logo
Ukraine-Russia war live: Day of mourning for Kyiv attack begins after G7 fails to condemn Putin

Ukraine-Russia war live: Day of mourning for Kyiv attack begins after G7 fails to condemn Putin

Independent3 hours ago

Ukraine is marking a day of mourning on Wednesday after what Volodymyr Zelensky described as one of the worst attacks on Kyiv since the war with Russia began.
At least 18 people were killed in the strikes, 16 in Kyiv and two in Odesa, as Russia fired nearly 500 missiles and drones at 27 locations in the capital.
Mr Zelensky told the G7 that the attack by Vladimir Putin 's forces proved once again the need for Ukraine to be provided better air defences.
He also told the G7 leaders in Canada that "diplomacy is now in a state of crisis" after US president Donald Trump left the summit a day early to address the conflict in the Middle East, skipping their meeting.
Hosts Canada then dropped plans for the group to issue a strong statement on the war in Ukraine after resistance from the United States, a Canadian official told reporters.
Mr Zelensky said Western allies need to continue calling on Mr Trump "to use his real influence" to force an end to the war.
Trump administration 'disbands group focused on pressuring Russia'
Trump administration officials have shelved an inter-agency working group created to formulate strategies for pressuring Russia into speeding up peace talks with Ukraine, it has been claimed.
The group was established earlier in the spring but lost steam in May as it became increasingly clear that Donald Trump was not interested in adopting a more confrontational stance toward Moscow, three US officials told Reuters.
"It lost steam toward the end because the president wasn't there. Instead of doing more, maybe he wanted to do less,' one official was quoted as saying.
The final blow came roughly three weeks ago, when most members of the White House National Security Council, who were coordinating the group – including the entire team dealing directly with the Ukraine war – were dismissed as part of a broad purge, they alleged.
Arpan Rai18 June 2025 06:48
North Korea's Kim met Putin's top security official Shoigu
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un met Russia's top presidential security adviser Sergei Shoigu in Pyongyang yesterday as the two discussed a "special military operation" in the Kursk region bordering Ukraine, state media KCNA reported today.
Mr Kim and Mr Shoigu, secretary of Russia's Security Council, discussed cooperation plans for Moscow's rebuilding of the Kursk region, the report said, confirming earlier reports of the meeting by Russian media.
North Korea will send 5,000 military construction workers and 1,000 sappers to the region to help rebuild it after the Ukrainian incursion that North Korean troops helped Moscow repel this year, Mr Shoigu was cited as saying by the Russian state news agency TASS today.
His visit to Pyongyang and meeting with Mr Kim came nearly two weeks after his last meeting with the leader of the reclusive state on 4 June.
Plans to commemorate the "heroic feats" of North Korean soldiers in the operations in the Kursk region, a part of Russia which Ukrainian forces infiltrated last year, were also discussed during the meeting, KCNA said.
Arpan Rai18 June 2025 06:09
Zelensky informs G7 leaders of Russia's attack across Ukraine: 'A difficult night'
Volodymyr Zelensky discussed the overnight Russian attacks from Tuesday that killed 15 people and injured 150-plus in his country as he met with allies at G7 summit.
"Our families had a very difficult night, one of the biggest attacks from the very beginning of this war,' he said.
"We need support from allies and I'm here," Mr Zelensky said. He added, "We are ready for the peace negotiations, unconditional ceasefire. I think it's very important. But for this, we need pressure."
Canadian prime minister Mark Carney said the attack "underscores the importance of standing in total solidarity with Ukraine."
While the summit was meant to showcase unity on top global issues, no joint statement on the conflict in Ukraine was released.
Arpan Rai18 June 2025 05:48
Zelensky thanks Canada for military aid and Russia sanctions
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky departed from the G7 summit yesterday with new aid from host Canada for its war against Russia.
But before exiting, he warned that diplomacy is in "crisis" after the leaders missed the chance to press US president Donald Trump for more action.
'Today, we have concrete decisions on increased military support, new tranches of aid funded by frozen Russian assets, and additional sanctions targeting what fuels Russia's war. It is important that partners are ready not only to support our defence now, but also to rebuild Ukraine together after the war ends,' Mr Zelensky said.
Arpan Rai18 June 2025 05:30
Video report: Russian drone attack hits residential building in Kyiv with 14 killed
Arpan Rai18 June 2025 05:19
Starmer tightens screws on Putin as he announces raft of fresh sanctions against Russia
Sir Keir Starmer has promised to keep 'tightening the screws' on Vladimir Putin as he announced a raft of fresh sanctions on dozens of new Russian finance, military and energy targets.
The prime minister is piling fresh pressure on the Russian war machine and seeking to win further backing from G7 leaders at a key summit in Canada.
After repeated refusals from Putin to engage in peace talks, and fresh Russian strikes on Kyiv on Tuesday, the PM said his sanctions will 'choke off his ability to continue his barbaric war' in Ukraine.
Starmer tightens screws on Putin with raft of fresh sanctions against Russia
Keir Starmer said his sanctions would choke off Putin's ability to continue his war
Arpan Rai18 June 2025 05:18
Trump unaware of major Russian attack on Kyiv when asked by reporter
Donald Trump appeared to be unaware of a major Russian attack that killed at least 15 people and injured 116 in Kyiv and Odesa on Tuesday, hours after the assault took place.
Asked about the attack by a reporter aboard Air Force One as he travelled back from the G7 summit in Canada – where reports suggested he had been due to meet Volodymyr Zelensky before cutting his trip short – Mr Trump said: 'When was that? When?'
Told that the attack was very recent, the US president replied: 'Just now? You mean as I'm walking back to see you, that's when it took place? Sounds like it. I'll have to look at it.'
The Kyiv Independent reported that seven hours later, the White House was still yet to comment on the Russian attack.
Arpan Rai18 June 2025 04:50
Trump's early exit forces G7 to abandon joint statement on Ukraine
Canada dropped plans for the G7 to issue a strong statement on the war in Ukraine after resistance from the United States, a Canadian official told reporters.
The G7 wealthy nations struggled to find unity over the conflict in Ukraine after Trump expressed support for Russian president Vladimir Putin and left a day early to address the Israel-Iran conflict from Washington.
Canadian prime minister Mark Carney said Ottawa would provide C$2bn ($1.47bn) in new military assistance for Kyiv as well as impose new financial sanctions.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said he had told the G7 leaders that "diplomacy is now in a state of crisis" and said they need to continue calling on Donald Trump "to use his real influence" to force an end to the war, in a post on his Telegram account.
Arpan Rai

