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Russia says Ukraine launches ‘counterattack’ in Kursk region

Russia says Ukraine launches ‘counterattack’ in Kursk region
A combination of screen grabs from a video posted on social media on January 2, 2025, shows damage caused by a Ukrainian strike on Russia's Kursk Region. (AFP)
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Updated 06 January 2025

Russia says Ukraine launches ‘counterattack’ in Kursk region

Russia says Ukraine launches ‘counterattack’ in Kursk region
  • Moscow said the counter-attack was directed toward the village of Berdin, about 15 kilometers northeast of Sudzha
  • Ukraine's army confirmed that fighting was under way in the Kursk region, without elaborating

MOSCOW: Russia said Sunday that Ukraine had launched a “counterattack” in the western border region of Kursk, where Kyiv’s forces began a shock ground offensive last August.
It was not immediately clear how much Ukraine had advanced in the region, but pro-Kremlin military bloggers reported earlier that a powerful new offensive was under way.
The assault comes at a critical juncture in the nearly three-year conflict, with both sides seeking to strengthen their negotiating hand ahead of US President-elect Donald Trump’s return to the White House on January 20.
“At about 9 a.m. Moscow time (0600 GMT), in order to halt the advance of Russian troops in the Kursk direction, the enemy launched a counterattack,” the Russian defense ministry said.
The Ukrainian army did not comment on the operation, simply saying in its daily report that fighting was under way in the Kursk region without elaborating.
Ukraine used two tanks, a dozen armored vehicles and a demolition unit in the assault, which was directed toward the village of Berdin — about 15 kilometers (nine miles) northeast of Sudzha, Moscow said.
“The operation to destroy the Ukrainian army formations continues,” it added.
Pro-Kremlin military bloggers acknowledged the Russian army had come under pressure but said Moscow was fighting back.
“The main events of the next attempted offensive by the Ukrainian army are clearly still ahead of us,” influential pro-Russian Telegram channel Rybar said.
Images purportedly showing a column of Ukrainian armored vehicles driving through the snow were shared by pro-Russia military blogger Dva Mayora on Telegram.

Ukrainian officials gave little detail on the new offensive, with a prominent lawmaker urging silence.
“I can’t understand why it is necessary to officially report on the Kursk region. Maybe better to do it afterwards when the operation is over?” Ukrainian MP Oleksiy Goncharenko said.
Other officials expressed their glee at the operation, which comes almost three years since Moscow launched its full-scale military assault on Ukraine.
“Russia is getting what it deserves,” Ukrainian presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak said.
The head of Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation, Andriy Kovalenko, said on Telegram that defense forces were “working” in the area, without elaborating.
“In the Kursk region, the Russians are very worried because they were attacked from several directions, and it was a surprise for them,” he said.
Kyiv seized dozens of villages in the Kursk region shortly after its incursion started on August 6, 2024, but its advances stalled after Moscow rushed reinforcements to the area, including thousands of troops from its ally North Korea.
A Ukrainian army source told AFP last November that Kyiv still controlled 800 square kilometers (around 300 square miles) of the Russian border region, down from previous claims it controlled almost 1,400 square kilometers.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said last year the Kursk operation has boosted Kyiv’s “exchange fund” — its negotiating position on swapping prisoners of war — and diverted tens of thousands of Russian troops away from the eastern front.
He said Saturday evening that “up to a battalion of North Korean infantry soldiers and Russian airborne troops” had been lost in battles in the Kursk region on that day and the day before.
And in an interview with US podcaster Lex Fridman released Sunday, he underlined the key role Trump would play.
“Trump and I will come to an agreement and... offer strong security guarantees, together with Europe, and then we can talk to the Russians,” Zelensky said, according to the published translation of the interview held in Kyiv over the New Year.
“We and Trump come first, and Europe will support Ukraine’s position,” he added. Trump, he said, “has enough power to pressure him, to pressure Putin.”

But Kyiv has so far been unable to halt Moscow’s advances in Ukraine, which were seven times higher in 2024 than the year prior, according to an AFP analysis of data from the Institute for the Study of War.
Both Russia and Ukraine have exchanged regular attacks since the year began.
Russia said Sunday it had downed dozens of Ukrainian drones overnight in a barrage that damaged homes and triggered air alerts, while Kyiv said Moscow fired 103 drones into its territory.
Four Russian airports briefly suspended traffic early Sunday for “safety” reasons, a spokesperson for Russia’s civil aviation authority Rosaviatsia said.
Elsewhere on the front line, Ukrainian authorities in the eastern Donetsk region reported Sunday that five people had been wounded in Russian shelling.


