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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Arpan Rai

Ukraine-Russia war latest: Moscow tells US to evacuate diplomats from Kyiv as Putin threatens revenge strikes

Key Points

  • Russia warns US embassy and foreign citizens to flee Kyiv as it threatens more 'systematic strikes' in response to Ukrainian attacks
  • EU says Putin wants to sow 'fear and panic' as it rejects calls to leave Kyiv
  • Zelensky says Ukraine achieved greater results on battlefield this year, a feat confirmed by criticism and complaints from Russia’s military bloggers
  • Ukraine reburies repatriated remains of Second World War leader Andrii Melnyk who worked with Nazi Germany to fight against Soviet rule
  • Putin signs a decree providing debt relief to new war recruits and their families in bid to enroll more fighters in Ukraine war
  • British man, 23, killed in action in Ukraine after joining specialist unit supporting army
  • Ukraine says it used UK-provided Storm Shadow missiles used to hit Russian military infrastructure in occupied Luhansk region

Russia warns US embassy and foreign citizens to flee Kyiv as it prepares more strikes

06:00 , Arpan Rai

Russia has issued a stark warning to foreign nationals, diplomatic missions and staff to leave Kyiv immediately as it will launch “systematic strikes”.

“Given the continued terrorist attacks by the Kiev regime against Russian civilians, @mod_russia will be targeting Ukrainian defence industry facilities in Kiev. Foreign nationals, including diplomatic missions & staff, should leave the city ASAP,” it said in a post on X.

Moscow has said it will attack targets in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military as well as decision-making centres.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, on a phone call with the US secretary of state Marco Rubio, also pressured the US to evacuate staff from its embassy.

Ukraine reburies remains of World War 2 leader who challenged Soviet rule

11:08 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine reburied the repatriated remains of divisive military figure Andrii Melnyk, who worked with Nazi Germany to fight against Soviet rule, yesterday.

The ashes of the 20th-century Ukrainian military figure and his wife Sofiia Fedak-Melnyk were exhumed last week from Luxembourg and sent to Ukraine.

Their remains were reburied at the National Military Memorial Cemetery near Kyiv yesterday in a ceremony attended by president Volodymyr Zelensky and other Ukrainian officials.

"Today we all see that the Ukrainian idea can overcome what once seemed absolutely insurmountable," Zelensky said, speaking at the reburial ceremony.

"Now, when we are on Ukrainian soil, under our Ukrainian flag, to the sound of the Ukrainian national anthem, paying due tribute to our Ukrainian heroes, we feel in our hearts everything that Ukrainians were forced to go through, everything our people had to endure,” he said.

British storm shadow missiles used to hit Russian military infrastructure in occupied Luhansk

10:38 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine says it used Storm Shadow missiles to strike Russian military targets in the occupied Luhansk region yesterday.

"Ukraine used Storm Shadow air-launched cruise missiles to successfully destroy an important enemy command-and-control and communications post in the temporarily occupied territory of Luhansk (Oblast)," a statement from the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said.

“This strike underscores the strategic foresight, unity of planning, and deliberate actions that prove no position of the Russian aggressor is safe on Ukrainian soil," the General Staff said.

Storm Shadow is an Anglo-French cruise missile with a maximum range of around 155 miles (250km). The French call it Scalp.

Powered by a turbo-jet engine, the 1,300kg Storm Shadow travels at speeds of more than 600mph, is just over five metres long and has a wingspan of three metres.

Russia had blamed Britain after a Ukrainian strike using the same kind of missile targeting a vital munitions factory in March. The attack reportedly killed seven people.

Kyiv said it hit one of Russia’s “most important military factories”, the Kremniy El plant in the border city of Bryansk using the British-supplied missile.

 (The Independent)
(The Independent)

Zelensky says Ukraine achieved greater results on battlefield this year

10:08 , Arpan Rai

Ukrainian forces have achieved stronger battlefield results this year and managed to stabilise parts of the front despite major Russian attacks, president Volodymyr Zelensky said.

