Tuesday, December 23, 2025
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Arab League calls for global action to end Israeli crimes against Palestinian children

Israel Palestine

“The international community must take serious action and stop Israeli violations [against] Palestinian children, protect them and guarantee their safety,” the Arab League announced.

Those are the words by Assistant Secretary-General of the League Haifa Abu Ghazaleh during a regional conference on preventing severe crimes against children in armed conflicts, which was co-hosted by Qatar.

“The international community must hold accountable those responsible for those violations and guarantee their prosecution for their crimes,” he stated.

Elsewhere in her remarks, Abu Ghazaleh placed a premium on upholding international conventions to ensure the protection of children from violence.

Addressing the conference, Asem Khamees, deputy Palestinian minister of social development, said Israel “detained 7,500 Palestinian children between 2015 and 2020.”

“The number of Palestinian children who are prisoners inside Israeli jails has reached 170; all of them subjected to different forms of violations and torture,” Khamees added.

In January, a Palestinian rights advocacy group said Israeli forces had arrested a total of 7,000 Palestinians, including hundreds of women and children, over the course of 2022. The figure was released in a report issued by the Palestine Center for Prisoners’ Studies (PCPS).

“Israel arrested 865 Palestinian children, including 142 under the age of 12, in 2022,” said Riyad al-Ashqar, the director of the PCPS. Some of those children, he added, had not even reached nine years of age, and all detainees were subject to abuse, torture or humiliation.

The official stated in one such case, Israeli forces arrested two-year-old Hammoudi Amash at the Barta’a checkpoint, claiming he insulted the Israeli soldiers stationed there.

The damning report followed a statement released by the Commission for Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs on 22, which said Israel had placed more than 600 Palestinian children under house arrest in 2022.

Moscow mayor says Russian capital attacked by drones

Russia Ukraine War

Sobyanin ordered the evacuation of residents from the two apartment blocks that were targeted, according to several messages posted on Telegram.

Emergency officials told RIA Novosti that two drones struck residential buildings. No information regarding casualties has been provided yet.

Sobyanin, citing data from the city medical services, stated that no residents of the buildings hit by the aircraft were seriously hurt. He added that two people requested medical assistance at the scene, but no one had to be taken to the hospital.

Moscow Region Governor Andrey Vorobyov wrote on Telegram that “several drones” were shot down by air defenses as they were flying towards the city.

The attack comes after two Ukrainian drones unsuccessfully attempted to strike the Kremlin earlier this month. Moscow accused Kiev of attempting to assassinate Putin and vowed retaliation.

Kiev denied responsibility, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky saying “we don’t attack Putin or Moscow.”

The Russian Defense Ministry has claimed that Tuesday morning’s drone attack on Moscow was orchestrated by Ukraine.

“The Kiev regime launched a terrorist attack with unmanned aerial vehicles on targets in the city of Moscow,” a statement from the ministry said.

The raid involved eight aircraft-type UAVs, all of which were hit; three drones that were suppressed by electronic warfare measures went out of control and deviated from their intended targets, the statement added.

The remaining five drones were shot down by Pantsir-S air defense systems operating outside Moscow, according to the MOD.

Ukraine has denied direct involvement with the drone attack on the Russian capital.

“Of course, we enjoy watching and predicting an increase in attacks. But of course, we have nothing to do directly with it,” Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak told the Breakfast Show YouTube channel.

“What is growing in Russia is the karmic payment that Russia will gradually pay in aggravated form for everything it does in Ukraine,” he added.

Ukraine’s parliament approves sanctions against Iran

Ukraine’s parliament

The measures were approved on Monday, a day after Ukraine said Russia used Iranian-made Shahed drones in the largest such attack on the capital, Kyiv, since the beginning of the war.

“The resolution synchronises Ukrainian sanctions with the actions of the entire civilised world on the path to the complete isolation of Iran,” the Ukrainian parliament said on its website.

The new regulations include a ban on exports of “military and dual-use goods” to Iran and the “suspension of economic and financial obligations in favour of residents of Iran”.

