logo
Death toll from Thursday's Russian attack on Kyiv rises to 26: Ukraine

Death toll from Thursday's Russian attack on Kyiv rises to 26: Ukraine

Al Arabiyaa day ago
The death toll from Thursday's Russian missile and drone strikes on Kyiv has risen to 26, including three children, Ukraine's interior ministry said.
The toll previously stood at 16, including two children, but was revised Friday after 'rescuers retrieved 10 bodies from the rubble of the residential building in Sviatoshynsky district, including the body of a 2-year-old child', the ministry posted on Telegram.
It also said 159 people were wounded in Thursday's strikes, including 16 children.
One person was also killed in a Russian attack early Friday on Zaporizhzhia, in southeast Ukraine, the region's military administration said on Telegram.
Kyiv was observing a day of mourning after Thursday's bombardment, among the deadliest the capital has seen since Russia launched its large-scale offensive in February 2022.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged his allies on Thursday to bring about 'regime change' in Russia, hours after the attack.
US President Donald Trump on Thursday blasted Russia's actions in Ukraine, suggesting that new sanctions against Moscow were coming.
'Russia -- I think it's disgusting what they're doing. I think it's disgusting,' Trump told journalists.
On Monday, the US leader issued a '10 or 12' day ultimatum for Moscow to halt its invasion, now in its fourth year, or face sanctions.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fire near Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant brought under control, says Russian management
Fire near Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant brought under control, says Russian management

Arab News

time2 hours ago

  • Arab News

Fire near Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant brought under control, says Russian management

MOSCOW: A fire that broke out near the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant after Ukrainian shelling has been brought under control, the Russian-installed administration of the Russia-held plant in Ukraine said on Saturday. Russian forces seized the Zaporizhzhia plant in the first weeks of Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Both sides have accused each other of firing or taking other actions that could trigger a nuclear accident. The plant's administration said on Telegram that a civilian had been killed in the shelling, but that no plant employees or members of the emergency services had been injured. Reuters could not independently verify the Russian report. The station, Europe's biggest nuclear power plant, is not operating but still requires power to keep its nuclear fuel cool. The plant's Russia-installed management said radiation levels remained within normal levels and the situation was under control.

Pakistan places sugar import order to ease prices, first shipment due next month
Pakistan places sugar import order to ease prices, first shipment due next month

Arab News

time2 hours ago

  • Arab News

Pakistan places sugar import order to ease prices, first shipment due next month

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has placed the procurement order for 200,000 metric tons of sugar from the international market, an official statement said on Saturday, adding the first shipment was expected to arrive in the beginning of next month. The announcement came amid growing concerns over a sugar crisis that has gripped parts of the country, with prices surging to Rs200 ($0.71) per kilogram in many areas, which is well above the government's official cap of Rs173 ($0.61). The situation occurs frequently in Pakistan amid accusations of hoarding and cartelization. It also leads to public outrage and criticism from opposition parties. Last month, leading Pakistani economists told Arab News the crisis owed to weak regulatory enforcement and a lack of industrial transparency, both of which hamper effective market oversight. 'The final order for sugar imports has been placed,' the Ministry of National Food Security and Research said in a statement. 'The first shipment of imported sugar will arrive in Pakistan in early September 2025.' The ministry said the procurement process entered its final phase after the government floated a tender, and successfully secured a discount through international negotiations. 'The purpose of the import is to ensure the availability of sugar in the market and maintain price stability,' the statement said. 'The arrival of imported sugar will help keep prices balanced in the local market and directly benefit consumers.' However, experts warned last month such measures only offered temporary relief. Dr. Khaqan Najeeb, Pakistan's former finance adviser, told Arab News in a recent conversation the sugar sector's persistent crises underscore the urgent need to move beyond 'reactive firefighting' and adopt structured, technology-enabled and market-aligned regulatory frameworks. 'Addressing this challenge requires deep policy expertise and a commitment to serious, evidence-based reform,' he continued Najeeb outlined several critical reforms for the sugar sector, including improving per-acre crop yields, deregulating the market, enforcing anti-cartel legislation, using digital tools to monitor the supply chain, and setting transparent, formula-based pricing mechanisms that ensure timely payments to farmers. 'These are not quick fixes — they demand consistent, hard work,' he added. 'But after years of misaligned interventions through poorly timed exports and imports, one thing is clear: there is no easy solution, only the hard path of structural reform.'

Trump fires US labor statistics chief after weak jobs report
Trump fires US labor statistics chief after weak jobs report

Saudi Gazette

time3 hours ago

  • Saudi Gazette

Trump fires US labor statistics chief after weak jobs report

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump has dismissed Erika McEntarfer, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), just hours after the release of weaker-than-expected jobs data that intensified concerns over his tariff policies. In a post on social media Friday, Trump accused McEntarfer of having 'RIGGED' the jobs figures 'to make the Republicans, and ME, look bad.' The move — unprecedented in modern US politics — drew swift condemnation from lawmakers, economists and former government officials, who warned it risked undermining public trust in official economic data. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called Trump 'a bad leader' who 'shoots the messenger' when confronted with unfavorable statistics. The BLS report showed that US employers added just 73,000 jobs in July, well below forecasts of 109,000. The agency also revised down employment growth in May and June by a combined 250,000 jobs, reinforcing signs of a slowing labor market amid uncertainty over Trump's trade tariffs. McEntarfer, appointed by former President Joe Biden in 2023 and confirmed by the Senate nearly unanimously, described her tenure as 'the honour of my life' and defended the agency's work as 'vital and important.' She had worked in government for more than two accused Trump of politicizing independent data collection. Former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said, 'Firing the head of a key government agency because you don't like the numbers they report ... is what happens in authoritarian countries, not democratic ones.'Friends of BLS, a group including two former commissioners, warned that politicizing economic statistics could 'destroy public trust in all official statistics and in government science.'The Labor Department said Deputy Commissioner William Wiatrowski would serve as acting commissioner during the search for a defended the decision, telling reporters before departing the White House for his New Jersey golf club: 'Why should anybody trust numbers? I believe the numbers were phony ... so you know what I did? I fired her.'The move came as Trump pressed ahead with new tariffs on imports from multiple countries, raising rates on some goods to as high as 50%. Economists say the trade policy shift has unsettled markets and hurt business stock indexes closed sharply lower Friday following the jobs report and McEntarfer's dismissal. — BBC

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store