logo
Russia's Aeroflot cancels more flights but says schedule is now 'stabilised' after cyberattack

Russia's Aeroflot cancels more flights but says schedule is now 'stabilised' after cyberattack

Reuters29-07-2025
MOSCOW, July 29 (Reuters) - Russian airline Aeroflot (AFLT.MM), opens new tab cancelled dozens more flights on Tuesday but said it had now stabilised its schedule after a major cyberattack a day earlier.
Two pro-Ukraine hacking groups claimed on Monday to have carried out a year-long operation to penetrate Aeroflot's network. They said they had crippled 7,000 servers, extracted data on passengers and employees and gained control over the personal computers of staff, including senior managers.
The Interfax news agency said Aeroflot had cancelled 59 round-trip flights from Moscow on Monday out of a planned 260. It said that a further 22 flights out of Moscow and 31 into the capital were cancelled on Tuesday.
Aeroflot's online timetable showed that all but one of the 22 cancelled flights out of Moscow on Tuesday had been due to leave before 10 a.m. Moscow time (0700 GMT), but the schedule for the rest of the day appeared largely unaffected.
"As of today, 93% of flights from Moscow and back are planned to be operated according to the original schedule (216 return flights out of 233)," the company said.
"Until 10:00, the company carried out selective flight cancellations, after which Aeroflot's own flight program stabilised."
Apart from the many cancellations, Monday's attack caused heavy delays to air travel across the world's biggest country and drew anger from affected passengers.
Responsibility was claimed by the Belarusian Cyber Partisans, a long-established group that opposes President Alexander Lukashenko, and by a more shadowy and recent hacking outfit that calls itself Silent Crow.
Russian lawmakers said the cyberattack was a wake-up call and that investigators should focus not only on the perpetrators but on those who had allowed it to happen.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ukraine strikes Russian ship ‘carrying ammunition from Iran' on day of Trump-Putin summit
Ukraine strikes Russian ship ‘carrying ammunition from Iran' on day of Trump-Putin summit

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Ukraine strikes Russian ship ‘carrying ammunition from Iran' on day of Trump-Putin summit

Ukraine has struck a large Russian oil refinery and key port, hitting a ship that had been transporting drone parts and ammunition from Iran, its military has confirmed. Kyiv said on Friday that Ukraine struck the Syzran oil refinery in Russia 's Samara region in an overnight attack and also hit the Caspian Sea port of Olya in the Astrakhan region the previous day, including the cargo vessel travelling to Russia. The strikes came hours before US president Donald Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin meet for a crucial summit in Alaska to discuss the war in Ukraine – to which Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has not been invited – and as Russia grinds out gains in Ukraine's east. Facing regular Russian missile and drone attacks, Ukraine has directed the majority of its deep strikes against Russian oil refineries and unspecified 'storage facilities' this year, according to new general staff data published on Friday. The Ukrainian military, as usual, did not confirm if it used drones for its latest two long-range attacks. It says its deep strike campaign aims to degrade Russia's capacity to wage the full-scale war it launched in February 2022. The Ukrainian military's claims could not be independently verified. In a statement on the Telegram messaging app, Kyiv's military said its strike caused a fire and explosions at the Syzran refinery, which it said produces a range of fuels and is one of the biggest in oil company Rosneft's network. Samara's regional governor said a drone attack caused a fire at an unspecified "industrial enterprise" in his region, but that it had been put out quickly. The Russian defence ministry said it had shot down Ukrainian drones over nine regions. The Ukrainian military also said it struck the Caspian port of Olya in Russia's Astrakhan region on Thursday, hitting a ship that had been transporting drone parts and ammunition from Iran. The vessel "Port Olya-4" regularly transits the Caspian Sea, bringing cargo between Iran and Russia, according to the US treasury department and Ukrainian military intelligence. Russia uses the Olya port as an important logistics hub for the supply of military goods from Iran, the Ukrainian military said in a statement on Friday. Meanwhile, Moscow's forces breached Ukrainian lines in a series of infiltrations in the country's industrial heartland of Donetsk this week. The advances amount to only a limited success for Russia, analysts say, since it still needs to consolidate its gains before achieving a true breakthrough – but it is still seen as a potentially dangerous moment for Ukraine. In other developments, Russian strikes in Ukraine's Sumy region overnight on Wednesday resulted in numerous injuries, Ukrainian regional officials said. A missile strike on a village in the Seredyna-Budska community wounded a 7-year-old girl and a 27-year-old man, according to regional governor Oleh Hryhorov. The girl was taken to hospital in a stable condition. In Russia, a Ukrainian drone attack damaged several apartment buildings in the southern city of Rostov-on-Don, near the border with Ukraine, where 13 civilians were wounded, according to acting governor of the region, Yuri Slyusar. Two of the wounded were hospitalised in serious condition, he said.

