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Zelensky says Ukraine not kicked out of Russia’s Kursk

Zelensky says Ukraine not kicked out of Russia’s Kursk
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaking during a press conference in Kyiv. (AFP/File)
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Updated 28 April 2025

Zelensky says Ukraine not kicked out of Russia’s Kursk

Zelensky says Ukraine not kicked out of Russia’s Kursk
  • “The situation on the front lines and the actual activities of the Russian army prove that the current pressure on Russia to end this war is not enough,” Zelensky says

KYIV, Ukraine: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday Ukraine’s army was still fighting in Russia’s Kursk despite Moscow claiming the “liberation” of its western region, as Washington signalled a “critical week” ahead for negotiations.
Kyiv had hoped it could use land in the Kursk region as a bargaining chip in future peace talks with Russia, which has seized parts of eastern and southern Ukraine since launching its offensive in February 2022.
“Our military continues to perform tasks in the Kursk and Belgorod regions — we are maintaining our presence on Russian territory,” he said in his evening address Sunday.
In a statement earlier Sunday, he conceded that the situation remained difficult in many areas including Kursk.
Russia said on Saturday it had captured Gornal, the last settlement under Ukrainian control in its border Kursk region, where Kyiv launched a shock offensive in August 2024.
Yet hours later Ukraine’s army dismissed Russia’s claim as “propaganda tricks.”
Several Russian military bloggers who closely monitor the conflict also said fighting was still ongoing around the forests on the border between Russia and Ukraine.
And a local Russian army commander in Kursk said the army was still conducting operations in the region, according to a state TV broadcast aired on Sunday.
“The situation on the front lines and the actual activities of the Russian army prove that the current pressure on Russia to end this war is not enough,” Zelensky said Sunday.
He called for increased pressure on Russia to create more opportunities for “real diplomacy.”
On Saturday, Zelensky discussed a potential ceasefire with US President Donald Trump on the sidelines of Pope Francis’s funeral at the Vatican.
After their brief talk in St. Peter’s Basilica, Trump cast doubt over whether Russian President Vladimir Putin wanted an end to the war, which has devastated swathes of eastern Ukraine and killed tens of thousands of people.
The following night, Russia launched drone and missile attacks, killing four people in regions across eastern Ukraine and wounding more than a dozen.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stressed the importance of the coming week.
“We’re close, but we’re not close enough” to a deal to halt the fighting, Rubio told broadcaster NBC on Sunday. “I think this is going to be a very critical week.”
Germany’s Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said Sunday Ukraine should not agree to all territorial concessions to Russia reportedly set out in the deal proposed by Trump.
“Ukraine has, of course, known for some time that a sustainable, credible ceasefire or peace agreement may involve territorial concessions,” he told broadcaster ARD.
“But these will certainly not go... as far as they do in the latest proposal from the US president,” Pistorius said.
Washington has not revealed details of its peace plan, but has suggested freezing the front line and accepting Russian control of Crimea in exchange for peace.
When he claimed that Russia had recaptured all of Kursk from Ukraine, Chief of Staff Valery Gerasimov praised the “heroism” of the North Korean soldiers who fought for Russia in the campaign.
It was the first time Moscow had admitted their participation in the conflict.
In August 2024, the Ukrainian army entered Kursk in an unprecedented counter-offensive on Russian soil. Among other gains, they seized a pumping station through which Russian gas used to flow to Europe.
Since then, Moscow has forced Kyiv’s soldiers onto the defensive, gradually recapturing much of the region.
After Ukraine was temporarily deprived of key US intelligence in March 2025, Russia redoubled its efforts, including through a surprise covert operation using an underground gas pipeline, according to the Institute for the Study of War.
Russia has said that after Kursk’s recapture it will keep advancing in the four Ukrainian regions it claimed to have annexed in 2022.
Moscow was also planning to create a “buffer zone” in Ukraine’s Sumy region, which borders Russia, said Gerasimov.
Russia holds about 20 percent of Ukraine’s territory, including the Crimean peninsula which Moscow annexed in 2014.


Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic

Updated 3 sec ago

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic
Humphrey Polepole went missing from his home in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam early on Monday
David Misime, a police spokesperson, said the force was investigating reports of Polepole’s abduction

NAIROBI: Tanzania’s police force said it was investigating reports that a former ambassador turned government critic had been kidnapped after his family said he was forcefully taken from his house.
Several critics of the government of President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who will stand for re-election on October 29, have disappeared since last year, with opposition parties alleging a campaign of abductions.
Humphrey Polepole, who resigned as ambassador to Cuba in July and has repeatedly and harshly criticized Tanzania’s ruling party in the months since, went missing from his home in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam early on Monday, his brother, Godfrey Polepole, told Reuters.
“The main door entering the house was broken and the door to the bedroom was broken as well,” he said. “There was a lot of blood from the sitting room all the way to the bedroom and the bloodstains continued even outside toward the gate area.”
Hassan, who won plaudits after coming to power in 2021 for easing repression of political opponents that was rampant under her predecessor, ordered an investigation last year into reports of abductions, but no official findings have been made public.
Government spokesperson Gerson Msigwa did not immediately respond to a phone call or text message seeking comment.
In a statement on September 29, the government rejected allegations by Human Rights Watch that it was cracking down on its critics ahead of the election and called accounts of abductions “a major source of concern for the government.”
David Misime, a police spokesperson, said the force was investigating reports of Polepole’s abduction.
“The Police Force has seen the reports being circulated on social media by his relatives that he has been kidnapped. We have already begun working ... to ascertain the truth,” he said in a statement late on Monday.
After resigning as ambassador, Polepole launched a series of broadsides during online press briefings against the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), accusing it of flouting party rules by choosing Hassan as its presidential candidate, engaging in corruption and abducting government critics.
Hassan’s government has also faced human rights scrutiny over the arrest in April of Tanzania’s main opposition leader, Tundu Lissu. Lissu went on trial on Monday for treason over what prosecutors said was a speech calling on the public to rebel. He has pleaded not guilty and said the charges are politically motivated.

Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses

Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses
Updated 47 min 22 sec ago

Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses

Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses
  • The three men and one woman were reported missing by the construction company
  • Police and firefighters were using drones and sniffer dogs to search for the missing

MADRID: At least four construction workers were missing after a building under renovation partly collapsed in central Madrid, authorities said on Tuesday.
The three men and one woman were reported missing by the construction company in charge, Madrid’s Deputy Mayor Inma Sanz told reporters.
“The upper floors collapsed and fell downwards, therefore we’re talking about a very significant amount of rubble that will take a long time to clear — not just hours, but probably several days,” Sanz said.


Police and firefighters were using drones and sniffer dogs to search for the missing inside the building located near the Spanish capital’s opera house and the royal palace.
Two people were lightly injured while a third person was taken to hospital with a broken leg, said Beatriz Martin, an emergency services spokesperson.
The partial collapse of the five-story building occurred inside, leaving its facade intact, Martin added.
Construction worker Mikhail was pumping concrete into the building’s lower floors and was outside when the collapse occurred. He said he saw a large cloud of dust and immediately sprinted away.
“I was the first to run, I didn’t care about anything else. I’ll save my life first and, if I can, save others later,” he told reporters.
The building was being converted into a hotel by developer Rehbilita, according to information on its website. Rehbilita did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source

Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source
Updated 07 October 2025

Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source

Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source
  • The case raises memories of the 2019 murder of conservative local government president Walter Luebcke

DUESSELDORF: A freshly elected mayor was found injured in western Germany with multiple stab wounds and her life is in danger, a security source told Reuters on Tuesday.
Bild newspaper reported that Iris Stalzer, a Social Democrat who was due to take office after being elected mayor of Herdecke in the Ruhr region a week ago, had been found by her son.
The case raises memories of the 2019 murder of conservative local government president Walter Luebcke, a support of then Chancellor Angela Merkel’s refugee policy, who was shot dead by a far-right activist as he smoked a late-night cigarette on his terrace at home.
Local and regional authorities were not immediately available to comment.


