also downed over Russia’s southwestern region of Bryansk, which borders Ukraine and the Lipetsk region in Russia’s south, regional governors said. There was no damage or casualties reported there.

The overnight drone attacks damaged at least two high-rise apartment buildings in the Ramenskoye district of the Moscow region, setting several flats on fire, Moscow’s governor Andrei Vorobyov said on Telegram. “Unfortunately, a 9-year-old child died,” Mr Vorobyov said.

Iranian missiles in Russia are a legitimate target, Zelensky’s aide says

05:10

Arpan Rai

A senior Ukrainian official said Western partner countries must allow Ukraine to use weapons they have supplied to strike military warehouses inside Russia because of strong suspicions Iran has provided ballistic missiles for the Kremlin’s war effort.

The United States has told allies it believes Iran has sent short-range ballistic missiles to Russia for its war in Ukraine, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press over the weekend.

Western countries supporting Ukraine in the war have hesitated to let its military strike targets on Russian soil, fearing they could be sucked into Europe’s biggest conflict since World War II, but the head of the Ukrainian presidential office said “protection is not escalation.”

“In response to the supply of ballistic missiles to Russia, Ukraine must be allowed to destroy warehouses storing these missiles with Western weapons in order to avoid terror,” Andrii Yermak said on his Telegram channel. He did not specify which country was supplying the missiles.

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Watch: Vladimir Putin suggests support for Kamala Harris as next US president

05:00

Alexander Butler

Ukraine summons Iranian diplomat over missile transfer to Russia

04:25

Arpan Rai

Ukraine’s foreign ministry summoned a senior Iranian diplomat to warn of “devastating and irreparable consequences” for bilateral relations if reports that Tehran had supplied Russia with ballistic missiles were correct.

The rebuke comes after the US told its allies it believes Iran has sent short-range ballistic missiles to Russia for its war in Ukraine.

The Ukrainian foreign ministry said on Telegram it had summoned Iran‘s charge d’affaires, Shahriar Amouzegar, and warned him in “harsh form” about the consequences for relations if delivery of the missiles was confirmed.

A senior Iranian official denied the reports earlier yesterday, describing them as “psychological warfare”. A European Union spokesperson described the information as “credible”.

Combat boats, missiles, camouflage gear: Inside Sweden’s $440m aid for Ukraine

04:13

Arpan Rai

Large amounts of battlefield gear and vehicles are inside Sweden’s 17th aid package to Ukraine, officials said. The latest tranche of aid will take Stockholm’s total military support to 4.6bn Swedish crowns (£339m), defence minister Pal Jonson said.

The new package will include ammunition for infantry fighting vehicles already donated by Sweden, as well as purchases that would facilitate a transfer of Gripen fighter jets in the future, though no such transfer has been decided on yet. It also contains additional combat boats, missiles and camouflage gear as well as funding to support defence procurements for Ukraine.

The measures were decided in close collaboration with Kyiv.

“We want to have the ability to donate Gripens to Ukraine at a possible later stage,” Mr Jonson told a press conference.

About half of the value of the package consisted of parts needed in Sweden’s production of the latest model Gripen E fighters for its own air force. This would mean Sweden would not, as previously planned, need to cannibalise its existing C/D models as part of the upgrade, allowing the older jets to transferred to Ukraine at a possible future date.

“At present, it is not on the cards to transfer JAS Gripens to Ukraine as this would disturb the introduction of F-16s,” the government said in a statement.

China announces joint naval and air drills with Russia

04:00

Alexander Butler

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Drone attack targets Moscow, one child killed

03:51

Arpan Rai

Russian officials claim one child was killed and another civilian was injured in an early morning drone attack today by Ukraine that targeted Moscow.

Regional governor of Moscow oblast Andrei Vorobyov confirmed the casualties shortly after a fire was reported in a multi-storey residential building in Moscow’s Ramenskoye district.

Moscow’s mayor Sergei Sobyanin confirmed that the 11th and 12th floors of the building were set ablaze. “Emergency services are on site,” Sobyanin said.

The Ukrainian doctors forced to perform surgery without anaesthetic

03:00

Alexander Butler

Russian airstrikes on Ukraine’s hospitals and power stations are pushing the country’s doctors to extraordinary limits, forcing operating theatres underground and leaving surgeons with little choice but to conduct complex procedures in the dark and with limited anaesthetic for patients.

Doctors in cities across the war-torn country spoke to The Independentabout the toll of working 22-hour shifts in such punishing conditions, not knowing if their hospital could be the next target in Vladimir Putin’s renewed onslaught of drone and missile attacks.

Due to severe power shortages last week, surgeons were left with only four to six hours of electricity per day, crippling their ability to run operating rooms effectively, says Yuriy Boychenko, the founder of Hope for Ukraine, a charity supporting the country’s doctors and hospitals.

