Ukraine-Russia war latest: Putin bombards Kyiv after ‘invincible’ nuclear-capable missile test

WorldPolitics
27 Oct 2025 • 3:23 AM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

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Three people have been killed and dozens more injured in a Russian drone attack on Ukraine's capital.

At least 29 people were injured, seven of them children, in the attack which took place overnight into Sunday.

Ukraine's interior minister said a 19-year-old woman and her mother were among those killed in what was the second consecutive nighttime attack on Kyiv to claim civilian lives.

Russia said it struck infrastructure serving Ukraine's war effort on Saturday, but did not comment on strikes on Kyiv or civilian casualties.

Elsewhere, Vladimir Putin said Russia has tested its nuclear-powered Burevestnik cruise missile, which he says can “pierce any defence shield”.

Moscow says the 9M730 Burevestnik is "invincible" to current and future missile defences, with an almost unlimited range and unpredictable flight path.

"It is a unique ware which nobody else in the world has," Putin said in remarks released on Sunday, adding its "crucial testing" had been concluded.

Russia's top general, Valery Gerasimov, told Putin that the missile travelled 14,000 km and was in the air for about 15 hours when it was tested on October 21.

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Key Points

  • Russia tested new nuclear-powered cruise missile, top general says
  • Three killed and 29 wounded after drone attack on Kyiv
  • Trump says he won't meet with Putin until he thinks there will be a peace deal
  • Kremlin: It's wrong to talk about cancellation of Putin-Trump summit
  • Why Russians are fighting against Russia: ‘Putin’s ruined my country’

Which countries buy Russian oil – and what impact will sanctions have?

23:00

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Bryony Gooch

The US has this week imposed new sanctions on Rosneft and Lukoil, Russia’s two largest petroleum-producing companies.

After efforts to negotiate an end to Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine appeared to come to a standstill, the Trump administration made the move in a bid to “increase pressure on Russia’s energy sector” and “degrade the Kremlin’s ability to raise revenue for its war machine and support its weakened economy”.

So how much impact could the move have, and what are the implications for countries who rely on Russia to supply their oil?

Karl Matchett reports:

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Watch: Putin issues warning as Russia tests new nuclear-powered cruise missiles

22:00

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Bryony Gooch

UK in line of fire if the Kremlin were to attack a Nato country, warns Tusk

21:00

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Bryony Gooch

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk has warned that Britain would be in the line of fire if the Kremlin were to attack a Nato country, and said he is been “shocked” by the level of public complacency about the UK’s safety.

Referring to the Russia-linked arson attacks on UK prime minister Sir Keir Starmer’s former family home in Kentish Town, London, he told the Sunday Times of his shock.

“The problem is that no one in Britain was [taken aback] by this. I was shocked, frankly speaking,” Tusk said. “After information about it appeared in the British press, the reaction was like it was just an Arsenal-Liverpool football match. But if the Russians are ready and able to organise something like that, it means that they are ready and able to do anything.”

He added that if Moscow deployed its new hypersonic Oreshnik ballistic missiles to Belarus or Kaliningrad, a Russian exclave next to Poland, it would be easily capable of unleashing a nuclear warhead in any European capital, including London, given the missiles’ range of up to 2,000 miles.

“The threat is global and universal, above all because of technology,” Tusk said. “You and we are both already under massive attack in cyberspace. In Poland they are ready to destroy the cyberinfrastructure [underpinning] our railways, our hospitals. It could be really painful. This is why you can’t live under this sweet illusion that you are too far away from them, that it’s not your war, it’s just Ukraine or Poland.”

Ukraine ready to fight for another two to three years, says Tusk

20:00

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Bryony Gooch

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk has said that Ukraine is concerned about the toll the war could take on its population and economy if it were to stretch on for longer than a few more years.

“I have no doubts Ukraine will survive as an independent state,” Tusk told the Sunday Times. “Now the main question is how many victims we will see. President Zelensky told me [on Thursday] that he hopes that the war will not last ten years, but that Ukraine is ready to fight for another two, three years.”

