logo
Russia says no response from Ukraine on Istanbul talks

Russia says no response from Ukraine on Istanbul talks

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called Kyiv's demand 'non-constructive'. (Kremlin pool/EPA Images pic)
MOSCOW : Russia on Thursday said it was still waiting for Ukraine to say whether it would attend peace talks in Istanbul on Monday, after Kyiv demanded Moscow send its peace terms before agreeing to the meeting.
Diplomatic efforts to end the three-year conflict have gained pace in recent months, but Moscow has shown no signs of easing its bombardment of Ukraine while rebuffing calls for an immediate ceasefire.
Moscow has offered to hold a second round of direct talks with Ukraine in Istanbul on June 2, where it wants to present a so-called 'memorandum' outlining its conditions for a long-term peace settlement.
But, Ukraine said the meeting would not yield results unless it saw a copy of the memorandum in advance, a proposal that the Kremlin dismissed.
'As far as I know, no response has been received yet… we need to wait for a response from the Ukrainian side,' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, calling Kyiv's demand that Russia provide peace conditions up front as 'non-constructive'.
Ukraine said it had already submitted its peace terms to Russia and demanded Moscow do the same.
Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called on Russia and Ukraine not to 'shut the door' on dialogue ahead of the anticipated meeting in Istanbul.
The warring sides previously met in Istanbul on May 16, their first direct talks in over three years.
Those talks failed to yield a breakthrough, but the two sides did agree to trade 1,000 prisoners each – their biggest POW swap since the beginning of the conflict.
Erdogan's foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, who met Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Monday, was expected to travel to Kyiv on Thursday to meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
US President Donald Trump, who has been pushing for a peace deal, has become increasingly frustrated with Moscow's apparent stalling and warned on Wednesday he would determine within 'about two weeks' whether Putin was serious about ending the fighting.
Moscow's offensive, launched in Feb 2022, has resulted in tens of thousands of deaths and the destruction of large parts of eastern and southern Ukraine.
Attacks go on
Ukraine, on Thursday, criticised Russia's refusal to provide the memorandum.
'The Russians' fear of sending their memorandum to Ukraine suggests that it is likely filled with unrealistic ultimatums,' foreign ministry spokesman Georgiy Tykhy said.
The Kremlin has been grinding forward on the battlefield for over a year while pushing its demands for peace, which include Ukraine abandoning its Nato ambitions and ceding territory it already controls.
Local authorities in Ukraine said Thursday that Russia had fired 90 drones overnight, killing at least five people across the country.
In southern Ukraine, a drone strike killed two civilians in the Kherson region, while a ballistic missile attack claimed the life of a farm worker in the Mykolaiv region.
In the eastern Donetsk region, shelling killed one civilian, according to a 24-hour tally from the National Police.
A 68-year-old man was killed by a drone strike on his home in the northeastern Sumy region, which borders Russia.
In his comments on Wednesday, Trump told reporters he was 'very disappointed' at Russia's deadly bombardment during the negotiating process, but rebuffed calls to impose more sanctions on Moscow.
Kyiv has accused Russia of deliberately stalling the peace process to pursue its offensive.
Zelensky said Russia was 'amassing' more than 50,000 troops on the front line around Sumy, where Moscow's army has captured a number of settlements as it seeks to establish what Putin has called a 'buffer zone' inside Ukrainian territory.
On Thursday, the Russian army said it captured three villages in the Donetsk and Kharkiv regions and had repelled 48 Ukrainian drones, including three over the Moscow region.
A retired Russian commander who led air strikes on the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol died in a blast early Thursday in Stavropol in southern Russia, authorities said, adding that they did not rule out Ukrainian involvement.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Young Ukrainian women see reporting from frontline as a duty
Young Ukrainian women see reporting from frontline as a duty

New Straits Times

time6 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Young Ukrainian women see reporting from frontline as a duty

WHEN Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022, Olha Kyrylenko was at home watching images from her colleagues risking their lives to cover the siege of the port city of Mariupol. "I asked myself whether I could work in such conditions at all," said Kyrylenko, now a 26-year-old reporter for the leading media outlet Ukrainska Pravda. "And I was like, well, I have to at least try," she said during a rare break in war-torn eastern Ukraine. She went to cover the front lines for the first time shortly after Russia invaded, and noticed that she was far from the only woman. "All my friends, journalists working in the war, are women," Kyrylenko said. While women journalists had already been covering fighting between Ukraine and Kremlin-backed separatists since 2014, a new generation emerged in 2022. Mobilisation in Ukraine's army is obligatory only for men, but the country has seen more and more women joining its ranks. Two Ukrainska Pravda journalists have been drafted into the army, including the photographer Kyrylenko worked with on her first reporting trip to the front in 2022. Since then, she has been working on her own. That was also the case for Viktoria Roshchyna, whose death in Russian detention last year highlighted the risks taken by Ukrainian journalists covering the war. The 27-year-old went missing in 2023 during a high-risk trip to territory occupied by Russian forces. Her body was sent back only in February and bearing signs of torture, according to a media investigation. Kyrylenko worked with Roshchyna and remembers her as "tenacious" and ready to work where no one else would. But Kyrylenko said her death had forced her to think hard about whether journalism "is worth risking your life". In April, Kyrylenko was reporting in Pokrovsk, a vital frontline logistics hub where fighting is fierce, on her mother's birthday. She promised her mother that nothing would happen to her. But, she said, "my life right now is not the highest value in my life". The main thing is "that my country as a country should survive and that the truth about this war, whatever it is, should be present in the information space". Keeping a professional distance as a Ukrainian journalist covering the war can be difficult. Alina Yevych, a 25-year-old reporter, said she had managed — for a while. Then she met a woman who said she had been kidnapped and raped for a week by Russian soldiers in Mariupol. After hearing her words, "I don't know how to be objective", said Yevych, who works along with her boss Maria Davydenko for Vchasno, an independent news outlet. Yevych said soldiers they interview sometimes found it hard to believe that women could understand how tanks work or listen to their stories without flinching. Mentalities are changing, Yevych said, but "for some people, you really remain a girl in this war". Vyacheslav Maryshev, editor in chief of the visuals department at Suspilne, a state-funded news organisation, in Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine, said his female employees tended to take fewer unnecessary risks. The men sometimes want to act like "Rambo" to prove their bravery, he said, but in his team of war reporters there are more women than men. One of them, Oleksandra Novosel, said she had just convinced her bosses to invest in bulletproof jackets more suited to women's body shapes. At the start of the invasion, one of the vests available at Suspilne weighed 12kg — around a quarter of her weight. "I walked around in it and wobbled," Novosel recalled. The 30-year-old said she would prefer not to need a bulletproof vest, and had not imagined working in a warzone until her country became one. She would rather be covering courts or investigating corruption, she said, but for the moment, reporting on the war is "my duty".