The package would also stop Iranian goods transiting through Ukraine and it planes through Ukraine’s airspace as well as imposing trade, financial and technology sanctions against Iran and its citizens.

The legislation still needs to be signed into law by President Volodymyr Zelensky, which is a formality because the Ukrainian leader submitted the bill himself.

Zelensky last week appealed directly to Iranians, asking: “Why do you want to be accomplices in Russian terror?”

Tehran struck back, calling Zelensky’s comments a “political show” that had no value.

“This repeat of empty claims by the Ukrainian president against the Islamic Republic of Iran means going along with the anti-Iranian media war that is done with the goal of receiving more arms and financial help from Western countries,” foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said on Saturday.

Both Iran and Russia have repeatedly denied claims that Tehran has provided Moscow with drones to be used in the Ukraine war.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian in November dismissed media controversy over Iran’s alleged support for Russia in the Ukraine war, adding, however, that Tehran had provided Moscow with a limited number of drones months before the war in Ukraine.

He also assured that Iran will not be indifferent if it is proven that Russia has used Iranian drones in the conflict.

UN envoy urges parties to Yemen conflict to take ‘serious steps’ to end war

Saudi Air Raid Yemen

During a visit to Japan on Monday, Grundberg stressed the need to maintain and intensify international advocacy for a sustainable political settlement that ushers in a future of durable peace and development in Yemen.

“This is a critical time. The parties have a responsibility to build on the progress achieved and take serious steps toward lasting peace,” he said, adding, “The coherence of the international community and its unity of objective on Yemen will be pivotal assets in this regard.”

In parallel with UN efforts led by Grundberg, Oman has also been trying to close gaps between Yemen’s Ansarullah resistance movement and Saudi Arabia.

The peace efforts are aimed at extending a UN-brokered ceasefire, which is still largely in place despite its official expiry last October.

In April, Omani and Saudi delegations held peace talks with Ansarullah officials in Sana’a.

Also on Monday, the al-Masirah television network reported that Washington has stepped up its “interferences” in Yemen, citing meetings between the US Ambassador to Yemen Stephen Fagin and members of the so-called presidential leadership council, Faraj al-Bahsani and Sultan Ali Al-Arada.

During both meetings, the report said, Fagin advised the council not to pay the salaries of state employees out of oil revenues.

“Despite being announced that meetings come to ‘discuss peace efforts and a political settlement in Yemen,’ they have completely different goals,” the report added.

“They come within the framework of the counter-move taken by the Americans to undermine the Omani mediation efforts and thwart the efforts to end the aggression against Yemen.”

Last week, Ansarullah chief Abdul-Malik al-Houthi accused the United States of “obstructing real peace” and “fair entitlements for our dear people.”

Saudi Arabia started a brutal war of aggression against Yemen in March 2015, enlisting the assistance of some of its allies, including the United Arab Emirates.

The war, which has enjoyed generous arms, logistical, and political support from the United States and several other Western governments, has been seeking to restore power in Yemen to the country’s former Riyadh- and Washington-friendly government.

The former Yemeni government’s president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi resigned from the presidency in late 2014 and later fled to Riyadh amid a political conflict with Ansarullah. The movement has been running Yemen’s affairs in the absence of a functioning administration.

The war has, meanwhile, killed tens of thousands of Yemenis and turned entire Yemen into the scene of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 461: Drones hit several buildings in Moscow as fresh wave of Russian airstrikes pound Ukraine

Russia Ukraine War

Russia issues arrest warrants for senior Ukrainian commanders after drone attacks

The Russian Interior Ministry has placed two senior Ukrainian figures on its wanted list — hours after a series of drone attacks in the Moscow region:

  • Valery Zaluzhnyi: The commander in chief of Ukraine’s armed forces
  • Alexander Syrskyi: The commander of Ukrainian ground forces

The Investigative Committee of Russia is also investigating Syrskyi and Zaluzhnyi for the shelling of “civilians and civilian facilities in Donbas.”


Putin: Ukraine chose “path of intimidation” with drone attacks

Russian President Vladimir Putin blamed Ukraine for the drone attack in the Moscow region, calling it a “clear sign of terrorist activity.”

