
Russia-Ukraine War: Chernivtsi Bleeds, Kim Cheers, Zelenskyy Begs For Patriots – Day 1,235 Of Conflict
Fire crews battled blazes through the night. Concrete dust mixed with smoke. Civilians carried water buckets through collapsed courtyards. Hospitals reported injuries from burns, shrapnel and blast waves. Ukraine's Interior Ministry confirmed the strikes targeted civil infrastructure. Meanwhile, Russia claimed they hit military industry targets and an airfield.
June was already the deadliest month in three years. Now, with 232 civilians killed and over 1,300 injured, the UN human rights team says the toll continues to rise.
Just across the border in Russia's Belgorod region, a private home was struck by a shell. One man was killed, said Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov. But Russian state media focused more on alliances than casualties.
In North Korea, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stood beside leader Kim Jong Un. The setting was Wonsan, on the coast. The message was chilling. Kim pledged his country's 'unconditional support' for all of Russia's actions in Ukraine. The two regimes issued a joint declaration vowing to defend each other's sovereignty and territorial claims. Lavrov warned the United States, South Korea and Japan not to form any bloc that could be seen as hostile.
In Europe, tensions brewed behind closed doors. Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico told reporters his country still had not agreed to support the EU's 18th sanctions package against Russia. The problem was gas. Slovakia gets most of its supply from Russian state-owned Gazprom through a deal valid until 2034. The European Union wants to end all Russian gas imports by 2028. Slovakia wants protection before saying yes. Talks are on. The deadline is June 15.
Russia, for its part, blamed Western sanctions for the collapse of a food-and-fertiliser export deal with the United Nations. Signed in 2022, the original agreement was meant to stabilise food prices. It is now dead.
Back in Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy looked to the sky and to Washington. He said Ukraine was close to finalising a 'multilevel agreement' with the United States to secure more Patriot air defence systems and the missiles to fire from them. Ukraine is also trying to build its own interceptor systems, but resources are thin.
'Every minute matters now. We are under attack from every direction, and even diplomacy takes too long,' a Ukrainian official said in private.
As day 1,235 of this war closes, Ukraine counts the dead, negotiates for shields and watches the clouds for the next missile.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
17 minutes ago
- Indian Express
India, China, Brazil can be hit by sanctions over Russia trade: NATO chief
At a time when Delhi and Washington are working on a trade deal before the pause on reciprocal tariff ends August 1, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said Wednesday that countries like India, China and Brazil could be hit very hard by secondary sanctions if they continued to do business with Russia. Speaking in Washington, Rutte, according to the Reuters news agency, said countries in business with Russia should make a phone call to President Vladimir Putin and 'tell him that he has to get serious about peace talks (on ending the Ukraine conflict), because otherwise this will slam back on Brazil, on India and on China in a massive way'. 'My encouragement to these three countries, particularly, is if you live now in Beijing, or in Delhi, or you are the president of Brazil, you might want to take a look into this, because this might hit you very hard,' Rutte told reporters. The NATO chief's remarks come amid tariff uncertainties and global trade wars with the US, and India's own trade with Russia, particularly oil imports. Weeks ago, there were concerns in India over a controversial Bill in the US that proposed 500 per cent tariffs on countries that continue to trade with Russia. More recently, US President Donald Trump also threatened 'biting' secondary tariffs at the rate of 100 per cent on buyers of Russian exports unless there is a Russia-Ukraine peace deal within 50 days. Industry watchers and experts see these as tactics to force Putin's hand by pressuring countries who import from Russia. India has so far not scaled back on its oil imports from Russia, and has maintained that it is willing to buy oil from whoever offers the best price, as long as the oil is not under sanctions. Russian oil itself is not sanctioned, but the US and its allies have imposed a price cap of $60 per barrel, as per which Western shippers and insurers cannot participate in Russian oil trade if the price of Moscow's crude is above that level. India and China are the top importers of Russian crude, and Delhi is engaging with US lawmakers and the Trump administration to voice concerns regarding India's energy security. India depends on imports to meet around 88 per cent of its crude oil needs, and Russia has been the mainstay of India's oil imports for nearly three years now. With much of the West shunning Russian crude following the country's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russia began offering discounts on its oil to willing buyers. Indian refiners were quick to avail the opportunity, leading to Russia, earlier a peripheral supplier of oil to India, emerging as India's biggest source of crude, displacing the traditional West Asian suppliers. Indian refiners are adopting a wait-and-watch approach while keeping Russian oil flows robust. In fact, imports of Russian crude may rise further amid the tariff threats as Indian refiners would ideally want to stock up before any tariff action takes effect. While the discounts have varied over time, Russian oil flows to India have remained robust despite Western pressure and limited sanctions on Russia's oil trading ecosystem. Booming oil trade with Russia has also catapulted the country to the list of India's biggest trading partners. In data: India's Russian oil imports India's Russian oil imports rose to an 11-month high in June, further cementing Moscow's continued dominance in Delhi's oil import basket. According to tanker data, Russian crude accounted for a massive 43.2 per cent of India's total oil imports in June, outweighing the next three suppliers — West Asian majors Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the UAE — put together. In June, India imported 2.08 million barrels per day (bpd) of Russian crude, the highest since July 2024, and higher by 12.2 per cent on a month-on-month basis, according to vessel tracking data from global commodity market analytics firm Kpler. According to India's official trade data, oil imports from Russia were at 87.4 million tonnes in the financial year 2024-25, accounting for almost 36 per cent of India's total oil imports of 244 million tonnes. Prior to the war in Ukraine, Russia's share in India's oil import basket was less than 2 per cent. In 2024-25, the value of India's oil imports from Russia was over $50 billion, or 35 per cent of India's total oil imports worth $143 billion. 