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Donald Trump issues warning to Vladimir Putin: ‘I’m not wasting my time’

19:30

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Bryony Gooch

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Russia says more than 80 people detained for questioning after Moscow street fight

19:00

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Bryony Gooch

Russia's interior ministry said on Sunday that more than 80 people had been taken to police stations for questioning after a major street fight between migrants in a residential area of Moscow and that all foreigners involved would be deported.

Russian media published videos of people fighting on the street with clubs and spades and smashing windows amid parked cars near the Prokshino residential complex, though it was not immediately clear what the fight was about.

Russia's interior ministry said 19 people had been arrested for hooliganism, adding that those migrants with Russian citizenship may have their citizenship revoked. Other foreigners involved would be deported, the ministry said.

"Those foreign citizens involved who are not imprisoned, will be deported and banned from re-entry," said Irina Volk, a spokeswoman for the interior ministry.

Migration, especially from the former Soviet republics of Central Asia and the Caucasus, has become a major domestic political issue in Russia.

Migration has been restricted since a deadly attack at a Moscow concert hall in 2024 which Russian authorities said was carried out by Tajiks.

About 6.3 million migrants arrived in Russia in 2024, according to interior ministry figures, with about half of the total from Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

While the domestic Russian economy is reliant on cheap labour from those republics, especially in the construction and consumer industry, there has been a backlash from many Russian citizens against what they say is such a large influx of people with little knowledge of Russian customs or culture.

Russia has faced acute labour shortages across multiple sectors since the start of the war in Ukraine, as hundreds of thousands joined the military.

Watch: Trump warns Putin 'I'm not wasting my time' as he makes demand to Russian leader

18:30

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Bryony Gooch

‘Putin has not only ruined Ukraine, he’s ruined my country’

18:00

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Amy-Clare Martin

The Independent’s world affairs editor Sam Kiley spoke to Russian volunteers in Ukraine’s army who have turned on Vladimir Putin:

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Ukraine's allies have pledged to take Russian oil and gas off the global market

17:30

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Amy-Clare Martin

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ICYMI: Russia tested new nuclear-powered cruise missile, top general says

17:00

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Amy-Clare Martin

Russia has tested a new nuclear-capable, nuclear-powered cruise missile named the Burevestnik, Russia's top general told President Vladimir Putin in remarks released on Sunday.

The missile travelled 14,000 km (8,700 miles) and was in the air for about 15 hours, General Valery Gerasimov, chief of the general staff of Russia's armed forces, told Putin.

Putin has said the 9M730 Burevestnik (Storm Petrel) - dubbed the SSC-X-9 Skyfall by NATO - is "invincible" to current and future missile defences, with an almost unlimited range and unpredictable flight path.

In his remarks on Sunday, Putin, dressed in camouflage fatigues, told Gerasimov that the crucial Burevestnik tests have now been completed and that work should start on the final stage before deploying the missiles.

Recap: Trump says he won't meet with Putin until he thinks there will be a peace deal

16:30

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Amy-Clare Martin

Donald Trump has said he will not meet with Vladimir Putin until he thinks a deal to secure peace between Russia and Ukraine is in place.

"You have to know that we're going to make a deal, I'm not going to be wasting my time," the US president told reporters in Doha on Saturday.

The leaders last met in Alaska in August, during a hastily organised summit which yielded no concrete results.

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Japan scrambles jets as Russian nuclear-capable bombers fly near its coast

16:00

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Amy-Clare Martin

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Three killed and 29 wounded after drone attack on Kyiv

15:30

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Amy-Clare Martin

Three people have been killed and 29 were injured after the Ukrainian capital was targeted with drones overnight, the authorities said on Sunday morning.

Seven children were among those hurt of in the second consecutive nighttime attack on Kyiv to claim civilian lives.

Ukraine's Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said a 19-year-old woman and her 46-year-old mother were among the killed.