“Kyiv chose the path of intimidation of Russian citizens and attacks on residential buildings,” he said, adding, “We are concerned about attempts to evoke a response from Russia. It seems that is what they [Ukraine] want … Kyiv provokes us to mirror actions. We will see what to do about this.”

The Russian president added the city’s air defenses worked normally.

“The Moscow air defense system worked satisfactorily. However, there is still work to be done to make it better,” Putin said in brief remarks carried by Russian state media TASS.

Putin suggested that the drone attacks had been in response to recent Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure.

“The Russian Armed Forces strike exclusively with long-range high-precision weapons and only at military infrastructure facilities. Of course, some portion of these strikes is aimed at the military headquarters as well as headquarters of the Ukrainian military intelligence, which was hit two to three days ago,” he continued.

In just the past few days, Russia has hit a medical facility in Dnipro and launched more than 50 drones at Kyiv.

Ukraine has not commented on any strike against the headquarters of its military intelligence.


NATO chief says there is no sign of Ukraine aid fatigue among Western countries

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said on Tuesday that Western countries are not tiring on providing aid to Ukraine.

During an event in Oslo, Norway, the NATO secretary general stressed that support for Ukraine is being “stepped up.”

“Everyone is on alert for signs of fatigue in our democracies, in NATO countries and partners, in terms of our ability to support. So far, we haven’t seen it,” Stoltenberg continued.

The NATO chief maintained that there is still “strong cross-party support across NATO allies both in Europe and the USA.”

Stoltenberg added that despite having “different voices” and opinions on the issue of support for Ukraine, there remains predominantly a “political will to stand by Ukraine.”

In a news conference last month, Stoltenberg had emphasized that NATO allies were united in supporting Ukraine and would “not be intimidated” from doing so.


Russia threatens “most severe measures” following drone attacks

Russia’s Foreign Ministry announced on Tuesday that it can implement “the most severe measures” after drone attacks on Moscow.

“Russia reserves the right to take the most severe measures in response to the terrorist attacks of the Kyiv regime,” the ministry said in a statement.

“Assurances from NATO officials that the Kyiv regime will not strike deep into Russian territory turn out to be completely hypocritical,” the foreign ministry added.

Ukraine has denied direct involvement with the attack on the Russian capital.

Russian authorities say eight drones were intercepted in the Moscow region. The Investigative Committee of Russia has opened a criminal case on the matter.


EU considers options to use frozen Russian assets as a guarantee that Russia pays for damages

The European Union and its members are considering next steps for frozen Russian assets worth more than 24 billion euros ($25.8 billion), said European Commissioner for Justice Didier Reynders on Tuesday.

“We’re trying to see if it’s possible to seize some parts of those assets due to criminal offenses like corruption, money laundering or violation of the sanctions,” and where possible to “go to Justice and to confiscate a part of those assets,” Reynders said ahead of a meeting of EU Ministers in Brussels.

The frozen assets ensure “a real guarantee” that Russia will pay for damages caused by its aggression, he added.

Meanwhile, the Swedish Presidency of the EU is also “working towards new sanctions against Russia” ahead of the June summit of EU Leaders, said Jessika Roswall, minister for European Affairs of Sweden.

Since 2014, the European Union has progressively imposed restrictive measures on Russia over the country’s illegal annexation of Crimea and its war of aggression against Ukraine.

The EU says these measures are designed to curtail Russia’s “ability to wage war.”

In the most recent figures, the EU announced its restrictive measures “now apply to a total of 1,473 individuals and 207 entities,” including Russian President Vladimir Putin, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, as well as the Russian private military company Wagner along with its commanders and boss Yevgeny Prigozhin.


Russian defense minister: West is stepping up supplies to Ukraine

Western countries are sending more supplies of weapons and equipment to Ukraine, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Tuesday.

“Deliveries of equipment and weapons to Ukraine are increasing. We monitor the volumes and routes of supply and, if identified, strike,” Shoigu told a military conference call Tuesday.