Rivals Meloni and Macron seek to mend fences in Rome talks
Rivals Meloni and Macron seek to mend fences in Rome talks

Free Malaysia Today

time8 hours ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Rivals Meloni and Macron seek to mend fences in Rome talks

French President Emmanuel Macron presents himself as the EU's go-to man on the issue of Ukraine. (AP pic) ROME : Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and France's President Emmanuel Macron will aim to reconcile their difference in talks in Rome today, with both sides seeking to cope with US tariffs and the conflict in Ukraine. The European rivals are meeting in the Italian capital from 6pm for talks and then dinner, an encounter Macron said he had initiated. The centrist president and nationalist far-right Meloni are not natural political allies. But as the leaders of the EU's second and third-largest economies, they face similar challenges in the Ukraine war and US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs against the bloc. Meloni on Friday acknowledged 'divergences' with Macron but denied she had any 'personal problems' with him, and said she was 'very happy' with the visit. An Italian government source said Rome and Paris hoped to 'lay the foundations for a further strengthening of relations' between two nations 'on the front line of the various fronts of international politics'. Macron's office said Italy was 'an important partner' with 'a crucial role to play in European decisions', particularly in the Ukrainian conflict. Despite their political rivalry, the French presidency said the two leaders were showing they were 'capable of moving forward together on the essentials'. Their cooperation has been sorely tested by Trump, with the pair disagreeing over how to deal with the US president on both tariffs and Ukraine. Meloni and Macron have and 'undeniable rivalry', said Marc Lazar, a professor at Sciences Po university in Paris. He said the pair were following different strategies with Meloni seeking 'mediation and compromise' with the US president and Macron favouring 'unwavering firmness'. Rome 'believes that because it is ideologically close to the US administration… it will be able to force it to back down on trade tariffs', he told AFP. But while Paris says it has 'respect' for those who can 'maintain the best possible relationship with President Trump', it insists trade negotiations are the responsibility of the European Commission – effectively sidelining Meloni as a would-be mediator. On Ukraine, Macron presents himself as the EU's go-to man on the issue, speaking to Trump regularly and invoking the relationship developed during the billionaire's first term. And he has seriously ruffled feathers in Rome with his attempts to put together a 'coalition of the willing' ready to provide 'security guarantees' to Ukraine. In recent weeks, the French president's meetings on the Russian invasion with the British, German and Polish leaders – but without Meloni – have ratcheted up tensions. Paris says that 'between Europeans, the issue of formats must be arranged to achieve the best impact we can under the circumstances'. It says that Italy has always insisted the US take part. But Lazar notes that as a nuclear power with a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, France sees itself as less dependent on the US. The mood was not helped when an adviser to Macron dismissed Italy's proposal to grant Ukraine protection under Article 5 of the Nato treaty without Kyiv joining the military alliance itself. The article stipulates that if one member is attacked all the others must act as if they too were attacked. While that idea 'deserves discussion', it would in practice be very hard to implement, Lazar said, not least 'because if the Trump administration refuses Ukraine's accession, it is precisely because it does not want to implement Article 5 for Ukraine's benefit'.

Russian rocket attack kills 2 in Ukraine's Sumy
Russian rocket attack kills 2 in Ukraine's Sumy

Free Malaysia Today

time8 hours ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Russian rocket attack kills 2 in Ukraine's Sumy

More than 30 people were killed in a Russian ballistic missile strike on Sumy in April. (AP pic) KYIV : A Russian rocket attack on the northeastern city of Sumy killed two people today, Ukrainian officials said, the latest in a series of escalating attacks on the border region. The city has come under intense Russian bombardment as Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered his troops to create a 'buffer zone' inside the Sumy region, which borders Russia. Russia fired five rockets from an MLRS system on the city at around 9am, the head of the city administration Oleg Grygorov said on social media. 'Unfortunately two people were killed,' and 20 more wounded, he said. 'The hits damaged a medical facility, cars and houses,' he added. The regional prosecutor's office posted photos showing burned out cars on a road in the city centre after the attack. Sumy is around 30km from the Russian border, and was a vital logistics hub for Ukraine's months-long offensive into Russia's Kursk region. Attacks on the city have escalated since Moscow said in April it had fully recaptured the Kursk region. More than 30 were killed there in a Russian ballistic missile strike on the city centre in April, one of the deadliest single attacks of the three-year war. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said last week that Russia was amassing some 50,000 troops for an offensive on the region. A separate Russian drone attack on Kharkiv killed one person, the prosecutor's office said, while the cities of Odesa and Chernigiv were also hit in overnight attacks.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store