Russian drones caused fires in two residential buildings in the capital's Desnianskyi district. Emergency crews evacuated civilians from a nine-story and a 16-story building, put out flames and cleared the rubble.

Olha Yevhenivha, 74, said there was so much smoke from the fire that she couldn't leave her apartment.

"Even until now our windows are totally black from the smoke, and it was impossible to go down, so that's why we put wet blankets on our doors and balcony," she said.

According to Ukraine’s air force, the attack involved 101 drones, 90 of which were shot down.

The attack came a day after a Russian missiles and drones killed four people, including two in Kyiv, prompting fresh pleas from Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for Western air defence systems.

Russia's defence ministry said its forces struck energy facilities and rail infrastructure serving Ukraine's war effort on Saturday, as well as other military targets such as troop deployment points and a drone factory.

It did not comment specifically on strikes on Kyiv, or on the civilian casualties reported by Ukraine.

Recap: Starmer wants allies to get tough on Russian assets

15:00

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Amy-Clare Martin

Sir Keir Starmer has urged allies to “finish the job” on frozen Russian assets by using them to strengthen Ukraine’s defences.

At a major press conference on Friday, the prime minister urged the so-called “coalition of the willing” to help to take Russian oil and gas off the global market.

It comes after the UK targeted Russia’s oil companies with tough sanctions earlier this month.

He said: “Last week, the UK became the first country to sanction all of Russia’s oil majors. On Wednesday, the US acted decisively and joined us.

“Together with further sanctions from the EU, we’re choking off funding for Russia’s war machine.

“And I’m urging others to take these steps, to go further to reduce their dependence and incentivise third countries to stop buying these tainted resources.”

Other measures under consideration include seeking ways to use billions in frozen assets to fund Ukraine’s defences.

Sir Keir met Ukrainian President Voloydmyr Zelensky for a bilateral meeting in No 10 on Friday ahead of the two leaders joining a call along with the wider coalition of the willing – a group of more than 30 countries pledging support for Kyiv.

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Slovakia will not be part of EU scheme for Ukraine's military needs, PM Fico says

14:30

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Bryony Gooch

Slovakia will not take part in any European Union programme aimed at financing military help for Ukraine in its fight against Russia's invasion, Prime Minister Robert Fico said on Sunday.

Slovakia stopped state military aid for Ukraine when Fico's government came to power in 2023, but has still allowed commercial sales. Fico differs with European Union states on the war, saying a solution is not on the battlefield.

EU leaders agreed on Thursday to meet Ukraine's "pressing financial needs" for the next two years but held off on endorsing a plan to use frozen Russian assets to fund a 140 billion euro loan to Kyiv.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said the money could be used right away to strengthen Ukraine's air defence, air fleet and frontline positions.

"I refuse to allow Slovakia to take part in any financial scheme aimed at helping Ukraine manage the war and military spending," Fico told a televised news conference.

Kremlin: It's wrong to talk about cancellation of Putin-Trump summit, agencies report

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Bryony Gooch

The Kremlin said on Sunday it was wrong to talk about cancellation of a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump, but added that preparation for it was needed, state television Vesti reported on its Telegram channel.

"Presidents cannot meet for the sake of meeting, they cannot just waste their time, and they are open about that. That's why they instructed (Russian Foreign Minister Sergei) Lavrov and (U.S. Secretary of State Marco) Rubio to prepare this process. The process is complicated," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told state TV Kremlin correspondent Pavel Zarubin.

Peskov also commented on sanctions imposed by the U.S. on Russian oil giants Lukoil and Rosneft, calling them "an unfriendly step", but said that Russia seeks to build friendly relations with all countries, including the U.S.

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"Despite the various nuances voiced by the president of the United States, we must still be oriented towards our interests. Our interests are to build good relations with all countries, including the United States," Peskov told Zarubin.

"Of course, the actions that were taken this week were an unfriendly step. They have indeed damaged the prospects for resuscitating our relations. But that does not mean that we should abandon these aspirations. We should do what is favourable to us," Peskov said.