Europe must step up after Trump’s shift on Ukraine, Berlin says

Updated 35 sec ago

Europe must step up after Trump’s shift on Ukraine, Berlin says

Europe must step up after Trump’s shift on Ukraine, Berlin says
BERLIN/BRUSSELS: Europe must “grow up” and step up its support for Ukraine after comments by US President Donald Trump backing Kyiv to take back all of its territory from Russia, Germany’s Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said on Wednesday.
Speaking to Germany’s Deutschlandfunk radio, Wadephul said Trump had realized that his own efforts had failed to persuade Russia’s Vladimir Putin to end the war in Ukraine.
Trump’s remarks on Truth Social marked an abrupt and major rhetorical shift for the US leader who had previously nudged Ukraine to give up territory to end the war and had rolled out the red carpet for Putin in Alaska just last month.
But it was not immediately clear whether Trump would back up his words with a shift in US policy, an ambiguity that could keep the onus on Europe to meet more of Ukraine’s needs through weapons and financing as Washington’s role recedes.

STEPPING UP WILL NOT BE EASY FOR EUROPE
Europeans have repeatedly said “that we really have to grow up... We have to become more sovereign,” Wadephul said.
“And that’s why we have to look at what we ourselves can achieve. We can achieve much more; not all European states have delivered what they promised Ukraine. We have to look at what other financial and military options we have.”
Trump’s comments were good for Ukraine and good for Europe, Wadephul said, as the president “must indeed acknowledge that his considerable efforts with Putin have so far been unsuccessful.” He warned, however, that Europe stepping up security efforts would not be easy.
Two officials, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, also cautioned that Trump may be signalling that it was up to Europe to help Ukraine now.
“He seems to be saying his goodbyes, no? But that can change tomorrow. In any case: the cards are clear for us. We know what we should be doing,” a Western European official said.
A senior Eastern European diplomat said that Trump’s Ukraine comments aimed to indicate a change of position and to show “that he is starting to disengage by sending a message that it is Europe’s question.”

EUROPE ALREADY TAKING ON A GREATER ROLE
Trump, in his social media post, said “With time, patience, and the financial support of Europe and, in particular, NATO, the original Borders from where this War started, is very much an option.”
The US has long been Ukraine’s biggest single backer and weapons supplier but since taking office Trump has insisted Europe take on a much greater share of its own defense burden. To some extent, that is already happened.
European members of the NATO defense alliance have raised their defense spending and also supplied Ukraine with air defense under a new system to give Ukraine weapons from US stocks using funds from NATO countries.
The European Union is also discussing a plan to repurpose the frozen assets to boost financial aid to Ukraine, as it looks to step up sanctions pressure on Russia, despite the risk of damaging foreign confidence in investing in Western bonds.
European defense stocks were the biggest early gainers on the pan European STOXX 600 on Wednesday following Trump’s remarks.
An index of aerospace and defense companies .SXPARO was up 0.8 percent at 0717 GMT, near its record highs and outperforming region-wide STOXX 60, which was down 0.45 percent.

France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition

France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition
Updated 2 min 21 sec ago

France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition

France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition
  • Dozens of town halls across France hoisted the Palestinian flag in celebration of recognition- defying instructions by Macron’s interior ministry not to do so
  • By Wednesday, some had taken the flag down after regional authorities initiated legal proceedings
NANTERRE, France: As French President Emmanuel Macron recognized Palestine statehood earlier this week, dozens of town halls across France hoisted the Palestinian flag in celebration — defying instructions by Macron’s interior ministry not to do so.
By Wednesday, some had taken the flag down after regional authorities initiated legal proceedings — an episode which some mayors said undermined the message of solidarity Macron sought to make with his largely symbolic recognition.
“For me it’s a complete misunderstanding,” Raphael Adam, mayor of Nanterre outside Paris, told Reuters. “You can’t have a government asking its representatives to oppose raising a flag at the same time it’s recognizing the state.”
The city raised the flag in a ceremony on Monday but a day later, the Nanterre administrative court ruled it should be removed after the city defied an order by the regional representative, known as the prefect, to take it down.
Under French law, public buildings cannot be used as platforms for expressing political, religious or philosophical opinions. Local officials noted, however, that Ukrainian flags have been displayed and even projected on the Eiffel Tower.
“When we raised a Ukrainian flag, no one told us anything!” said Gilles Poux, mayor of La Courneuve, northeast of Paris, who planned to take down the flag late on Tuesday after his administration was fined for flying one earlier this year.
“Speaking of neutrality is hypocritical. Liberty, equality, fraternity: there’s nothing neutral about these values,” he said.
Asked about the allegations of double standards, the interior ministry told Reuters the Gaza war had provoked protests and tensions in France, and that displaying Palestinian flags on public buildings could trigger public unrest.
As of Tuesday night, 86 town halls across France had flown the Palestinian flag, according to the interior ministry, which last week told regional government representatives to block such moves for contravening France’s “neutrality principle.”
Anne Tuaillon, head of the France Palestine Solidarity Association, said there was no room for neutrality “in a situation of oppression,” referring to Israel’s military onslaught on Gaza since the 2023 Hamas attack on Israel.
Lionel Crusoe, a lawyer specialized in French public law, said the interior ministry ruling made little sense.
“This neutrality principle for public services does not prevent a municipality from being able to occasionally show solidarity toward a people who are the target of a military aggression, or a terrorist attack, for example,” he said.