Shoigu also claimed Russian forces have intercepted 29 Storm Shadow long-range missiles – supplied to Ukraine by Britain – this month. Ukraine has so far not commented on this.

In recent days, Russia has destroyed large arms depots in Ukraine’s Khmelnytskyi, Ternopil and Mykolaiv regions, Shoigu added. Ukraine said Monday that Russia had attacked warehouses, including a military facility, in the western Khmelnytskyi region overnight. It is rare for Ukraine to publicize attacks on military facilities.

Additionally, the minister claimed that Russia struck a Patriot anti-aircraft missile system in Kyiv in recent days, but he did not specify when.

On May 16, the Russian Defense Ministry had said that one of its Kinzhal missiles had hit a US-made Patriot system in Kyiv during strikes that morning. The Pentagon later confirmed that one Patriot missile battery that was given to Ukraine was damaged by a Russian missile barrage against Kyiv, but that the system has since been fixed. The Patriot is an advanced surface-to-air missile defense system.

Ukraine has received at least two Patriot systems, one from the United States and one from Germany, to enhance its air defenses


“No threat” to Moscow residents following drone attack: Kremlin spokesperson

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said there is currently “no threat” to Moscow’s residents following a drone attack on the capital on Tuesday.

“Thank God, there are no casualties and at present there is no threat to the residents of Moscow and the Moscow region,” Peskov stated.

Peskov added there are no plans for Putin to make an address on the attack.

Asked if additional security measures were needed to prevent such attacks, he said: “I cannot comment on issues of the security of the capital. I can only repeat that the Ministry of Defense worked well, the air defense worked well.”

Two people were injured and buildings were damaged by the attack, according to Russian state media.


Ukrainian foreign minister calls for more air defense systems after spate of attacks on Kyiv

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba, has called for more air defense systems following a third night of attacks on Kyiv.

“There can be only one response to each Russian attack aimed to deplete Ukrainian air defense: greater production and supply of air defense systems and ammunition by EU and NATO partners,” Kuleba said.

One person was killed and at least three others were injured as a result of explosions in Kyiv early Tuesday as the city’s air defenses intercepted 20 drones, the Ukrainian military confirmed.

It marks the 17th aerial attack on Kyiv this month, with the Russians varying their assaults with missiles, drones and unmanned aerial vehicles, according to Ukrainian officials.

The drone attacks Tuesday come after Moscow’s forces launched an unusual daytime missile attack on Kyiv Monday that Ukraine’s military said signified a change in Russian tactics.


Wagner chief criticizes Russian Ministry of Defense over alleged Moscow drone attacks

Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the Russian private military company Wagner, has launched an expletive-laden tirade at the Russian Ministry of Defense following an alleged drone attack on Moscow on Tuesday.

Prigozhin said in an audio recording on his Telegram channel that he was aware of and concerned about the drone attack.

“As a person who understands this somewhat, I can tell you that many years ago it was necessary to deal with these [drone] programs — that we are now years behind our opponents, years, maybe decades,” he stated in response to a question from a journalist.

The mercenary boss — who has been engaged in a bitter public feud with Russia’s military leadership — said the Russian Ministry of Defense is doing “absolutely nothing at all” to catch up with developments in drone technology.

“Regarding the drones that fly over Moscow and in Moscow — you stinking animals, what are you doing? You are swine! Get up off your asses from the offices you’ve been put in to defend this country,” he said.

“You are the Ministry of Defense. You didn’t do a damn thing to stamp this out,” he continued, claiming he had warned about the threat many times but that officials did nothing to prevent it.

“Why the f** are you allowing these drones to hit Moscow?” he continued, adding, “Let your houses burn.”

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that Russian President Vladimir Putin had met with officials at the Kremlin following the alleged attack.

Putin’s “working day started very early” and “he received information directly from law enforcement agencies, the Ministry of Emergency Situations, the mayor of Moscow and the governor of the Moscow region”.

“Everyone worked properly. The air defense system also worked well. Clearly, we are talking here about the Kyiv regime’s response to our very effective strikes on one of the decision-making centers. The Sunday strike,” Peskov stated.