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump overseeing a ‘fascist regime' says Brad Lander after arrest
Trump overseeing a ‘fascist regime' says Brad Lander after arrest

The Guardian

time22 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Trump overseeing a ‘fascist regime' says Brad Lander after arrest

Update: Date: 2025-06-18T08:51:50.000Z Title: Opening summary: Trump overseeing a 'fascist regime', says Lander Content: Brad Lander, New York City's comptroller and a mayoral candidate, has lashed out at Donald Trump and 'his fascist regime', after he was arrested on Tuesday by masked federal agents while visiting an immigration court and accompanying a person out of a courtroom. Posting on X, Lander wrote: We will all be worse off if we let Donald Trump and his fascist regime undermine the rule of law. Lander was arrested, according to video footage of the incident, as he and his staff walked with an immigrant – who he later identified as 'Edgardo' – who had their case dismissed pending appeal earlier in the day, per AMNY. Lander can be seen and heard in videos of the incident asking the immigration officials if they have a judicial warrant. Additional footage of the arrest shows Lander telling the officials: I'm not obstructing. I'm standing right here in the hallway. I asked to see the judicial warrant. In a statement to the Guardian, assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin from the Department of Homeland Security said Lander 'was arrested for assaulting law enforcement and impeding a federal officer'. Upon his release, Lander said he 'certainly did not' assault an officer. In an interview with CNN after his arrest, Lander said: All I was trying to do was the things I had done [in] the prior two weeks of just accompany people out to safety. That was my goal today. I sure did not go with any intention of getting arrested. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump is expected to meet Pakistan's army chief, Asim Munir, for talks today. The meeting is expected to take place in the White House cabinet room at 1pm Washington time. It comes after India's prime minister Narendra Modi told Trump late on Tuesday that a ceasefire between India and Pakistan after a four-day conflict in May was achieved through talks between the two militaries and not US mediation. Trump had said last month that the nuclear-armed South Asian neighbours agreed to a ceasefire after talks mediated by the US, and that the hostilities ended after he urged the countries to focus on trade instead of war. 'PM Modi told President Trump clearly that during this period, there was no talk at any stage on subjects like India-US trade deal or US mediation between India and Pakistan,' Indian foreign secretary Vikram Misri said in a press statement, according to Reuters. More on both of these stories in a moment, but first, here are some other developments: Israel's war on Iran appeared to be approaching a pivotal moment on Tuesday night after five days of bombing and retaliatory Iranian missile strikes, as Donald Trump demanded 'unconditional surrender' from Tehran and weighed his military options. Trump convened a meeting of his national security team in the White House situation room after a day of febrile rhetoric in which the president gave sharply conflicting signals over whether US forces would participate directly in Israel's bombing campaign in Iran. An unlikely coalition of lawmakers has moved to prevent the president from involving US forces in the conflict without Congress's approval. Republican congressman Thomas Massie, whose libertarian-tinged politics have often put him at odds with Trump, joined several progressive Democrats to introduce in the House of Representatives a war powers resolution that would require a vote by Congress before Trump could attack Iran. Democrat Tim Kaine has introduced companion legislation in the Senate. 'Effective today, I am lifting the curfew in downtown Los Angeles,' the city's mayor, Karen Bass, said in a statement on Tuesday afternoon. A federal judge in Boston ruled that transgender and intersex people can obtain passports that align with their gender identity during litigation that seeks to overturn Trump's executive order that US passports must conform to the sex citizens were assigned at birth. Ukrainian diplomats have been left frustrated – and in some cases embittered – at Donald Trump's refusal to make Ukraine a priority after Volodymyr Zelenskyy flew 5,000 miles to the G7 conference in Canada only for the US president to return home the night before the two leaders were due to meet. Trump said he needed to focus on the Israel-Iran conflict. Donald Trump has abandoned his brief immigration and customs enforcement (Ice) reprieve for farm and hotel workers, ordering the agency's raids in those sectors to resume after hardliners crushed a pause that lasted just four days. A federal appeals court in San Francisco heard arguments on Tuesday in Trump v Newsom, to determine whether the Trump administration must return control of the California national guard troops deployed to Los Angeles by Trump to the state's governor during protests over federal immigration raids. Bernie Sanders has endorsed the leftwing New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani in the latest boost to his insurgent campaign.