'This resurgence in Russian volumes reflects both commercial incentives and geopolitical realignments. Russian barrels have remained highly competitive due to discounts, payment mechanisms, and logistical flexibility via alternative shipping and insurance networks. Despite mounting Western sanctions, Indian refiners have managed to maintain — and even expand — procurement from Russia. Barring any severe logistical or regulatory disruptions, this trend is likely to persist in the coming months,' said Sumit Ritolia, Lead Research Analyst, Refining & Modeling at Kpler. 'Looking ahead, Russia will likely remain India's largest crude supplier – with a share of 35-40 per cent (in India's oil imports) – supported by price competitiveness and techno-economics. However, this dominance could face pressure if the West escalates enforcement of secondary sanctions targeting financial or shipping facilitators. Such a scenario could either reduce Russian volumes or push Indian refiners to seek greater compliance safeguards,' Ritolia said. Oil imports from West Asia are also expected to stabilise in the 35-40 per cent range. Tariff threats: Will they, won't they? It is yet to be seen if the recent tariff threats made against countries like India and China for their energy imports from Russia will translate into tangible tariff action. The Trump administration has been rather mercurial when it comes to trade tariffs; making sweeping announcements, then pausing and negotiating. The hope in India's oil sector is that the US won't actually implement tariffs related to India's oil imports from Russia, as it is in the interest of the US and the global economy that the international oil market remains well-supplied. If Russia is unable to supply its crude, global oil prices are bound to rise due to lower supply being available. But if the US indeed goes ahead and imposes such tariffs, India would be pushed to cut down oil imports from Russia and increase imports from other suppliers, primarily its traditional West Asian suppliers like Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, which would push up the cost of imports by a few dollars a barrel. Additionally, it could also lead to complications in India's ongoing trade deal negotiations with the US, its largest trading partner. Sukalp Sharma is a Senior Assistant Editor with The Indian Express and writes on a host of subjects and sectors, notably energy and aviation. He has over 13 years of experience in journalism with a body of work spanning areas like politics, development, equity markets, corporates, trade, and economic policy. He considers himself an above-average photographer, which goes well with his love for travel. ... Read More


Economic Times
32 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Senator Adam Schiff hits back after Trump accuses him of ‘ripping off America' but did he game the system for a tax break?
Donald Trump is once again aiming his fire at Senator Adam Schiff. In a post on Truth Social, Trump claimed Schiff is a "scam artist" and accused him of a "sustained pattern of possible mortgage fraud." He says the Democratic Senator should be "brought to justice" for allegedly misleading lenders to secure better mortgage terms. Trump's comments came after the Federal Housing Finance Agency reportedly sent a criminal referral to the Justice Department. The case centres on Schiff's Maryland home, which he listed as his primary residence in 2009, despite previously declaring it a secondary home and representing California in Congress. "Adam Schiff said that his primary residence was in MARYLAND to get a cheaper mortgage and rip off America, when he must LIVE in CALIFORNIA because he was a Congressman from CALIFORNIA," Trump accusation is based on a rebate Schiff claimed for his California property, which requires the residence to be a "true, fixed, and permanent home" under state law. Schiff responded swiftly, calling the accusations a weak political smear. "Since I led his first impeachment, Trump has repeatedly called for me to be arrested for treason. So in a way, I guess this is a bit of a letdown," Schiff said in a statement on X. "This baseless attempt at political retribution won't stop me from holding him accountable. Not by a long shot." — SenAdamSchiff (@SenAdamSchiff) He continued, "This is just Donald Trump's latest attempt at political retaliation against his perceived enemies. So it is not a surprise, only how weak this false allegation turns out to be. And much as Trump may hope, this smear will not distract from his Epstein files problem."A spokesperson for Schiff also stated that the lenders were fully aware of his year-round use of both homes and that neither property was a vacation first reported on the mortgage questions in 2023, but experts say Schiff is unlikely to face charges. California's property laws are open to interpretation, and there's no evidence of deliberate a senior administration official told the New York Post the matter could lead to charges. "It is extremely serious and [Schiff] is not taking it seriously," the official said. "The senator could face a criminal count for each time he paid his monthly mortgage bill."Trump added more fuel during a White House press briefing, saying, "I would have thought he covered his bases a little bit better than that. Adam Schiff is a low-life, he deserves what he gets."This is just the latest chapter in a long political fight. Schiff was central to Trump's first impeachment trial in 2020, accusing him of abusing power to pressure Ukraine into investigating Joe Biden. Trump has targeted Schiff repeatedly ever was later censured by House Republicans for his role in promoting claims of Russian collusion, and remains a favourite Trump mortgage allegations come at a time when Trump is facing multiple legal battles of his own, including fallout from the Epstein files and ongoing civil fraud for Schiff, he's keeping busy. According to Quiver Quantitative, his net worth is currently $1.9 million. He has around $761,000 in publicly traded assets and raised $1.2 million in campaign funds last quarter. He has over $7 million in cash on also been active on legislation, proposing bills on reproductive rights, gun control, and government the noise, no formal charges have been filed. The Justice Department has declined to comment. Schiff insists he has nothing to hide. Trump, meanwhile, is doing what he does best: stirring the this goes anywhere legally is still unclear. What is clear is that, in this deeply polarised political era, old rivalries never really die. They just reload.


Deccan Herald
an hour ago
- Deccan Herald
Russian bomb kills two, injures up to 27 in eastern Ukrainian town of Dobropillia
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, speaking in his nightly video address, described the attack as 'simply horrific', stupid Russian terror.