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Drone hits Russian city of Yelets, causing fire at battery factory
Drone hits Russian city of Yelets, causing fire at battery factory

Yahoo

time23-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Drone hits Russian city of Yelets, causing fire at battery factory

Reports have indicated that drones have attacked a battery factory in the city of Yelets in Russia's Lipetsk Oblast, causing fires. Source: BBC News Russian; Lipetsk Oblast Governor Igor Artamonov; Russian Telegram channels Details: BBC News Russian surmised that Ukrainian drones had attacked a battery factory in Yelets. Artamonov stated there had been a "fire in an industrial zone". BBC News Russian also noted that local residents had written in social media groups about several drone "hits" on the Energiya factory, a producer of batteries and accumulators. The factory lists the Russian Defence Ministry as one of its clients on its website. Artamonov reported that drones had been allegedly "suppressed" in the sky over Yelets. Quote from Artamonov: "Debris fell in the industrial zone, resulting in a burst of light. Emergency services are working at the scene and people are being evacuated." Details: Artamonov also claimed people had been injured in a "drone crash in the industrial zone" in Yelets. Updated: Later, the Russian Defence Ministry claimed that 112 Ukrainian drones had been intercepted and destroyed over various Russian oblasts and temporarily occupied Crimea. In particular, 24 UAVs were downed over Moscow Oblast, 18 over Tula Oblast, 11 over Kursk Oblast, eight each over Oryol and Bryansk oblasts, six over Ryazan Oblast, five over Kaluga Oblast, three each over Belgorod and Ivanovo oblasts, two over Vladimir Oblast, one each over Voronezh and Lipetsk oblasts and 22 over temporarily occupied Crimea. Background: Operations at Moscow Vnukovo, Domodedovo and Zhukovsky airports were suspended on the night of 22-23 May. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

Ukrainian UAVs attack Russia largely: airports suspend operations in five oblasts
Ukrainian UAVs attack Russia largely: airports suspend operations in five oblasts

Yahoo

time06-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Ukrainian UAVs attack Russia largely: airports suspend operations in five oblasts

Airport operations have been suspended in several Russian cities, including Moscow, due to a drone attack. At least 19 drones have been downed in Moscow, one of which has crashed near a high-rise building. Source: Kremlin-aligned Russian news agency TASS with reference to Russian Federal Air Transport Agency; Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin; BBC News Russian Details: According to TASS, temporary flight restrictions were introduced at airports in Moscow, Samara, Kaluga, Volgograd and Saratov. These cities are located hundreds of kilometres apart in various regions of European Russia, indicating the scale of the incident. Sobyanin reported that Russian air defence had downed 19 drones near the capital. At least one of them was destroyed directly over the city and its debris struck a nine-storey residential building. Quote from BBC News Russian: "Photos and videos published by Russian Telegram channels make it easy to identify that the debris hit a building located at block 3, building 26, Kashirskoye Highway, but in fact it is located about 250 metres from Kashirskoye Highway and the Kashirskaya metro station on Marshal Shestopalov Street." Details: Another 10 UAVs were downed over Penza Oblast. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

Friday, April 4. Russia's War On Ukraine: News And Information From Ukraine
Friday, April 4. Russia's War On Ukraine: News And Information From Ukraine