Read the full article by The Independent’s Asia reporter Arpan Rai:

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Putin has two secret sons with gymnast who live life of luxury isolated from world

02:00

Alexander Butler

Russian president Vladimir Putin has two secret sons who live an isolated life of luxury in a heavily-guarded mansion, according to a Russian investigative journalism website.

The Dossier Centre reported that Ivan, nine, and Vladimir Jr, five, spend most of the year at their father’s vast mansion near Lake Valdai, northwest of Moscow.

Their mother is Alina Kabaeva, the former Olympic rhythmic gymnast whose relationship with Putin has been an open secret in Russia for more than a decade, the Dossier Centre claim.

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Cyber sabotage operation in Poland 'neutralised'

01:00

Alexander Butler

Polish security services have neutralised a cyber sabotage operation by Russia and Belarus, Poland’s deputy prime minister has said.

Warsaw has repeatedly accused Moscow of attempting to destabilise Poland due to its role in supplying military aid to neighbour Ukraine - allegations Russia has dismissed.

Krzysztof Gawkowski, Poland’s deputy prime minister and also minister for digital affairs, said today that saboteurs, operating from Belarus in co-operation with Russia, had attempted to gain information from government institutions

Russian drone that crashed in Latvia carried explosives, Latvian military says

Monday 9 September 2024 23:00

Alexander Butler

A Russian military drone which crashed in Latvia on Saturday carried explosives that were likely to have been intended for Ukraine when it strayed into its air space, Latvian officials said on Monday.

Romania and Latvia, both Nato members and supporters of Ukraine in its 2 1/2-year-old war with Russia, said on Sunday they were investigating instances of Russian drones that crashed after breaching their airspace.

The drone that landed in Latvia was of the Iranian-designed Shahed type, National Armed Forces Commander Lieutenant General Leonids Kalnins told a press conference, according to Latvia’s Delfi news website.

The drone’s explosives, which were likely meant for Ukraine, were deactivated following its discovery in Latvia, Kalnins told reporters.

Sweden announces £340m support package for Ukraine

Monday 9 September 2024 21:00

Alexander Butler

Sweden will send its 17th aid package to Ukraine with further military support totalling £340milllion, defence minister Pal Jonson said.

The new package will include ammunition for infantry fighting vehicles already donated by Sweden, as well as purchases that would facilitate a transfer of Gripen fighter jets in the future, though no such transfer has been decided on yet.

“We want to have the ability to donate Gripens to Ukraine at a possible later stage,” Mr Jonson told a press conference.

Mr Jonson said support included additional combat boats, missiles and camouflage gear as well as funding to support defence procurements for Ukraine

Romania finds Russian drone fragments near Ukraine border

Monday 9 September 2024 20:00

Alexander Butler

Fragments from a Russian drone were found a Romanian village near the Danube River that borders Ukraine on Sunday after an overnight attack on Ukrainian river ports, the defence ministry of Nato-member Romania said on Monday.

The ministry said it was conducting searches in a second area where drone parts might have fallen. Romania has found drone fragments after attacks several times since last year.

The Russian glide bombs changing the face of the war in Ukraine

Monday 9 September 2024 19:00

Alexander Butler

In a Ukrainian stronghold near the front line, less than 20 miles from the eastern city of Donetsk, a winged bomb is seen hurtling towards a multistorey building.

The 1,500-kilogram explosive hits the structure in the town of Krasnohorivka, erupting into a fireball before engulfing the whole building in a plume of grey and black smoke.

The camera, filming from several hundred metres away, shakes as the ground beneath it rocks from the aftereffects of the explosion.

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In Ukraine, a city grieves for a family killed in a deadly Russia missile attack

Monday 9 September 2024 18:00

Alexander Butler

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It feels like the Ukraine invasion has made the Russian invasion more ferocious

Monday 9 September 2024 17:00

Alexander Butler

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World order under threat ‘not seen since Cold War’, say heads of MI6 and CIA

Monday 9 September 2024 16:00

Alexander Butler

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Voices: Why Xi secretly hates and fears Russia – and may be about to betray Putin

Monday 9 September 2024 15:00

Michael Sheridan

The bear and the dragon can never be friends. That is a lesson Xi Jinping heard at a young age. And it explains why the Chinese leader’s “no limits” partnership with Vladimir Putin may turn into a limitless liability – for the Kremlin.

While researching a new biography of Xi, I came across a startling declassified US document. It reveals that the man who was Xi’s mentor in his first job, at the heart of China’s military, was fiercely anti-Russian. Never trust Moscow, he told his staff.