“Everything is not simple. We are actively defending ourselves, but this year we have achieved greater results than before,” Zelensky said.

The war-time president said Ukraine has strengthened its battlefield positions through drone operations, long-range strikes and technological innovations.

He added that Ukraine’s claims have been indirectly confirmed by criticism and complaints from Russian military bloggers.

“It is especially pleasing when this is clearly confirmed even by the whining of the so-called Russian ‘war correspondents,’” Zelensky said.

 (AFP/Getty)
(AFP/Getty)

Watch: Russia hits Ukraine with hypersonic missile in massive Kyiv assault

09:38 , Arpan Rai

EU says not leaving Kyiv in response to Russia's bombing threat

09:08 , Arpan Rai

The head of the EU mission in Kyiv said the 27-nation bloc was "not going anywhere” after Russia issued a warning message, asking foreigners to leave the Ukrainian capital.

Russia has threatened to launch "systematic strikes" on targets in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military as well as decision-making centres, a day after one of its heaviest bombardments of the city since the start of the war.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, on a phone call with the US secretary of state Marco Rubio, also pressured the US to evacuate staff from its embassy.

Katarina Mathernova, the head of the EU mission, said the Russian warning sought to sow panic.

"Russia wants ‌fear. Panic. Isolation of Ukraine. It will not work," she said on social media. "The EU ‌is not going anywhere. We are staying in Kyiv. We are staying with Ukraine,” she said.

Putin wants new Ukraine war recruits, offers debt relief in exchange

08:38 , Arpan Rai

Russian president Vladimir Putin has signed a decree providing debt relief to new Ukraine war recruits and their families, the Kremlin said late on Monday, as Moscow seeks to boost its army.

People who signed a contract with the Russian defence ministry from 1 May and/or their spouses are free from their debts of up to 10 million roubles (£103,791) if a legal claim to collect those debts was in force before that date, the decree posted on the Kremlin's website said.

The recruits will have to join the military to fight against Ukraine in Putin's “special military operation” for at least one year, it added.

The law adds to a variety of support measures for Russian fighters in the war, from big payouts to preferable admissions for higher education, as the Kremlin seeks to boost its forces.

Putin also signed a decree indefinitely extending rental rights for state land for those fighting in Ukraine, the Kremlin said.

Russian president Vladimir Putin during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow (AP)
Russian president Vladimir Putin during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow (AP)

EU says not leaving Kyiv in response to Russia's bombing threat

08:10 , Arpan Rai

The head of the EU mission in Kyiv said the 27-nation bloc was "not going anywhere” after Russia issued a warning message, asking foreigners to leave the Ukrainian capital.

Russia has threatened to launch "systematic strikes" on targets in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military as well as decision-making centres, a day after one of its heaviest bombardments of the city since the start of the war.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, on a phone call with the US secretary of state Marco Rubio, also pressured the US to evacuate staff from its embassy.

Katarina Mathernova, the head of the EU mission, said the Russian warning sought to sow panic.

"Russia wants ‌fear. Panic. Isolation of Ukraine. It will not work," she said on social media. "The EU ‌is not going anywhere. We are staying in Kyiv. We are staying with Ukraine,” she said.

Lavrov tells Rubio of Russian decision to strike Kyiv sites linked to military

08:08 , Arpan Rai

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has advised US secretary of state Marco Rubio of Moscow's decision to launch strikes on sites in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military, the Russian foreign ministry said.

Moscow has warned it will launch "systematic strikes" on targets in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military as well as decision-making centres, and urged foreigners to leave, a day after one of its heaviest bombardments of the city since the start of the war.

A statement ⁠on the ministry's ​website said ⁠Lavrov told ‌Rubio by telephone that the move was initiated "in ‌response to the continuing terrorist ‌attacks by the Kyiv regime against the peaceful ⁠population and civilian sites on Russian territory”.