Forbes

time04-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Forbes

Friday, April 4. Russia's War On Ukraine: News And Information From Ukraine

Dispatches from Ukraine. Day 1,136. Kryvyi Rih. On April 4, Russia launched a ballistic missile attack on a residential area in Kryvyi Rih, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, killing at least 16 people, including six children, and injuring over 50, Governor Serhii Lysak reported. Kharkiv. Russia launched a barrage of drones in an overnight attack on Friday, killing at least four people and injuring 35 civilians in a residential area of Ukraine's second-largest city. Dnipropetrovsk region. A Russian ballistic missile strike on an industrial facility in Kryvyi Rih on April 2 in central Ukraine killed four people. Zaporizhzhya region. A Russian drone strike on April 1 in Ukraine's southern province killed one civilian. Donetsk region. On April 2, Russian forces launched multiple strikes on residential areas in the front line city of Pokrovsk, killing one civilian and wounding six others. A Russian Tupolev Tu-22M3 strategic bomber crashed on April 2 in the country's eastern Irkutsk region. Before 2022, Moscow had nearly 60 of these Cold War-era warplanes, designed to carry cruise missiles and nuclear warheads. The latest crash is the fifth confirmed loss for Russia's strategic air forces and the first since August, 2024. Russia captured nearly 50 square miles of Ukrainian territory in March, marking the slowest advance since last summer. Although the pace of the Kremlin's gains has slowed since its peak of 280 square miles captured last November, the land captured in March is nearly equal to the territorial gains of the first quarter of 2024. Russia's gains have been concentrated in eastern Donetsk and Luhansk provinces and the southern Zaporizhzhya region. Russian media outlet Mediazona, in collaboration with BBC News Russian, has confirmed more than 100,000 Russian military deaths in the war in Ukraine. The outlet's methodology, based on analysis of publicly available sources such as social media and local reports, reveals a far higher toll than Kremlin figures, with nearly 3,000 new deaths documented every two weeks. Mediazona's experts estimate that available data accounts for only 45–65% of the Kremlin's actual military death toll. In an interview last week with European news channels, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared that Russian President Vladimir Putin 'will soon die and that's a fact.' Zelenskyy did not explain what his prediction involved but said that it was 'dangerous' for the United States to ease pressure on Russia with an end to the war so close. U.S. Defense Secretary Peter Hegseth will not attend next week's Ramstein-format meeting of Ukraine's partners in Brussels, marking the first absence of a Pentagon chief since the format's establishment in 2022. The summit, co-chaired by the U.K. and Germany on April 11, will proceed without Hegseth, who will not participate even virtually. His absence aligns with U.S. President Donald Trump's strategy of reducing U.S. support for Ukraine while pursuing a ceasefire and peace treaty between Kyiv and Moscow. Hegseth, who attended the previous Ramstein summit in February, has expressed a change in U.S. policy, which now views Ukraine's return to pre-2014 borders and NATO membership as unrealistic. Moscow plans to increase its military forces by 150,000 personnel in 2025. According to Pavel Palisa, Deputy Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, Russia has no difficulty recruiting personnel for this buildup but will not deploy them all at once. Instead, he stated, Russia is likely to intensify pressure on specific fronts where feasible, particularly as discussions on a ceasefire continue. Nonetheless, Russia remains largely uninterested in halting the conflict aside from potential naval considerations. Ukraine has received $3.8 billion in aid from the European Union under the Ukraine Facility program. With the latest disbursement, total EU support has reached $21.6 billion. The funding comes as Kyiv continues reforms in anti-corruption and fiscal governance. Additionally, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development will provide Ukraine $1 billion in 2025 to rebuild its power infrastructure, left in limbo since the halt of USAID funding. Ukraine also is awaiting a further delivery of F-16 jets from Europe. Russia's oil and gas revenues decreased for a second consecutive month, falling 17% since March, 2024, to $11.6 billion, as U.S. sanctions continue to restrict the Kremlin's key income source. With crude exports facing discounts and the ruble appreciating nearly 15% against the dollar since early 2024, Moscow's dollar-denominated energy earnings have significantly declined. The Russian finance ministry now faces a widening fiscal gap, with the country's benchmark crude oil blend known as Urals trading nearly 30% below budget projections. Economists warn that this shortfall, which could reach $21.5 billion this year, might compel the Kremlin either to deplete its dwindling sovereign wealth fund or devalue the ruble. Culture Front. Russian forces have destroyed or damaged at least 1,419 cultural sites and 2,233 cultural infrastructure objects across Ukraine. The most considerable damage has been caused in the eastern and southern Kharkiv and Kherson regions, where 329 and 279 cultural sites, respectively, were damaged. Accurate estimates of the destruction in the occupied territories, however, remain difficult as Russian forces continue to deny independent experts access to the sites. By Danylo Nosov, Alan Sacks

Elon Musk's father says their family admires Putin
Elon Musk's father says their family admires Putin

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Elon Musk's father says their family admires Putin

Errol Musk, father of Elon Musk, US billionaire and Head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in the Trump administration, has stated that both he and his family feel a certain admiration for Russian leader Vladimir Putin. Source: BBC News Russian Details: Errol Musk said he believes that "if you view Putin simply as a man, not through the lens of international politics, it's hard not to respect him". He added that he believes his son's views are similar to his own. Errol claimed that while people around often try to persuade others not to trust Putin, he personally sees him as an example of a strong leader. When the BBC journalist pointed out that Putin launched the war in Ukraine, Errol replied that "only later will it be possible to understand who really started it". Background: Russian Presidential Envoy for International Cooperation Kirill Dmitriev said that Russia is ready to supply a small nuclear power plant for the SpaceX mission to Mars. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

Drones attack oil refinery in Russia's Leningrad Oblast
Drones attack oil refinery in Russia's Leningrad Oblast

Yahoo

time08-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Drones attack oil refinery in Russia's Leningrad Oblast

The Russian authorities have reported that drones have attacked an oil refinery in Leningrad Oblast. Source: BBC News Russian; Leningrad Oblast Governor Alexander Drozdenko Quote from Drozdenko: "A UAV attack on Kirishi Refinery in the Kirishi district was repelled. Air defence downed one drone on approach, while another was destroyed over the facility's territory." Details: Drozdenko stated that debris had damaged the external structure of one of the facility's storage tanks, but "the consequences have been dealt with". Kirishi Petroleum Organic Synthesis is an oil refinery located in the town of Kirishi in Leningrad Oblast. It already came under a drone attack a year ago. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

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