
Russia says its forces advancing in Sumy as row over peace talks escalates
Russia
has said its forces had advanced to the edge of the east-central Ukrainian region of Dnipropetrovsk amid a public row between Moscow and Kyiv over peace negotiations and the return of thousands of bodies of soldiers who fell in the war.
Amid talk of peace,
the war is stepping up
, with
Russian forces grabbing more territory in Ukraine
and Kyiv unfurling high-profile
drone and sabotage attacks on Russia's nuclear-capable bomber fleet
and, according to Moscow, on railways.
Russia, which controls a little under one-fifth of Ukrainian territory, has taken more than 190 square km (73 square miles) of the Sumy region of eastern Ukraine in less than a month, according to pro-Ukrainian open source maps.
Now, according to the Russian defence ministry, units of the 90th Tank Division of the Central Grouping of Russian forces have reached the western frontier of Ukraine's Donetsk region and are attacking the adjacent Dnipropetrovsk region.
READ MORE
'The enemy does not abandon its intentions to enter the Dnipropetrovsk region,' Ukraine's Southern Defence Forces said on Telegram. 'Our soldiers are courageously and professionally holding their section of the front, disrupting the occupier's plans. This work does not stop for a minute.'
Dmitry Medvedev
, the deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, said the Dnipropetrovsk offensive showed that if Ukraine did not want to accept the reality of Russia's territorial gains in peace talks then Moscow's forces would advance further.
The pro-Ukrainian Deep State map showed Russian forces very close to the Dnipropetrovsk region, which had a population of more than 3 million before the war, and advancing on the city of Kostyantynivka in the Donetsk region from several directions.
A Ukrainian military spokesman, Dmytro Zaporozhets, said Russian forces were trying to 'build a bridgehead for an attack' on Kostyantynivka, an important logistical hub for the Ukrainian army.
Russia on Saturday accused Ukraine of delaying the swap of prisoners of war and return of the bodies of 12,000 dead soldiers, though Ukraine denied those claims.
[
Russia's Kharkiv attack kills four, wounds at least 60 in 'most powerful' strike since start of war
Opens in new window
]
Russia said on Sunday it was moving bodies towards the border and television showed refrigerated trucks containing the bodies of Ukrainian soldiers on the road in the Bryansk region.
Ukraine accused Russia of playing propaganda games and said that the exchange of prisoners of war and the bodies of fallen soldiers was scheduled for next week. Russia said Ukraine was playing politics with the dead.
US president
Donald Trump
, who says he wants an end to the deadliest conflict in Europe since the second World War, on Thursday likened it to a fight between young children and indicated that he might have to simply let the conflict play out.
Russian president
Vladimir Putin
said on Wednesday that he did not think Ukraine's leaders wanted peace, after accusing them of ordering a bombing in Bryansk, western Russia, that killed seven people and injured 115 a day before talks in Turkey.
Ukraine, which has not commented on the attack on a Bryansk bridge, has similarly accused Moscow of not seriously seeking peace, citing as evidence Russian resistance to an immediate ceasefire.
Russia is demanding international recognition of Crimea, a peninsula annexed from Ukraine by Russia in 2014, and four other regions of Ukraine that Moscow has claimed as its own territory. It says Ukraine would have to withdraw its forces from all of them.
[
Ukrainian commander's final dispatch: 'I had hoped my service and sacrifices would be enough, but they haven't'
Opens in new window
]
Russia controlled 113,273 square km, or 18.8 per cent, of Ukrainian territory as of June 7th, according to the Deep State map.
The areas under Russian control include Crimea, more than 99 per cent of the Luhansk region, over 70 per cent of the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, all in the east or southeast, and fragments of the Kharkiv and Sumy regions in the northeast.
Mr Putin told Mr Trump on Wednesday that he would have to respond to Ukrainian drone attacks on Russia's bomber fleet and the bombings of the railways.
The United States believes Mr Putin's threatened retaliation against Ukraine over its attacks has not happened yet in earnest and is likely to be a significant, multi-pronged strike, US officials told Reuters.
Russia also hit the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Friday evening and overnight
with drones, missiles and guided bombs, killing at least four people and injuring more than 60, including a baby, local officials said on Saturday.