He also said Russia would prosecute anyone found to be involved in the possible confiscation of frozen Russian assets.

Why Russians are fighting against Russia: ‘Putin’s ruined my country’

13:30

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Bryony Gooch

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Russia will respond harshly in event of strikes deep inside its territory, Kremlin says

13:00

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Bryony Gooch

Russian armed forces will respond forcefully in the event of strikes deep inside Russia, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in remarks published on Sunday.

"Like (Russian President Vladimir) Putin said, the response will be overwhelming," Peskov told state TV Kremlin correspondent Pavel Zarubin.

Putin said on Thursday that Moscow would never bow to pressure from the United States or any other foreign power, and cautioned that it would deliver an "overwhelming" response to any military strikes deep inside Russia.

On Sunday, Putin said that Russia had successfully tested its nuclear-powered Burevestnik cruise missile, a nuclear-capable weapon Moscow says can evade any defence system, and would move towards deploying the weapon.

Zelensky says civilian infrastructure main target for Russians

12:30

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Bryony Gooch

Volodymyr Zelensky has responded after a heavy bombardment overnight in Kyiv to say emergency services are tackling the aftermath of Russia’s latest attack.

“Response efforts are ongoing in Kyiv following the Russian attack. All the necessary emergency services are working at the sites. Last night, Russia launched more than 100 drones against us. Ordinary apartment buildings in several districts of the city have been damaged.

“Unfortunately, as of now, three people are known to have been killed in the attack. My deepest condolences to their families. Dozens have been injured, including children. Every Russian strike is an attempt to inflict as much damage as possible on ordinary life. This week, they’ve been striking residential buildings, our people, children, and civilian infrastructure. These are the main targets for the Russians.

“Thousands of strikes with various types of weapons: in just one week, Russia has used nearly 1,200 attack drones, more than 1,360 guided aerial bombs, and over 50 missiles of different types against Ukraine. Under all these strikes, Ukraine has continued to defend itself actively – on the battlefield, in the sky, and through diplomacy. There are significant results regarding the pressure on Russia: the 19th EU sanctions package and new U.S. sanctions targeting Russian oil.

“We are grateful to our partners for these steps, but it is important not to stop here. We count on the synchronization of these sanctions across the G7 and other partner jurisdictions. And, of course, additional tariff and sanctions restrictions are needed against Russia and all those helping it stay afloat. Certainly, pressure will help bring about peace. I thank everyone who contributes to this.”

Russia’s population is shrinking rapidly. Putin is trying to stop that

12:00

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Bryony Gooch

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Watch: Moment arsonist sponsored by Russian mercenaries is arrested

11:30

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Bryony Gooch

Vilnius airport shuts again after Belarusian balloons disrupt airspace

11:00

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Bryony Gooch

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Watch: A man dressed as Pennywise dances during a Halloween rave in Kyiv

10:30

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Bryony Gooch

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Facts about Russia's new nuclear-powered cruise missile

10:00

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Bryony Gooch

President Vladimir Putin said on Sunday that Russia had tested its Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise missile. Here are some key facts about the weapon:

  • The 9M730 Burevestnik, whose name translates as "storm petrel", is a ground-launched, low-flying cruise missile that is not only capable of carrying a nuclear warhead but is also nuclear-powered. NATO refers to it as the SSC-X-9 Skyfall.
  • Putin, who first revealed the project in March 2018, has said it has an unlimited range and can evade U.S. missile defences. But some Western experts have questioned its strategic value, saying it won't add capabilities that Moscow does not already have, and may disgorge radiation along its flight path.
  • Putin said on Sunday that the weapon was unique. Russia's top general, Valery Gerasimov, chief of the general staff of Russia's armed forces, told Putin that in the October 21 test the missile travelled 14,000 km (8,700 miles) and was in the air for about 15 hours. He said it travelled on nuclear power, could defeat any missile defence and has an unlimited range.
  • Its nuclear propulsion is designed to enable it to fly much further, for longer, than traditional turbojet or turbofan engines that are limited by how much fuel they can carry. This would allow it to "loiter" for an extended period before hitting a target.
  • The Nuclear Threat Initiative, a U.S.-based non-profit security organisation, said it could stay aloft potentially for days: "In operation, the Burevestnik would carry a nuclear warhead (or warheads), circle the globe at low altitude, avoid missile defenses, and dodge terrain; and drop the warhead(s) at a difficult-to-predict location (or locations)," it said in a 2019 report.