It said Russia's armed forces "are starting systematic strikes on facilities located in Kyiv that ‌are used for ​the needs of the ‌Armed Forces ⁠of Ukraine, as ⁠well as on centres where the ‌corresponding ​decisions are ‌being made”.

 (AFP via Getty Images)
(AFP via Getty Images)

Kyiv hosts Belarusian opposition leader Tsikhanouskaya for her first 'working visit'

07:50 , Arpan Rai

Exiled Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya visited Kyiv yesterday after weeks of mounting warnings from ⁠Ukrainian officials about Russian plans to draw Minsk more deeply into the war against Ukraine.

Tsikhanouskaya arrived a day after one of the war's biggest strikes on the Ukrainian capital killed four people and damaged historical sites, and amid Russian threats to launch further heavy attacks on Kyiv.

Tsikhanouskaya, an opponent of Belarus' president Alexander Lukashenko, a close ally of Moscow, said only a democratic Belarus could become a source of stability and security in the region.

"Lukashenko's rhetoric is shifting: we are preparing for war, of course, we want peace, but we ⁠are gearing up for war. And that, of course, is very alarming for people," ​she told reporters ⁠after meeting with Ukraine's foreign minister ‌Andrii Sybiha, on what she said was her first "working visit" to Kyiv.

Asked about a phone call that French president Emmanuel Macron held on Sunday with Lukashenko, Tsikhanouskaya described it as "a warning" from Europe.

"If you take any steps to escalate the situation... there will be a response from our side," Tsikhanouskaya said, paraphrasing what she believed to be Europe's message to the veteran Belarusian leader.

 (Reuters)
(Reuters)

Ukraine destroys more than 80 Russian defence systems since March

07:08 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine has inflicted serious damage to Russia’s air defence capabilities as it has destroyed more than 80 air defence systems since March this year, its defence ministry said in an update.

Ukrainian forces have significantly intensified their strike campaign against Russian air defence systems, it said, damaging almost twice as many Russian air defence and radar systems in April 2026 compared to October 2025.

“The Ukrainian General Staff reported that Ukrainian forces have struck 81 Russian air defence systems since March 1, 2026, and the Ukrainian MoD noted that Ukrainian forces have struck 12 Pantsir air defense systems in occupied Crimea since the start of 2026,” the Institute for the Study of War, a US-based think tank said.

“Ukrainian forces have been conducting a coherent campaign to suppress and destroy Russian air defences since late 2025 in order to destroy or temporarily degrade surface-based air defenses and let friendly aircraft operate safely,” it added.

 (AFP/Getty)
(AFP/Getty)

British man, 23, killed in action in Ukraine after joining specialist unit supporting army

06:49 , Arpan Rai

A 23-year-old British man, Ayrton Redfearn, was killed in action in Ukraine's Donetsk region. He died on 9 May.

From Devon, Mr Redfearn had joined a specialist unit supporting the Ukrainian army in 2025, his mother, Natasha, told the BBC, adding she “lived in fear of the police coming to my door with bad news”.

“This fear became reality on the evening of 11 May, and the world of myself, and Ayrton’s 10-year-old brother, then fell apart,” she said.

Mr Redfearn was a Torquay Air Cadet as a child, joining the RAF at 17 before travelling overseas.

His mother stated: "We are trying to have just 1 per cent of the strength, bravery and courage of Ayrton, and if we can do this, it will help us to eventually come to terms with our life without him.

British man, 23, killed in Ukraine after joining specialist unit supporting army

Russia says magnetic mines found on tanker at Ust-Luga port

06:27 , Arpan Rai

Several magnetic mines had been detected on a tanker in Russia's Baltic Sea port of Ust-Luga, Russia's Investigative Committee said yesterday.

The committee said the mines, ⁠manufactured in a Nato country, ​were ⁠found by divers during an inspection of the hull of the tanker Arrhenius, which arrived from ⁠Belgium's port of Antwerp to load liquefied petroleum gas.