In Kyiv, disheartened Ukrainians wary ahead of Trump-Putin summit
In Kyiv, disheartened Ukrainians wary ahead of Trump-Putin summit

Reuters

time22 minutes ago

  • Reuters

In Kyiv, disheartened Ukrainians wary ahead of Trump-Putin summit

KYIV, Aug 15 (Reuters) - As President Donald Trump prepared to meet his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday, Ukrainians were watching warily, fearful the U.S. leader could sell Kyiv out in his bid for a quick deal with Moscow. The American leader, who has set his sights on securing a truce in Russia's 3-1/2-year-old war in Ukraine, agreed last week to hold the first U.S.-Russian summit since 2021, abruptly ending Western attempts to isolate the Kremlin leader. Polls by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology show Ukrainians overwhelmingly want a negotiated settlement to end the fighting, but would also oppose any truce secured with crushing concessions. Half a dozen Ukrainians interviewed by Reuters on Kyiv's central square said they were not optimistic ahead of the summit. Some said they worried that Kyiv's interests would not be taken into account. "I don't trust Trump. He says one thing today, another tomorrow. The day after tomorrow – another thing, in five days – something else. Therefore, I have no faith in him," 47-year-old accountant Anna Sherstniova said. Tetiana Harkavenko, a 65-year-old cleaner, predicted the fighting would rage on after the summit. "Nothing good will happen there, because war is war, it will not end. The territories - we're not going to give anything to anyone." Trump has said any deal to end the war will require territorial concessions by both sides, and that he would like to see a follow-up meeting between Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Liubomyr Yurtsiv, 26, a technician, said he expected little would change after the meeting. "Most likely, the outcome won't be positive," he added. Valerii Kucherenko, a 31-year-old war veteran, had a similarly pessimistic take, speaking to Reuters at the pizzeria he set up in the town of Bila Tserkva outside the capital. Kucherenko lost both his hands to injuries that he sustained while storming a Russian position on the eastern front in 2023. "I hope for peace on our terms, but we're all adults and understand it's not that simple. Putin and Trump may reach an agreement, but it will not be in our favour. This scenario will not suit us," he said. "We are Ukrainians, and we will defend our rights to the very end."

Ukraine vows to continue drone attacks until there's a peace deal
Ukraine vows to continue drone attacks until there's a peace deal

Sky News

time28 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Ukraine vows to continue drone attacks until there's a peace deal

Why you can trust Sky News Ukraine says there will be no let-up in its punishing long-range drone attacks on Russia until Moscow agrees to peace. The warning comes ahead of Vladimir Putin meeting Donald Trump in Alaska. It was made in a rare interview with one of the key commanders of Ukraine's drone forces. We met in an undisclosed location in woods outside Kyiv. Brigadier General Yuriy Shchygol is a wanted man. There is a quiet, understated but steely resolve about this man hunted by Russia. His eyes are piercing and he speaks with precision and determination. His drone units have done billions of dollars of damage to Russia's economy and their range and potency is increasing exponentially. "Operations", he said euphemistically, "will develop if Russia refuses a just peace and stays on Ukrainian territory". "Initially, we had a few drones a month, capable of striking targets 100 to 250 kilometres away. Today, we have drones capable of flying 3,000 to 4,000 kilometres, and that's not the limit, it's constrained only by fuel supply, which can be increased". His teams had just carried off one of their most complicated and most devastating strikes yet. A massive fire was raging in an oil refinery in Volgograd, or Stalingrad as it was once called. If the refinery is completely destroyed, it will be one of the largest operations conducted. There have been other major targets too, in Saratov and Akhtubinsk. Those refineries are now either non-operational or functioning at only 5% of capacity. Oil is potentially Vladimir Putin's Achilles heel. So much of his economy and war effort is dependent on it. Donald Trump could cripple Russia tomorrow if he sanctioned it but so has appeared reluctant to do so, a source of constant frustration for the Ukrainians. Military activity on both sides has increased as diplomacy has picked up pace. 1:35 In another long-range attack, Ukraine says it hit the port of Olya in Russia's Astrakhan region, striking a ship loaded with drone parts and ammunition sent from Iran. But on the ground, Russian forces have made a surprise advance of more than 15km into Ukrainian territory. Ukraine says the intrusion can be contained, but it adds to fears about its ability to hold back the Russians along the 1000-mile frontline. Russia launches almost nightly drone attacks on Ukraine's cities, killing civilians and striking residential targets. General Yuriy says Ukraine picks targets that hurt Russia's war effort, and it is constantly honing its capability. "Each operation", he says, "uses multiple types of drones simultaneously, some fly higher, others lower. That is our technical edge." How satisfying, I asked, was it to watch so much enemy infrastructure go up in smoke? He answered with detached professionalism. "It does not bring me pleasure, war can never be a source of enjoyment. Each of us has tasks we could fulfil in peacetime. But this is war; it doesn't bring satisfaction. However, it benefits the state and harms our enemy." Whatever happens in Alaska, General Yuriy and his teams will continue pioneering drone warfare, hitting Vladimir Putin's economy where it hurts most.

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