Peskov said he could not comment on where the drones were launched from and who the target was.

“The only thing [I can say] is that it was obviously an attack of the Kyiv regime,” he added.

Ukraine has denied any direct involvement in the attack.


Kremlin spokesman says Putin briefed on Moscow drone attack

Kremlin spokesman said President Vladimir Putin is working in the Kremlin and has been briefed about drone attacks on Moscow.

Dmitry Peskov added Russian air defences and the defence ministry had done well in dealing with the assault and there were currently no plans for Putin to comment on the attack on the capital.

“Everyone worked properly. The air defense system also worked well. Clearly, we are talking here about the Kyiv regime’s response to our very effective strikes on one of the decision-making centers. The Sunday strike,” Peskov stated.

Russia has blamed Ukraine for the attack while Kyiv has denied its involvement.


Ukrainian official denies Kyiv’s involvement in Moscow drone attack

A Ukrainian presidential aide denied Kyiv was responsible for a drone attack on Moscow but said that Ukraine enjoyed watching it unfold.

“Of course, we are pleased to watch and predict an increase in the number of attacks. But of course we have nothing directly to do with this,” Mykhailo Podolyak told the YouTube channel Breakfast Show.

While air defences destroyed all eight drones, the attack is the most significant one on Moscow since the war began, according to Russian officials.


Moscow residents begin returning home: Mayor

The mayor of Moscow stated that residents are beginning to return home after a drone attack in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Sergey Sobyanin said on VK, “Emergency services have taken all the necessary measures to study the circumstances of buildings damaged by UAVs. Evacuated for the purpose of unhindered work of special services, residents are beginning to return to their homes. Residents of the building on Leninsky Prospekt will be the first to return to their apartments.

“Specialists have been instructed to eliminate minor damages in buildings as soon as possible,” he added.

The drone attacks hit some of Moscow’s most prestigious areas, including Leninsky Prospekt and the area of western Moscow.


Woman, 33, killed in Kyiv drone attacks: Ukrainian officials

A 33-year-old woman was killed and 13 others were wounded in the Russian drone attack on Kyiv in the early hours of Tuesday, Ukraine’s National Police said.

Among those injured, nine were in the city while four were hurt in the wider capital region, police added.

Ukraine’s Air Force reported earlier that its air defenses had destroyed 29 of 31 drones launched at Kyiv by Russia.


Russian Defense Ministry blames Ukraine for Moscow drone attack

Russia’s Ministry of Defense has claimed that Ukraine is responsible for a “terrorist attack” using drones against Moscow on Tuesday.

All eight aircraft-type unmanned aerial vehicles launched at the Russian capital were destroyed, the ministry said in a statement.

“Three of them were suppressed by electronic warfare, lost control and deviated from their intended targets,” the statement said, adding, “Another five UAVs were shot down by the Pantsir-S surface-to-air missile system in the Moscow region.”

Kyiv has not yet commented on the alleged drone attack.

Russian state media reported earlier that two buildings were damaged in a drone attack. Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said in an update that two people were injured but no one was hospitalized. Emergency services continue to work at the sites, he said.


Russia says its air defenses shot down a number of drones near Moscow

Russian air defenses shot down a number of drones as they approached Moscow Tuesday, the country’s main federal investigating authority said in a statement Tuesday.

“As a result of the fall of unmanned aerial vehicles, several buildings in Moscow have sustained minor damage. In addition, a number of unmanned aerial vehicles were shot down by Russian air defense forces on their way to Moscow,” the Russian Investigative Committee said in a statement.

Based on preliminary information, there were no casualties, while city emergency services and Russian Investigative Committee personnel are on the scene following the attack, it added.

“The persons involved in the crime are being identified,” the Investigative Committee noted.


Ukraine says it shot down nearly 30 drones over Kyiv early Tuesday

Ukrainian air defenses destroyed 29 of 31 drones launched at Kyiv by Russia early Tuesday, Ukraine’s Air Force said.

“Almost all of the drones were destroyed on the outskirts of the capital and in the Kyiv sky,” the Ukrainian Air Force said.