"Based on initial ⁠investigative actions, it can already be concluded that the magnetic mines could ‌not have ​been installed in Russia's territorial waters," ‌Petrenko said.

Nato has not mined any tanker, a Nato official said in an emailed statement.

Last year, Russia ordered divers to inspect ships in its ports, after suspected attacks on four oil tankers. The Suezmax tanker Koala ran aground at Ust-Luga after a blast in its engine room in February 2025.

According to LSEG ship tracking data, Arrhenius is Liberia-flagged and is managed by the Maple Mariner Holding in the UAE.

A spokesperson for Russia's Investigative Committee, Svetlana Petrenko, said the vessel, which entered Ust-Luga on 20 May, was scheduled to sail to the Turkish port of Samsun. The mines were deactivated, she said.

Six people die in a fire in Russia's Omsk region

06:19 , Arpan Rai

At least six people, including four children, have died in a fire that broke out in a private house in Russia's Omsk region, local officials said.

Omsk lies in southwestern Siberia, about 2,200km (1,370 miles) ​east ‌of Moscow.

The cause of the fire was not immediately clear.

Ukraine reburies remains of World War 2 leader who challenged Soviet rule

05:50 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine reburied the repatriated remains of divisive military figure Andrii Melnyk, who worked with Nazi Germany to fight against Soviet rule, yesterday.

The ashes of the 20th-century Ukrainian military figure and his wife Sofiia Fedak-Melnyk were exhumed last week from Luxembourg and sent to Ukraine.

Their remains were reburied at the National Military Memorial Cemetery near Kyiv yesterday in a ceremony attended by president Volodymyr Zelensky and other Ukrainian officials.

"Today we all see that the Ukrainian idea can overcome what once seemed absolutely insurmountable," Zelensky said, speaking at the reburial ceremony.

"Now, when we are on Ukrainian soil, under our Ukrainian flag, to the sound of the Ukrainian national anthem, paying due tribute to our Ukrainian heroes, we feel in our hearts everything that Ukrainians were forced to go through, everything our people had to endure,” he said.

Watch: Russia hits Ukraine with hypersonic missile in massive Kyiv assault

05:41 , Arpan Rai

British storm shadow missiles used to hit Russian military infrastructure in occupied Luhansk

05:00 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine says it used Storm Shadow missiles to strike Russian military targets in the occupied Luhansk region yesterday.

"Ukraine used Storm Shadow air-launched cruise missiles to successfully destroy an important enemy command-and-control and communications post in the temporarily occupied territory of Luhansk (Oblast)," a statement from the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said.

“This strike underscores the strategic foresight, unity of planning, and deliberate actions that prove no position of the Russian aggressor is safe on Ukrainian soil," the General Staff said.

Storm Shadow is an Anglo-French cruise missile with a maximum range of around 155 miles (250km). The French call it Scalp.

Powered by a turbo-jet engine, the 1,300kg Storm Shadow travels at speeds of more than 600mph, is just over five metres long and has a wingspan of three metres.

Russia had blamed Britain after a Ukrainian strike using the same kind of missile targeting a vital munitions factory in March. The attack reportedly killed seven people.

Kyiv said it hit one of Russia’s “most important military factories”, the Kremniy El plant in the border city of Bryansk using the British-supplied missile.

Zelensky says talks with US on missile defences see little progress

04:44 , Arpan Rai

Ukraine had made little progress in talks with the United States on expanding production of missile defences and was ⁠working with Europe to solve the matter, Volodymyr Zelensky said.

“Unfortunately, there has been no progress for a long time with America regarding the expansion of anti-ballistic missile production," he said in his nightly video address.

"We are ​trying ⁠to accelerate this work in Europe, the production of our own anti-ballistic systems on the ⁠continent in sufficient quantities," he said.

Zelensky said Ukraine was continuing to talk to the United States on how it can help Ukraine and that US leadership was vital.