Russia also said it had downed 61 Ukrainian drones overnight on Sunday in the Moscow region. Two major airports serving Moscow were closed temporarily. – Reuters
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Irish Independent
3 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Planning sought to turn former Wexford convent into IPAS centre
Although Wexford County Council ruled the development non-exempt in the previous application, Ian Skeffington has lodged another application, with letters supporting the need for the centre. The application is looking to see if the project would be ruled a development or exempt from planning permission, specifying that the occupants are to be Ukrainian and international protection applicants. The cover letter consists of a letter from Farry Town Planning Ltd, as a referral pursuant, that emphasises the need for appropriate accommodation for refugees fleeing conflict. "There is a clearly a great need nationally for all types of residential accommodation, ranging from standard houses and apartments, through student dwellings and nursing homes and onwards to centres for wartime refugees and international protection applicants and every effort needs to be made by the various stakeholders, including the Planning Authority, to accelerate the delivery of such housing,' they wrote. "Indeed, all participants in this overall process must aim to promote the provision of such accommodation, to the degree that these types of dwellings are required immediately and not at some future stage." "We thus respectfully invite Wexford County Council to endorse this referral request, in order that this heritage building can be used for war refugees and international protection applicants,' they added. As part of their argument, they highlighted that, in short, the temporary use of the former convent to house both Ukrainian and international protection applicants does not need the usual planning permissions under current laws. They pointed to the European Union (Planning and Development) (Disgraced Persons from Ukraine Temporary Protection) Regulations 2022 which specifically exempt temporary accommodation for displaced persons from usual planning rules. Regarding housing international protection applicants within the building also, they said this also does not require planning consent under the Planning and Development (Exempted Development) (No 4) Regulations 2022, as long as the building is not protected by heritage laws. A document comprised by Chris Ryan, a RIAI Grade 1 Conservation Architect, also ruled that the proposed change of use would turn an underutilised building into an establishment with use, without negative impacts on the structure while restoring the South garden. Included in the application, is a letter from the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth addressed to Ian Skeffington in which they confirm they are interested in using the site should he acquire appropriate permissions.


Irish Times
8 hours ago
- Irish Times
Russia says its forces advancing in Sumy as row over peace talks escalates
Russia has said its forces had advanced to the edge of the east-central Ukrainian region of Dnipropetrovsk amid a public row between Moscow and Kyiv over peace negotiations and the return of thousands of bodies of soldiers who fell in the war. Amid talk of peace, the war is stepping up , with Russian forces grabbing more territory in Ukraine and Kyiv unfurling high-profile drone and sabotage attacks on Russia's nuclear-capable bomber fleet and, according to Moscow, on railways. Russia, which controls a little under one-fifth of Ukrainian territory, has taken more than 190 square km (73 square miles) of the Sumy region of eastern Ukraine in less than a month, according to pro-Ukrainian open source maps. Now, according to the Russian defence ministry, units of the 90th Tank Division of the Central Grouping of Russian forces have reached the western frontier of Ukraine's Donetsk region and are attacking the adjacent Dnipropetrovsk region. READ MORE 'The enemy does not abandon its intentions to enter the Dnipropetrovsk region,' Ukraine's Southern Defence Forces said on Telegram. 'Our soldiers are courageously and professionally holding their section of the front, disrupting the occupier's plans. This work does not stop for a minute.' Dmitry Medvedev , the deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, said the Dnipropetrovsk offensive showed that if Ukraine did not want to accept the reality of Russia's territorial gains in peace talks then Moscow's forces would advance further. The pro-Ukrainian Deep State map showed Russian forces very close to the Dnipropetrovsk region, which had a population of more than 3 million before the war, and advancing on the city of Kostyantynivka in the Donetsk region from several directions. A Ukrainian military spokesman, Dmytro Zaporozhets, said Russian forces were trying to 'build a bridgehead for an attack' on Kostyantynivka, an important logistical hub for the Ukrainian army. Russia on Saturday accused Ukraine of delaying the swap of prisoners of war and return of the bodies of 12,000 dead soldiers, though Ukraine denied those claims. [ Russia's Kharkiv attack kills four, wounds at least 60 in 'most powerful' strike since start of war Opens in new window ] Russia said on Sunday it was moving bodies towards the border and television showed refrigerated trucks containing the bodies of Ukrainian soldiers on the road in the Bryansk region. Ukraine accused Russia of playing propaganda games and said that the exchange of prisoners of war and the bodies of fallen soldiers was scheduled for next week. Russia said Ukraine was playing politics with the dead. US president Donald Trump , who says he wants an end to the deadliest conflict in Europe since the second World War, on Thursday likened it to a fight between young children and indicated that he might have to simply let the conflict play out. Russian president Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday that he did not think Ukraine's leaders wanted peace, after accusing them of ordering a bombing in Bryansk, western Russia, that killed seven people and injured 115 a day before talks in Turkey. Ukraine, which has not commented on the attack on a Bryansk bridge, has similarly accused Moscow of not seriously seeking peace, citing as evidence Russian resistance to an immediate ceasefire. Russia is demanding international recognition of Crimea, a peninsula annexed from Ukraine by Russia in 2014, and four other regions of Ukraine that Moscow has claimed as its own territory. It says Ukraine would have to withdraw its forces from all of them. [ Ukrainian commander's final dispatch: 'I had hoped my service and sacrifices would be enough, but they