Bangladesh to send skilled workers to Ƶ under new recruitment deal

Bangladesh to send skilled workers to Ƶ under new recruitment deal
Updated 07 October 2025

Bangladesh to send skilled workers to Ƶ under new recruitment deal

Bangladesh to send skilled workers to Ƶ under new recruitment deal
  • Agreement signed with Kingdom’s Human Resources and Social Development Ministry
  • Authorities try to meet the target of deploying 30,000 skilled workers every month

DHAKA: Bangladesh is preparing to send more skilled workers to Ƶ, authorities said on Tuesday, following the signing of a new recruitment agreement in Riyadh.

Around 3 million Bangladeshi nationals live and work in Ƶ. They are the largest expat group in the Kingdom and the biggest community outside their country.

Bangladeshi citizens have been working in Ƶ since the 1970s but until now their employment was regulated by memoranda on specific labor deployment.

The new pact, signed on Monday by the Kingdom’s Human Resources and Social Development Minister Ahmad bin Sulaiman Al-Rajhi and Bangladesh’s Expatriates’ Welfare and Overseas Employment Adviser Asif Nazrul, is the first such agreement for general worker recruitment.

“With this agreement, it is expected that the recruitment of skilled workers from Bangladesh to Ƶ across various professions will increase, and the rights and interests of both workers and employers will be better protected,” the Ministry of Expatriates’ Welfare and Overseas Employment said in a statement.

In the wake of numerous infrastructure projects underway in the Kingdom, the current demand is 30,000 certified workers per month, joint secretary of the ministry’s training wing, Mokhlesur Rahman Akand, told Arab News.

“We are taking all measures to meet the demand of the Saudi certification authorities, since sending more skilled workforces ensures better opportunities.”

Candidates are tested by the Saudi agency Takamol, which certifies workers according to standards and requirements of the Skill Verification Program. It is an initiative launched in 2021 under Vision 2030 to advance the professional competence of employees in the Kingdom’s labor market.

“They oversee everything online,” Akand said. “We provide the training in our Technical Training Centers, where computer-based tests are conducted. We have 104 TTCs across the country.”

Currently, many Bangladeshis are employed in the construction sector. And more are likely to find jobs in the industry in the next few years as the Kingdom prepares to host the AFC Asian Cup in 2027, the World Expo in 2030, and the World Cup in 2034.

“We are now working in line with Saudi demand,” Akand said.

“We hope that by early next year we will be able to meet the target set by the Takamol.”


Russia says Ukrainian drone crashed into nuclear plant, without causing damage

Russia says Ukrainian drone crashed into nuclear plant, without causing damage
Updated 07 October 2025

Russia says Ukrainian drone crashed into nuclear plant, without causing damage

Russia says Ukrainian drone crashed into nuclear plant, without causing damage
  • The drone was “suppressed by technical means” and detonated after crashing into a cooling tower at the Novovoronezh plant
  • There was no immediate comment from Ukraine on the alleged incident

MOSCOW: Russia’s state nuclear energy company said on Tuesday that a Ukrainian drone had tried to strike a nuclear plant in Russia’s Voronezh region, which borders Ukraine.
In a statement, Rosenergoatom said the drone was “suppressed by technical means” and detonated after crashing into a cooling tower at the Novovoronezh plant.


“There was no damage or injuries; however, the detonation left a dark mark on the cooling tower. The safe operation of the nuclear power plant is ensured,” the company said, adding that radiation levels were normal and unchanged.
There was no immediate comment from Ukraine on the alleged incident, which Rosenergoatom described as “another act of aggression by the Ukrainian armed forces against Russian nuclear power plants.”
Moscow has previously accused Kyiv of attacking nuclear power stations in the Kursk and Smolensk regions of western Russia.
Ukraine, in turn, has accused Russia of deliberately creating radiation risks at nuclear power stations on Ukrainian territory.