He thanked French president Emmanuel Macron for ‌his role in developing systems and ‌said Europe was instrumental in providing financial help for Ukraine to acquire weapons.

“Europe is helping us financially. But the leadership of the United States is also very much needed. Today it is very, very important to say this," he said.

He added that Ukraine was grateful for US expertise and that it was "very important that there are results. The same applies to diplomacy. We expect new diplomatic measures ‌with representatives of the President of the United ​States of America”.

Zelensky says Ukraine achieved greater results on battlefield this year

04:23 , Arpan Rai

Ukrainian forces have achieved stronger battlefield results this year and managed to stabilise parts of the front despite major Russian attacks, president Volodymyr Zelensky said.

“Everything is not simple. We are actively defending ourselves, but this year we have achieved greater results than before,” Zelensky said.

The war-time president said Ukraine has strengthened its battlefield positions through drone operations, long-range strikes and technological innovations.

He added that Ukraine’s claims have been indirectly confirmed by criticism and complaints from Russian military bloggers.

“It is especially pleasing when this is clearly confirmed even by the whining of the so-called Russian ‘war correspondents,’” Zelensky said.

EU says not leaving Kyiv in response to Russia's bombing threat

04:11 , Arpan Rai

The head of the EU mission in Kyiv said the 27-nation bloc was "not going anywhere” after Russia issued a warning message, asking foreigners to leave the Ukrainian capital.

Russia has threatened to launch "systematic strikes" on targets in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military as well as decision-making centres, a day after one of its heaviest bombardments of the city since the start of the war.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, on a phone call with the US secretary of state Marco Rubio, also pressured the US to evacuate staff from its embassy.

Katarina Mathernova, the head of the EU mission, said the Russian warning sought to sow panic.

"Russia wants ‌fear. Panic. Isolation of Ukraine. It will not work," she said on social media. "The EU ‌is not going anywhere. We are staying in Kyiv. We are staying with Ukraine,” she said.

Watch: Dozens injured in Russian attack on Kyiv

04:00 , Harriette Boucher

Putin wants new Ukraine war recruits, offers debt relief in exchange

03:53 , Arpan Rai

Russian president Vladimir Putin has signed a decree providing debt relief to new Ukraine war recruits and their families, the Kremlin said late on Monday, as Moscow seeks to boost its army.

People who signed a contract with the Russian defence ministry from 1 May and/or their spouses are free from their debts of up to 10 million roubles (£103,791) if a legal claim to collect those debts was in force before that date, the decree posted on the Kremlin's website said.

The recruits will have to join the military to fight against Ukraine in Putin's “special military operation” for at least one year, it added.

The law adds to a variety of support measures for Russian fighters in the war, from big payouts to preferable admissions for higher education, as the Kremlin seeks to boost its forces.

Putin also signed a decree indefinitely extending rental rights for state land for those fighting in Ukraine, the Kremlin said.

Russian president Vladimir Putin attends a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow (Reuters)
Russian president Vladimir Putin attends a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow (Reuters)

Lavrov tells Rubio of Russian decision to strike Kyiv sites linked to military

03:51 , Arpan Rai

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has advised US secretary of state Marco Rubio of Moscow's decision to launch strikes on sites in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military, the Russian foreign ministry said.

Moscow has warned it will launch "systematic strikes" on targets in Kyiv linked to the Ukrainian military as well as decision-making centres, and urged foreigners to leave, a day after one of its heaviest bombardments of the city since the start of the war.

A statement ⁠on the ministry's ​website said ⁠Lavrov told ‌Rubio by telephone that the move was initiated "in ‌response to the continuing terrorist ‌attacks by the Kyiv regime against the peaceful ⁠population and civilian sites on Russian territory”.