Watch: Why Russians are fighting against Russia: ‘Putin has not only ruined Ukraine, he’s ruined my country’

09:30

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Bryony Gooch

Which countries buy Russian oil – and what impact will sanctions have?

09:00

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Bryony Gooch

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In pictures: Firefighters work at a destroyed apartment building after a Russian drone attack in Kyiv,

08:30

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Bryony Gooch

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Russian attack on Kyiv kills three, injures 29, including 6 children, Ukraine says

08:00

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Bryony Gooch

Three people were killed and 29 injured, including six children, in a Russian overnight air attack on Kyiv that destroyed two high-rise apartment buildings, Ukrainian officials said on Sunday.

Seven of the injured, including two children, were taken to the city's hospitals, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on the Telegram messaging app.

Debris from destroyed Russian air weapons fell onto a nine-storey apartment building in Kyiv's leafy Desnianskyi district, sparking a fire that quickly engulfed several stories, the mayor added.

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The fire has since been extinguished.

Ukraine's state emergency service said that 13 people were rescued from the building's upper floors.

The full scale of the attack was not immediately known. Kyiv and its surrounding region were under air-raid alerts for about 1-1/2 hours before the air force called them off at around 0030 GMT.

Both sides deny targeting civilians in their strikes on each other's territory. But thousands, mostly Ukrainians, have been killed in the war that Russia started with its full-scale invasion of Ukrainein February 2022.

Russia tested new nuclear-powered cruise missile, top general says

07:30

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Bryony Gooch

Russia has tested a new nuclear-capable, nuclear-powered cruise missile named the Burevestnik, Russia's top general told President Vladimir Putin in remarks released on Sunday.

The missile travelled 14,000 km (8,700 miles) and was in the air for about 15 hours, General Valery Gerasimov, chief of the general staff of Russia's armed forces, told Putin.

Putin has said the 9M730 Burevestnik (Storm Petrel) - dubbed the SSC-X-9 Skyfall by NATO - is "invincible" to current and future missile defences, with an almost unlimited range and unpredictable flight path.

In his remarks on Sunday, Putin, dressed in camouflage fatigues, told Gerasimov that the crucial Burevestnik tests have now been completed and that work should start on the final stage before deploying the missiles.

Trump says Russia-Ukraine peace ‘tougher than India-Pak deal’

07:00

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Donald Trump has said the stalled peace talks with Russia's Vladimir Putin have been "very disappointing" and that it was easier for the US president to resolve the India-Pakistan conflict.

“I thought the India-Pak war deal would’ve been tougher than the Russia-Ukraine ceasefire, but it didn’t work out that way,” Mr Trump told reporters.

He added that the hostility between Moscow and Kyiv has prevented a breakthrough in the three-year-long war. "There’s a lot of hatred between the two, between Zelensky and Putin. It was tremendous hatred."

Nato member’s main airport shuts again

06:30

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Nato member Lithuania closed its capital airport late last night and shut both crossings on the border with Belarus after helium weather balloons drifted into the Baltic country's territory for a second consecutive day.

Traffic at Vilnius Airport was suspended until 2am, while the Belarus border will remain shut until the same time, Lithuanian officials said.

European aviation has repeatedly been thrown into chaos in recent weeks by drone sightings and other air incursions, including at airports in Copenhagen, Munich and the Baltic region.

Alex Ross reports.

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Why Russians are fighting against Russia?

06:15

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Sam Kiley meets Russian volunteers in Ukraine’s army near the southern front line who explain why they turned on Vladimir Putin – and how they’re happy to kill their countrymen.