Rolls-Royce boss urges Labour to back £3bn jet engine project
Rolls-Royce boss urges Labour to back £3bn jet engine project

Telegraph

time42 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Rolls-Royce boss urges Labour to back £3bn jet engine project

The chief executive of Rolls-Royce is lobbying ministers to support his company's £3bn jet engine project, saying it could be the 'the single biggest item for economic growth for the UK'. Tufan Erginbilgic is pushing for the Government to back Rolls's plans to launch a range of engines for short-haul planes, a market it abandoned more than a decade ago. He said the project could create 40,000 jobs in Britain and deliver a surge in exports. Mr Erginbilgic is lobbying Labour to support the scheme as the Government prepares to launch its upcoming industrial strategy. He said: 'Any country needs to support competitively advantaged industries. If you give some momentum that will create lots of export growth, and employment with that.' Britain's biggest manufacturing company has stepped up talks with potential partners as it eyes a return to making engines for short-haul planes of the kind used by Ryanair and easyJet. Speaking at the Paris Air Show, Mr Erginbilgic said: 'We are progressing. We would like to enter narrowbody, that's true, and it's even more true right now. 'Our preference is partnership. I can't go into details because of the confidentiality about these things, but we are talking to multiple parties. 'Do we have the technology, do we have the capability, do we have the opportunity? Yes, yes and yes.' Rolls-Royce would seek government support in helping to fund the £3bn development cost of the engine. Mr Erginbilgic argued that General Electric and Pratt & Whitney, the other major player in the sector, get four or five times as much backing. He said that support for the project would also deliver a huge boost to the economy. He said: 'It is that big. Think about that. If you pick economic growth in the UK, one item, this will be the number one.' He added that the project could create more than 40,000 jobs across the supply chain. Rolls, which has its main manufacturing plant in Derby, would use technology developed as part of its Ultrafan programme on the new engines. It would need to develop a reduced-thrust version of the Ultrafan, which was initially developed for larger, long-haul planes. The 120-year-old company aims to develop the engines to coincide with the introduction of the next generation of the narrowbody planes from Airbus and Boeing in about a decade's time. Mr Erginbilgic is eyeing new markets after piloting a stunning turnaround at Rolls-Royce. He told Rolls's 42,000 workers that they were on a 'burning platform' when he took over in 2023. However, shares in the company have surged more than 700pc since Mr Erginbilgic, a former BP executive, took charge.

Iran will respond firmly if US becomes directly involved in Israeli strikes, says UN ambassador
Iran will respond firmly if US becomes directly involved in Israeli strikes, says UN ambassador

Reuters

time44 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Iran will respond firmly if US becomes directly involved in Israeli strikes, says UN ambassador

GENEVA, June 18 (Reuters) - Iran said it had conveyed to Washington that it will respond firmly to the United States if it becomes directly involved in Israel's military campaign, the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva said on Wednesday. Ali Bahreini, the ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations in Geneva, told reporters that he saw the U.S. as "complicit in what Israel is doing." Israel launched its air war, its largest ever on Iran, on Friday after saying it had concluded the Islamic Republic was on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon. The U.S. has so far only taken indirect actions in the current conflict with Iran, including helping to shoot down missiles fired toward Israel. It is deploying more fighter aircraft to the Middle East and extending the deployment of other warplanes, three U.S. officials told Reuters. Bahreini said Iran will also respond strongly to Israeli strikes. "We will not show any reluctance in defending our people, security and land - we will respond seriously and strongly, without restraint," Ali Bahreini, the ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations in Geneva, told reporters. Thousands of people were fleeing Tehran and other major cities on Wednesday, Iranian media reported, as Iran and Israel launched new missile strikes at each other despite U.S. President Donald Trump calling for Tehran's unconditional surrender. The Israeli military said two barrages of Iranian missiles were launched toward Israel in the first two hours of Wednesday morning. Explosions were heard over Tel Aviv.

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