Volodymyr Zelensky has lowered the minimum age for Ukraine’s military draft from 27 to 25 in a move that analysts said would provide a significant boost to recruitment.
“Lowering the mobilisation age is one of many measures that Ukraine has been considering in an ongoing effort to create a sustainable wartime force-generation apparatus,” the Washington-based The Institute for the Study of War said.
Ukraine will now need an injection of new weaponry and equipment to kit out its newly mobilised personnel, the ISW added, pointing to the backdrop of delayed Western aid that could render the Zelensky administration’s move ineffective.
It comes as British Foreign Minister David Cameron is expected to call for Nato allies to bolster defence spending and production in support of Ukraine.
“Allies need to step up and spend more on defence in the face of continued Russian aggression and a more dangerous world,” Lord Cameron is expected to say in a speech marking the 75-year anniversary of Nato’s founding.
The British minister will also ask the allies to endorse British-led initiatives to procure Nato standard missiles and munitions for the Ukrainian armed forces.
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Russia says foreign minister Lavrov to meet China’s Wang soon
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will soon meet his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday.
At the meeting, Lavrov and Wang will discuss Ukraine and the situation in the Asia-Pacific region, among other issues, Zakharova told a weekly briefing.
The meeting could lay the groundwork for a trip to China that Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to make in May. Five sources familiar with the matter told Reuters last month that Putin would hold talks there with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in what could be the Kremlin chief’s first overseas trip of his new six-year presidential term.
((Olga Maltseva /Pool Photo via AP)
Maryam Zakir-Hussain3 April 2024 11:04
NATO seeks accord on more robust support to Ukraine to show Russia cannot win war
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Wednesday the members states will discuss an accord to increase support to Ukraine in a more predictable way to send the message to Russia that it cannot win the war.
At the start of a NATO summit in Brussels, Stoltenberg told reporters that Ukraine needs more and new money from NATO over many years.
However, he declined to comment on a possible $100 billion aid fund for Ukraine specifically.
(REUTERS)
Maryam Zakir-Hussain3 April 2024 10:39
Putin ally points finger at Ukrainian special services for concert shooting, cites no evidence
Top Russian security official Nikolai Patrushev said on Wednesday that “Ukrainian special services” were behind last month’s deadly concert shooting near Moscow and that Ukraine was under the control of the United States, state media reported.
Patrushev, secretary of the Security Council, provided no evidence for Russia‘s latest claim of Ukrainian involvement. Ukraine has denied having anything to do with the attack that killed at least 144 people, and the United States has said Islamic State militants bore sole responsibility.
(POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
Maryam Zakir-Hussain3 April 2024 10:19
Cameron calls for increased Nato spending amid Ukraine conflict
British Foreign Minister David Cameron on Wednesday will call for Nato allies to bolster defense spending and production in support of Ukraine amid the ongoing Russian invasion.
“Allies need to step up and spend more on defence in the face of continued Russian aggression and a more dangerous world,” Lord Cameron will say in a speech on the occasion of 75 years of NATO history since its founding April 4, 1949.
The British minister will ask the allies to endorse British-led initiatives to procure Nato standard missiles and munitions for the Ukrainian armed forces. The UK has spent billions of dollars in its support for Ukraine since 2022 when the invasion began.
“With Ukraine closer to Nato than ever, we must sustain the critical support Ukraine needs to win the war,” Lord Cameron will say.
Speaking at a meeting of Nato’s foreign ministers, Cameron will also welcome Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom to the Nato alliance.
Sweden officially joined Nato in March, two years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced it to rethink its national security policy and conclude that support for the alliance was the Scandinavian nation’s best guarantee of safety.
Lord Cameron also pointed to Nato’s commitment to integrating Ukraine into the alliance, reaffirming all allies’ consensus on Ukraine’s future Nato membership.
In February, Britain had announced a new package of sanctions against Russia and said it was seeking to diminish Russian President Vladimir Putin’s weapons arsenal and war chest.
Foreign Secretary David Cameron is expected to call for increased defence spending at a Nato summit later today
(PA Wire)
Tom Watling3 April 2024 10:00
Ukraine expects power exports to resume on Wednesday, ministry says
Ukraine expects significant electricity exports to rebound on Wednesday, but the volumes are still well below levels prior to Russia’s recent missile attacks on the Ukrainian power system, Ukraine‘s energy ministry has said.