haven't' Opens in new window ] Russia controlled 113,273 square km, or 18.8 per cent, of Ukrainian territory as of June 7th, according to the Deep State map. The areas under Russian control include Crimea, more than 99 per cent of the Luhansk region, over 70 per cent of the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, all in the east or southeast, and fragments of the Kharkiv and Sumy regions in the northeast. Mr Putin told Mr Trump on Wednesday that he would have to respond to Ukrainian drone attacks on Russia's bomber fleet and the bombings of the railways. The United States believes Mr Putin's threatened retaliation against Ukraine over its attacks has not happened yet in earnest and is likely to be a significant, multi-pronged strike, US officials told Reuters. Russia also hit the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Friday evening and overnight with drones, missiles and guided bombs, killing at least four people and injuring more than 60, including a baby, local officials said on Saturday. Russia also said it had downed 61 Ukrainian drones overnight on Sunday in the Moscow region. Two major airports serving Moscow were closed temporarily. – Reuters


Irish Times
a day ago
- Irish Times
The Christian idea of ‘bearing witness' has never been more vital
Written in stone: 'Thou Shalt Not Kill'. Carved into tablets for eternity: 'Thou Shalt Not Steal'. With the passage of time, it's apparent that writing into rock does not ensure an enduring message. These basic commandments are reflected in similar guidelines in my own Buddhist tradition; and they, too, often go ignored. Stealing and killing doesn't get any bigger than colonial expansion. Theft on a grand scale is the grabbing of Ukrainian territory by Russia. It is Israel 'seizing territory' and 'dividing up' Gaza. It is the US trying to take Greenland to rob it of its natural resources. When Donald Trump says 'Gaza is ours', he is acting like Sykes and Picot, the British and French colonial overloads who divided up the Middle East like a cake in 1916, fuelling the conflict and tragedy we are still living with today. READ MORE This colonialism is nothing short of stealing what does not belong to you. And, in order to do it, it's often necessary to break that other grave commandment, and to kill. But to kill, one has first to dehumanise and demean. Anti-Semitism is what allowed Hamas to murder without guilt when it committed its October 2023 pogrom in Israel. A man I know recently suggested that every man, woman and child in Gaza are terrorists and, therefore, legitimate targets for killing Anti-Semitism is what allowed German Nazis to attempt to liquidate a people on a scale we had not seen before or since. Whenever an entire people are reduced to 'a problem' that needs to be removed, we are in similar, genocidal territory. Anti-Semitism is real; and so is anti-Palestinianism. A man I know recently suggested that every man, woman and child in Gaza are terrorists and, therefore, legitimate targets for killing. When I suggested that the thousands of children killed there cannot, by any stretch of the imagination, be terrorists, he dismissed my point. 'Their parents are,' was his chilling response. There is now widespread, institutional discrimination against Palestinians and their supporters. In Ireland, this anti-Palestinian sentiment is rare. It was an aberration when An Garda Síochána recently detained mothers demonstrating for Gaza outside Dáil Éireann. But in the US, peaceful protesters have been routinely incarcerated in a way worthy of Putin's Russia. New York University cancelled a scheduled presentation by Dr Joanne Liu in which she planned to mention aid cuts to Gaza. She is a professor at McGill University, as well as former international president of Médecins Sans Frontières. Such examples of authoritarian heavy-handedness and the curtailing of free speech go on and on. What emerges is a pattern of systematic oppression In Germany recently, two Irish citizens faced deportation for taking part in pro-Palestinian demonstrations. In 2025, some democratic states are willing to jettison basic human rights in support of the Israeli state. It's staggering that academic staff are losing jobs and funding in North America for speaking out. A classic witch hunt is in progress. Such examples of authoritarian heavy-handedness and the curtailing of free speech go on and on. What emerges is a pattern of systematic oppression. Speaking out for the oppressed is a demand of the Christian call to witness. In these times, the call is urgent, like never before. In that spirit, what is not true and right must be called out. Unfortunately, today, that's quite a long list. It is not true that children are terrorists. It is true that a genocide is happening in Palestine right now. It is true that Russia is the aggressor in Ukraine. It is not right to arrest peaceful protesters and to intimidate and abuse them. It is not right that Ireland facilitates Israel by allowing Israeli-bound armaments to pass through its ports, on the way to their civilian targets. It is not true that people who condemn the killing in Palestine are Hamas supporters and anti-Semites. It is true that we are late into a climate emergency. It is true that truth itself is under threat with the emergence of artificial intelligence and the fake 'reality' of ever-powerful social media platforms. This Christian idea of 'bearing witness' is vital and important now. But so, too, is an understanding of the Buddhist teaching of Karma, which shows us that actions conform to the principle of causality – in short, actions have consequences. The lesson that security comes with the open hand of friendship and not the closed fist of violence seems to have gone unlearned The mass killing and theft that Israel and the US are engaged in will have consequences for many generations to come. The hatred planted deep in the hearts of brutalised Ukrainians will echo for more than a century. A whole new generation of fighters will be created through this brutality. The lesson that security comes with the open hand of friendship and not the closed fist of violence seems to have gone unlearned. To achieve peace in our time, we need to see 'the other' as an equal human being. This was the great lesson of the Belfast Agreement. We need to stop feeding the endless cycle of violence, perpetrating the cycle with more violence. As the Buddha taught, 'Hatred does not cease through hatred at any time. Hatred ceases through love. This is an unalterable law'. Even when international justice is corrupted, some laws are eternal and never change. Rev Myozan Ian Kilroy is a Zen Buddhist priest and abbot at the Dublin Zen Centre. His new book, Do Not Try to Become a Buddha, is out now from Wisdom Publications