Today, it all looks fine. The two autocrats have boasted of their alliance for more than two years now. It’s clear that Putin gave his “friend” a tip that he was about to invade Ukraine in February 2022. Since then, Xi has stood alongside him, talking peace but sending Russia weapons technology in exchange for oil and gas.

Read the full article by Michael Sheridan, longtime foreign correspondent and diplomatic editor of The Independent:

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Girl, 16, 'killed in attack on Ukrainian city'

Monday 9 September 2024 14:30

Alexander Butler

A 16-year-old girl has died following Russian artillery fire in the city of Nikopol, in the south of Ukraine, over the weekend, a regional governor has said.

Serhiy Lysak, head of Dnipropetrovsk OVA, said emergency crews pulled the teenager from the rubble of a damaged building in a statement shared on Telegram. However, medics were unable to save her, he wrote.

Three other people suffered shrapnel wounds, he said, including a 79-year-old man who was taken to hospital with injuries of “moderate severity”.

Iran denies reports of missile transfer to Russia

Monday 9 September 2024 14:00

Alexander Butler

A senior Iranian Revolutionary Guards commander denied reports that Iran was transferring missiles to Russia, Iranian media said on Monday, amid concern in the West that they could be deployed in the war in Ukraine.

CNN and the Wall Street Journal reported last week, citing unidentified sources, that Iran had transferred short-range ballistic missiles to Russia.

Brigadier Fazlollah Nozari, deputy commander of the Khatam al-Anbia Central Headquarters, was quoted by the Iranian Labour News Agency as saying: “No missile was sent to Russia and this claim is a kind of psychological warfare.”

Watch: Drone rains down molten thermite on Ukrainian battlefield

Monday 9 September 2024 13:30

Alexander Butler

North Korean weapons extending Russian stockpiles, German general says

Monday 9 September 2024 12:20

Alexander Butler

North Korea’s provision of weapons has strengthened Russia’s hand in Ukraine by allowing it to keep its arsenals stocked at home, Germany’s top military official said during a visit to South Korea on Monday.

Chief of Defence General Carsten Breuer said Russian President Vladimir Putin would not have reached out to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for weapons if they were not useful.

“It’s about increasing the production of weapons for Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, it’s also strengthening Russia by making it possible for them to keep their stocks like they are,” Breuer told reporters in the South Korean capital Seoul.

Putin loyalists set to win local elections in war-affected Russian regions

Monday 9 September 2024 09:30

Alexander Butler

Supporters of President Vladimir Putin and his war in Ukraine were set to win gubernatorial races across Russia, according to early vote counts on Sunday, including in Kursk where Ukrainian forces have seized control of some towns and territory.

Russia’s three-day local and regional elections came to an end on Sunday evening, with voters expected to elect Kremlin-backed candidates in all 21 gubernatorial races, as well as legislative assembly members in 13 regions and city council officials across the country.

Results of the tightly controlled elections are already being interpreted in Russia as a vote of confidence in Putin and his operation in Ukraine, now in its third year - just as was the election in March that extended his presidential term and voting a year ago.

World order under threat ‘not seen since Cold War’, say heads of MI6 and CIA

Monday 9 September 2024 08:51

Alexander Butler

The international world order is under threat in a way not seen since the Cold War, the heads of MI6 and the CIA have warned.

In the first joint op-ed penned by the leaders of the British and American intelligence services in their shared 77-year history, the MI6 chief Sir Richard Moore and CIA director William Burns warned that both countries now “face an unprecedented array of threats”.

Writing in the Financial Times, the intelligence leaders reflected on their decades of cooperation over the course of two world wars and in their fight against terrorism, warning: “The challenges of the past are being accelerated in the present, and compounded by technological change.”

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Russia and China in joint navy exercise

Monday 9 September 2024 08:36

Alexander Butler

Russia’s military will send naval and air forces to join an exercise held by China in the Sea of Japan and Sea of Okhotsk in September, China’s state-owned Xinhua news agency reported on Monday.

The drills aim to deepen “the level of strategic coordination between the Chinese and Russian militaries and enhance their ability to jointly respond to security threats,” Xinhua said.

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Russia launches eight drones at Ukraine in overnight attack

Monday 9 September 2024 07:39

Alexander Butler

Russian forces launched eight drones and three missiles at Ukraine in an overnight attack, Kyiv’s airforce said.

Ukraine downed six out of eight drones and two out of three missiles, it added. Overnight air attacks have become a daily occurrence in Ukraine.

Volodmyr Zelensky has urged Western leaders to allow Ukraine to use long-range missiles to hit targets inside Russia.

Last week, he said: “We need to have this long-range capability, not only on the divided territory of Ukraine, but also on the Russia territory so that Russia is motivated to seek peace.”

A Ukrainian searchlight scours the night sky for Russian drones on Monday (REUTERS)