It said Russia's armed forces "are starting systematic strikes on facilities located in Kyiv that ‌are used for ​the needs of the ‌Armed Forces ⁠of Ukraine, as ⁠well as on centres where the ‌corresponding ​decisions are ‌being made”.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and US secretary of state Marco Rubio speak during a US-Russia summit on Ukraine at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska (AFP/Getty)
Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and US secretary of state Marco Rubio speak during a US-Russia summit on Ukraine at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska (AFP/Getty)

How Ukraine and Russia’s drone war spread into Europe as Putin ‘hijacks’ Kyiv’s weapons in mid-air

03:00 , Harriette Boucher

Ukraine has developed unprecedented drone technology after being invaded by the Russian superpower, but now Moscow appears to be using the aircraft against Kyiv, threatening to cause chaos in Europe, reports Maira Butt:

How Ukraine and Russia’s drone war spread to Europe as Putin ‘hijacks’ Kyiv’s weapons

Russia hits Ukraine with hypersonic missile in massive Kyiv assault

02:00 , Harriette Boucher

Russia's Syzran oil refinery halted by drone attack, sources say

01:00 , Harriette Boucher

Russia's Syzran oil refinery on the Volga river has halted operations after a Ukrainian drone attack last Thursday.

Industry sources told Reuters that the attack damaged a primary processing unit.

The local governor said that two ⁠people were killed ​by ⁠a drone attack on the town of Syzran in Russia's ⁠Samara region while Ukraine said it ​had ⁠struck the area's ‌refinery.

The sources said the refinery's CDU-6 crude distillation unit, which accounts for more than 70 per cent of the plant's capacity, was shut down after the attack and that repairs could take more than a month.

Rosneft, which owns the plant, did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

British soldier fighting for Ukraine killed in war

Tuesday 26 May 2026 00:00 , Harriette Boucher

A 23-year-old British man, Ayrton Redfearn, was killed in action in Ukraine's Donetsk region. He died on 9 May.

From Devon, Mr Redfearn had joined a specialist unit supporting the Ukrainian army in 2025, his mother, Natasha, told the BBC, adding she “lived in fear of the police coming to my door with bad news”.

“This fear became reality on the evening of 11 May, and the world of myself, and Ayrton’s 10-year-old brother, then fell apart,” she said.

Mr Redfearn was a Torquay Air Cadet as a child, joining the RAF at 17 before travelling overseas.

His mother stated: "We are trying to have just 1 per cent of the strength, bravery and courage of Ayrton, and if we can do this, it will help us to eventually come to terms with our life without him.

“I am very grateful for all the tributes, messages and support from those who knew Ayrton and from strangers."

A spokesperson for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said: “We are supporting the family of a British national who has died in Ukraine, and are in contact with the Ukrainian authorities.”

British man, 23, killed in Ukraine after joining specialist unit supporting army

Leaders keep a wary eye on Belarus after Russia’s biggest missile attack of the year on Ukraine

Monday 25 May 2026 23:00 , Harriette Boucher

Belarus' exiled opposition leader visited Kyiv on Monday as the Ukrainian capital cleaned up after Russia’s biggest missile attack of the year, and world leaders kept a close eye on how much support the Belarusian government is ready to provide for Moscow’s all-out invasion of Ukraine.

Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya arrived by train in Kyiv for her first visit to the city, a day after French President Emmanuel Macron spoke by phone with President Alexander Lukashenko, who has governed Belarus with an iron fist for more than three decades.

The French leader “underscored the risks for Belarus of allowing itself to be dragged into Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine,” according to a presidential aide in Macron’s office who spoke on condition of anonymity in accordance with the presidential palace’s practices.

Macron also spoke Sunday with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who in recent days has increasingly warned that Belarus could provide a launchpad for Russia to open a new front in northern Ukraine.

With the full-scale invasion more than four years old, the Russian army is locked in a hard and costly slog on the 1,250-kilometer (780-mile) front line that mostly snakes through eastern and southern Ukraine. With American-made air defence missiles in short supply because of the Iran war, Russian missiles are harder for Ukraine to stop.