Ukraine‘s electricity imports reached a record high at the end on March after a string of Russian missile strikes on critical infrastructure caused blackouts in many regions.
The attacks, the largest of which came on 22 March , have caused major damage to generating and transmission facilities, forcing Kyiv to halt power exports and rely on imports.
“No shortage of electricity is expected. Ukraine‘s energy system is stable and balanced,” the ministry said in a statement.
It said power exports were expected to reach 1,487 megawatt hours (MWh) on Wednesday.
The ministry said Ukraine could also import 5,415 Mwh in periods of maximum consumption.
Ukraine imported 10,867 Mwh on Tuesday with no exports, the ministry said.
The head of national grid company Ukrenergo Volodymyr Kudrytskyi told Reuters on Monday that recent Russian attacks had caused significant damage to the power system, but a total collapse is unlikely.
Flames and smoke rise from a blaze at an electricity facility after a Russian attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine on 22 March
(AP)
Tom Watling3 April 2024 09:30
Ukraine’s latest attack is deepest strike yet inside Russia
Ukrainian drones attacked industrial facilities in the province of Tatarstan, Russian authorities said Tuesday, in what would be Kyiv’s deepest strike inside Russian territory since the war began more than two years ago.
Seven people were injured in the attack on facilities near the cities of Yelabuga and Nizhnekamsk, located some 1,200 kilometers (745 miles) east of Ukraine, Russian regional authorities said.
The strike damaged a hostel for students and workers in a free economic zone where a factory manufacturing Iranian-designed drones is reportedly located, other media reports said. Tatarstan is known for its high level of industrialization.
Tom Watling3 April 2024 08:30
Here are some of the latest photos from Ukraine
Below are some of the latest photos from Ukraine.
A woman stands among the rubble in her damaged apartment hit by recent shelling, what local officials called a Ukrainian military strike, in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine
(AFP via Getty Images)
A young woman poses for a friend against the skyline as a woman enjoys the afternoon sun on a bench, in Kyiv, Ukraine
(AP)
People cross a bridge on a warm afternoon on the bank of the Dniepr River in Kyiv, Ukraine
(AP)
Tom Watling3 April 2024 08:00
Ukraine downs four Russian drones in overnight attack
Ukraine’s air force shot down all four drones used in Russia’s overnight attack on central regions, the Ukrainian military said on Wednesday.
The Shahed drones were destroyed over Kirovohrad, Cherkasy, Khmelnytskyi and Zhytomyr regions. The attack caused a fire in Kirovohrad region which has since been put out, the region’s governor said on Telegram messaging app.
Separately, a Russian missile attack on Tuesday damaged four educational facilities and nine residential buildings in Dnipro, injuring 18 people, the Dnipropetrovsk region’s governor reported on Wednesday morning via Telegram.
Russia has recently intensified its attacks on Ukraine, targeting grid infrastructure to deal significant damage to the country’s power system.
Athena Stavrou3 April 2024 07:54
Russia claims 100,000 signed contracts to join military this year
More than 100,000 people have enlisted for military service under contract in the Russian armed forces this year, Russia’s defence ministry said today.
“Every day, up to 1,700 volunteers come to contract selection points across the country. Over the past 10 days, about 16,000 citizens have signed contracts to participate in a special military operation,” reported Russian state news agency RIA.
It also claimed that most of those who enlisted themselves in the military over the last week said they wanted to avenge the victims of the 22 March concert hall shooting near Moscow that killed at least 144 people.
Isis claimed responsibility for that attack but Russia has tried to argue that the perpetrators were linked to Ukraine, without providing evidence. Kyiv has strongly denied any involvement.
Arpan Rai3 April 2024 07:03
Nato’s Stoltenberg ‘proposes €100bn package for Ukraine’
Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg has proposed a €100bn package of military aid to Ukraine which would give the Western military alliance a more direct role in providing support to Kyiv, five diplomats have told Reuters.
Under the plan, Nato would take over some coordination work from a US-led coalition known as the Ramstein group – a step designed in part to guard against any cut in US support if Donald Trump returns to the White House, diplomats reportedly said.
The proposal is expected to be discussed at a two-day meeting of Nato foreign ministers on Wednesday and Thursday, with the aim of finalising a package in time for a Nato summit in Washington in July, Reuters reported.
Andy Gregory3 April 2024 07:01