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Japan scrambles jets as Russian nuclear-capable bombers fly near its coast

06:00

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Japan scrambled fighter jets to monitor nuclear-capable Russian warplanes that flew over international waters along the edge of Japanese airspace off its coast.

Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi said Japan’s air force launched the jets in response to Russian bombers approaching the Sea of Japan.

The defence ministry said the two Tu-95 bombers, accompanied by two Su-35 fighters, had initially flown toward Japan’s Sado Island before turning northward. The ministry also released a map showing the flight path of the Russian aircraft off Japan’s west coast over the Sea of Japan.

More here.

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US mulling further sanctions on Russia - report

05:45

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

The Donald Trump administration has reportedly prepared additional sanctions to target Russia's economy to bring Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table to end Moscow's war in Ukraine.

US officials have also told European counterparts that they support the EU using frozen Russian assets to buy US weapons for Kyiv, two US officials told Reuters.

Washington has held nascent internal conversations about leveraging Russian assets held in the US to support Ukraine’s war effort, according to the report.

While it is not clear whether Washington will actually carry out any of those moves in the immediate term, it shows there is a well-developed toolkit within the administration to up the ante further after Mr Trump imposed sanctions on Russia on Wednesday for the first time since returning to office in January.

One senior US official told Reuters that he would like to see European allies make the next big Russia move, which could be additional sanctions or tariffs.

A separate source said Mr Trump was likely to hit pause for a few weeks and gauge Russia’s reaction to Wednesday’s sanctions announcement.

Those sanctions took aim at oil companies Lukoil and Rosneft. The moves spiked oil prices by more than $2 and sent major Chinese and Indian buyers of Russian crude looking for alternatives.

North Korea's foreign minister to visit Russia

05:30

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

North Korean foreign minister Choe Son Hui will visit Russia and Belarus, state media KCNA said.

Her trip follows the invitation of the foreign ministries of Russia and Belarus, KCNA said.

Meeting between Putin's envoy and US officials to continue today

05:00

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Meetings between Russian president Vladimir Putin's special envoy for investment and economic cooperation, Kirill Dmitriev, and US officials will continue today, Reuters reported.

"Meetings between special envoy of the president of Russia for investment and economic cooperation with foreign countries, Kirill Dmitriev and representatives of president (Donald) Trump's administration were held on October 24 and 25 and will continue on October 26," a source told the news agency.

Mr Dmitriev is in the US for what he said was a series of long-planned meetings.

Children among 14 injured in Russian attack

04:30

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Four children were among 14 people injured in Russia's overnight air attack on Kyiv, the military administration of the Ukrainian capital said this morning.

"Everyone is receiving medical assistance, some have been hospitalised," the administration said on Telegram.

Two high-rise residential buildings were hit as a result of the attack, mayor Vitali Klitschko said earlier.

He did not say whether there was a direct hit on the buildings or if it was falling debris from destroyed weapons that fell onto the apartment complexes.

Recap: Ukraine foiled plans to reconnect Zaporizhzhia power plant in time for Putin’s birthday

04:00

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Bryony Gooch

Ukrainian forces operating behind enemy lines derailed Russia’s hopes of reconnecting the occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station before Vladimir Putin’s birthday earlier this month, sources have claimed.

Ukrainian sources told The Guardian that they believed Russia was trying to bring power back to the plant in time for the president’s birthday on 7 October, after it lost external power in late September.

Europe’s largest power station, which has been in Russian control since early in the invasion, was forced to operate on diesel backup generators after its last remaining external power line was severed on 23 September. Russia and Ukraine blamed each other.

Russian air defence systems destroy Moscow-bound drone

03:11

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Russian air defence systems destroyed a drone heading towards Moscow, the mayor of the Russian capital, Sergei Sobyanin, said this morning.

Watch: Moment arsonist sponsored by Russian mercenaries is arrested

03:00

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Bryony Gooch

Starmer vows Ukraine allies will take Russian oil and gas off market

02:00

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Bryony Gooch