Leaders keep a wary eye on Belarus after Russia’s biggest missile attack of the year on Ukraine

In pictures: Ukrainians deal with aftermath of Russia's deadly attacks in Kyiv

Monday 25 May 2026 22:00 , Harriette Boucher

 (AFP/Getty)
(AFP/Getty)
 (AFP/Getty)
(AFP/Getty)
 (AFP/Getty)
(AFP/Getty)
 (AFP/Getty)
(AFP/Getty)

Ukrainians flee Kyiv after latest deadly Russian attack

Monday 25 May 2026 21:00 , Harriette Boucher

Some locals said they had no choice but to flee Kyiv after Sunday's attack, one of the worst so far on the capital since the war began.

“It was a terrible night, and there had never been anything like it in the entire war," said Kyiv resident Svitlana Onofryichuk, 55, who had worked for 22 years in the market that was damaged.

“I am very sorry that I have to say goodbye to Kyiv now, I am not staying there anymore, there is no possibility," she added.

“My job is gone, everything is gone, everything has burned down.”

Yevhen Zosin, 74, a Kyiv resident who witnessed the attack, said the moment he heard the explosion he rushed to grab his dog.

“Then there was another explosion and she and I were thrown back like a pin by the shock wave. We both survived, she and I. My apartment was blown to pieces,” he said.

In Kyiv’s Shevchenko district, a five-story residential building was hit, which caused a fire, and one person was killed, Ukraine's state emergency service reported.

A school building was damaged by an attack while people sheltered inside, mayor Vitali Klitschko said.

Fires continued to rage into the morning, complicating rescue efforts as buildings collapsed from the blasts.

 (AFP/Getty)
(AFP/Getty)

Usyk says his daughter texted him from bomb shelter minutes before Verhoeven fight

Monday 25 May 2026 20:00 , Harriette Boucher

Russia says Armenia could lose cheap gas if it turns away from Moscow

Monday 25 May 2026 19:00 , Harriette Boucher

Moscow has warned Armenia that it could lose the “very attractive” price it pays for gas if it turns away from integration with Russia.

Armenia is a member of a Russian-led economic union and heavily dependent on Russia for energy supplies, but in recent years it has ⁠sought deeper ties with the European ​Union, including ⁠adopting a law last year to launch its accession process to the bloc.

“There is a very, very attractive and more than preferential price for Russian gas,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, when asked about relations with Armenia.

“But, of course, such terms are not available to participants in other integration frameworks. There, the pricing structure is entirely different. It ‌is market-based.”

Armenian foreign minister Ararat Mirzoyan said Armenia had no interest in severing political and economic ties with Russia.

“We want and will strive to preserve and deepen our normal relations,” Russian news agency Interfax ⁠quoted him as telling reporters in Yerevan on Monday.

Czech government proposes tighter rules for Ukrainian refugees

Monday 25 May 2026 18:00 , Harriette Boucher

The Czech government is looking to tighten its rules for Ukrainian refugees over what it says is an abuse of aid and the perception that refugees had some advantages over locals.

A legal amendment was approved on Monday by the populist coalition government, which includes an anti-Ukrainian far-right party.

It faces a balancing act between the demands of ⁠the anti-immigration far-right, providing ​aid, and ⁠the needs of businesses that are keen to employ Ukrainians key to sectors such ⁠as services and construction.

Russia hits Ukraine with hypersonic missile in massive Kyiv assault

Monday 25 May 2026 17:00 , Harriette Boucher

Russia tells foreign citizens to get out of Kyiv as it prepares more strikes

Monday 25 May 2026 14:48 , Harriette Boucher

Russia has told foreign citizens to leave Kyiv as it threatens more revenge attacks against the capital.

It said it was starting a series against Ukrainian defence industry facilities, Tass news agency reported.

Strikes will be directed at both decision-making centres and command posts.

It comes after Moscow vowed to continue its strikes on Kyiv in response to the attack on a student dormitory on Friday.

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