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive
Updated 39 min 29 sec ago

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive
  • The comments come a day after Trump said Ukraine could win back all of its territory from Russia, which he characterised as a “paper tiger” with a failing economy

MOSCOW: The Kremlin on Wednesday said it had no choice but to continue its military offensive on Ukraine, as Moscow rejected US President Donald Trump’s claim that Russia was a “paper tiger.”
The comments come a day after Trump said Ukraine could win back all of its territory from Russia, which he characterised as a “paper tiger” with a failing economy — a major pivot in his stance on the three-and-a-half-year conflict.
“We are continuing our special military operation to ensure our interests and achieve the goals,” set by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday, using Moscow’s term for its assault on Ukraine.
“We are doing this for both the present and the future of our country. For many generations to come. Therefore, we have no alternative,” he added in a radio interview with a Russian newspaper.
He also pushed back against Trump’s “paper tiger” remark, but conceded the economy — slowing after three years of rapid growth and with stubborn inflation — was facing some headwinds.
“Russia maintains its macroeconomic stability,” Peskov said, adding: “Yes, Russia is experiencing tensions and problems in various sectors of the economy.”
The Kremlin also offered a downbeat assessment of wider efforts to boost relations between Moscow and Washington.
A rapprochement ushered in when Trump returned to the White House in January has yielded “close to zero” results, Peskov said.
“This track is sluggish, very sluggish,” he said of the efforts to reset ties.
Moscow has sought to cast negotiations with the United States as broader than just the Ukraine conflict, trying to promote possible economic and diplomatic cooperation between the two nuclear powers.


Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife

Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife
Updated 11 min 37 sec ago

Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife

Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife
  • PM Sanchez has dismissed the allegations against his wife as an attempt to undermine his government by the right, which has demanded his resignation

MADRID: A judge investigating Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s wife Begona Gomez for alleged embezzlement has ordered that she face trial in a case roiling national politics, a court document showed on Wednesday.
The long-running probe is one of several into Sanchez’s family and former close allies that have embarrassed the Socialist leader and heaped pressure on his minority coalition.
The embezzlement investigation centers on whether an official employed in the premier’s office, Cristina Alvarez, worked for Gomez during her past academic job at Madrid’s Complutense University at the expense of her public duties.
Judge Juan Carlos Peinado said in a ruling dated Tuesday that his preliminary investigation showed that a jury trial was warranted and summoned her to appear in court on Saturday.
He cited emails sent by Alvarez to third parties that “clearly seem to exceed her duties” and constituted “sufficient evidence.”
Gomez’s “personal friendship” with Alvarez was “the reason for her appointment to the position of highest trust,” Peinado wrote in his ruling.
The appointment, which aimed to serve and improve Gomez’s private activities, “could represent a diversion of public resources in favor of private interests,” Peinado said.
Gomez can appeal and the ruling is not yet definitive.
Gomez denied wrongdoing during a court appearance before Peinado in Madrid two weeks ago.
She told her lawyer Alvarez never helped her in her private professional activities, though she occasionally sent messages that did not affect her primary work, according to legal sources.
Gomez said spouses of previous prime ministers hired staff to coordinate their agenda and security, the sources added.
Peinado set off the saga in April 2024 by opening an investigation to determine whether Gomez exploited her position as Sanchez’s wife for private benefit after complaints by groups with far-right ties.
Sanchez has dismissed the allegations against his wife as an attempt to undermine his government by the right, which has demanded his resignation.
This month he said there were “judges who do politics and politicians who try to do justice” and denounced spurious complaints by groups with far-right links.
Separate corruption probes have ensnared two former Socialist heavyweights, Santos Cerdan and ex-transport minister Jose Luis Abalos, as well as the prime minister’s younger brother David Sanchez.
The legal troubles compound woes for the minority government which engages in laborious negotiations with an array of fringe and regional separatist parties to try to pass legislation.


Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines

Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines
Updated 24 September 2025

Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines

Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines
  • Typhoon Ragasa, one of the strongest in years, was whipping waves taller than lampposts onto Hong Kong promenades and halted life on the southern Chinese coast after leaving destruction in Taiwan and
  • Taiwan reported 14 deaths in a flooded township and 10 deaths occurred in the Philippines

HONG KONG: Typhoon Ragasa, one of the strongest in years, whipped waves taller than lampposts onto Hong Kong promenades and turned seas rough on the southern Chinese coast on Wednesday after leaving deadly destruction in Taiwan and the Philippines.
In Taiwan, 14 people died in a flooded township, and 10 deaths were reported in the Philippines.
Nearly 1.9 million people were relocated across Guangdong province, the southern Chinese economic powerhouse. A weather station in Chuandao town recorded maximum gusts of 241 kph (about 150 mph) at noon, a high in Jiangmen city since record-keeping began. Huge waves battered Zhuhai city’s coastline and strong winds buffered trees under intense rain. Fallen branches were scattered on the streets.
The national weather agency forecast the severe typhoon would make landfall between the cities of Yangjiang and Zhanjiang on Wednesday evening. Schools, factories and transportation services were suspended in about a dozen cities.
The fierce winds, brought by Ragasa, once a super typhoon, woke Hong Kong residents in the early hours, and many went online to describe scenes like a kitchen ventilation fan being blown down and a crane swaying.
Strong winds blew away parts of a pedestrian bridge’s roof and knocked down hundreds of trees across the city. A vessel crashed into the shore, shattering a row of glass railings along the waterfront. Areas around some rivers and promenades were flooded, including cycling lanes and playgrounds. At several promenade restaurants, furniture was scattered chaotically by the winds. Over 60 injured people were treated at hospitals.
A video that showed waves of water crashing through the doors of a hotel and flooding its interiors went viral in the financial hub. The hotel has not immediately commented on the incident. But staff were seen cleaning up the lobby, with parts of its exterior damaged.
Hong Kong and Macao, a nearby casino hub, canceled schools and flights, with many shops closed. Hundreds of people sought refuge in temporary centers in each city. Streets in Macao turned into streams with various debris floating on the water. Rescue crews deployed inflatable boats to save those who were trapped. The gambling city’s local electricity supplier suspended its power supply in some flooded, low-lying areas for safety.
As winds gradually weakened in the afternoon, a few cities distant from the expected landfall location were preparing to resume normal operations.
Hong Kong’s observatory said Ragasa had maximum sustained winds near the center of about 195 kph (120 mph) and skirted around 100 kilometers (62 miles) to the south of the financial hub. It was forecast to continuing moving west or west-northwest at about 22 kph (about 14 mph).
The city categorizes cyclones with sustained winds 185 kph or stronger as super typhoons to make residents extra vigilant about intense storms.
The government previously said the rise in water levels could be similar to those recorded during Typhoon Mangkhut in 2018 — estimated to have caused the city direct economic losses worth 4.6 billion Hong Kong dollars ($592 million).
Ragasa earlier caused deaths and damage in Taiwan and the Philippines after the typhoon took a path between them.
In Taiwan, heavy rain caused a barrier lake in Hualien County to overflow Tuesday and torrents of muddy water destroyed a bridge, turning roads in Guangfu township into churning rivers that carried vehicles and furniture away. Guangfu has about 8,450 people, more than half of whom sought safety on higher floors of their homes or on higher ground. Local authorities said 14 people died and contact was lost with 124 others in the township. Taiwan’s Central News Agency said rescuers were going door-to-door to check on these residents.
Separately, 34 people were injured across the self-ruled island.
At least 10 deaths were reported in the Philippines, including seven fishermen who drowned after their boat was battered by huge waves and fierce wind and flipped over on Monday off Santa Ana town in northern Cagayan province. Five other fishermen remained missing, provincial officials said.
Nearly 700,000 people were affected by the onslaught in the main northern Philippine region of Luzon, including 25,000 people who who fled to government emergency shelters.