One person was killed in the bombardment, the 17th aerial assault launched by Russian forces at Kyiv during this month alone, authorities announced earlier.

Four people were injured by shrapnel, according to Kyiv police chief Andrii Nebytov, and there were 50 reports of damage to houses, commercial properties and cars.

“The police are recording every crime of the Russian army, for which they will definitely be held accountable,” Nebytov wrote.

Earlier reports from Ukrainian officials said 20 drones were shot down overnight.


Moscow drone attack caused minor damage to several buildings: Mayor

A drone attack on Russia’s capital city early Tuesday resulted in “minor damage to several buildings,” but no casualties were reported, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.

“All of the city’s emergency services are on the scene,” Sobyanin wrote on Telegram, adding, “They are investigating the circumstances of what happened. No one has been seriously injured so far.”

One of the damaged buildings was in the south of Moscow, and another is located southwest of the Russian capital, according to state news agency RIA.

Quoting a spokesperson for the emergency services, state news agency TASS said authorities are investigating several possibilities, including that a drone hit a building.

What looked like drone fragments were found around the building, TASS reported.


Russian air strikes target Kyiv for third night running

Blasts were heard in Kyiv and several buildings were set ablaze after Russia targeted Ukraine’s capital for the third night running.

Officials say falling debris caused the blazes, as Ukraine’s air defences intercepted several drones and missiles.

Ukraine claims it downed all missiles and drones in the previous two attacks.


Zelensky says timing of Ukraine’s counteroffensive has been set

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said a decision had been made on the timing of Ukraine’s counteroffensive in his nightly address on Monday.

“As usual, the commander-in-chief and the commanders of the operational directions reported to the staff,” Zelensky stated.

“Not only the supply of ammunition, not only the training of new brigades, not only our tactics. But also, the timing. This [the timing] is what is most important. The timing of how we will move forward. We will,” the president continued.

“The decisions have been made,” he added.

Zelensky did not provide further details on when the counter offensive would launch.


Russia is transferring forces to Bakhmut to replace Wagner fighters: Ukrainian military

Russia has been transferring its forces to Bakhmut to replace fighters from the Wagner group, said Serhii Cherevatyi, spokesperson for the Eastern Grouping of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, during an interview with Ukrainian media on Monday.

“Yes, [Russia] is currently rotating its units [in Bakhmut] – primarily in light of the significant losses the Wagner Group has suffered. They are forced to do it, not for any other reason,” Cherevatyi said, adding, “Units of airborne forces and motorized infantry units of are entering [Bakhmut]. We know what units they are; we know their commanders and their combat capabilities.”

Cherevatyi noted “all of these Russian units have been taking part in hostilities since 24 February 2022 and have sustained significant losses.”

He also said that Russia used “recently mobilized soldiers” to replenish those units.

In recent days, “the dynamics of combat clashes in the Bakhmut direction have been approximately the same,” Cherevatyi added.

Cherevatyi’s comments echoed those of Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar, who said Russians are “replacing troops from Wagner with regular units and trying to stabilize the defense in this area.”

On Sunday, the head of the Wagner group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, stated that the handover of his fighters’ positions in Bakhmut to Russian army units may extend to June 5.


Ukrainian diplomat says Zelensky’s peace plan only way forward

Chief diplomatic adviser Ihor Zhovkva has told Reuters that Ukraine has no interest in a ceasefire that locks in Russian territorial gains, and wants the implementation of its peace plan, which envisages the full withdrawal of Russian troops.

He pushed back on a flurry of peace initiatives from China, Brazil, the Vatican and South Africa in recent months.

“There cannot be a Brazilian peace plan, a Chinese peace plan, a South African peace plan when you are talking about the war in Ukraine,” Zhovkva said in an interview.

Kyiv’s peace plan is the only way to end Russia’s war in Ukraine and the time for mediation efforts has passed, he added.


Russia will not go into a negotiation without winning the war in Ukraine: EU’s top diplomat

European Union’s top diplomat Josep Borrell said on Monday that he was “not optimistic” about how the Russia-Ukraine conflict will play out this summer.

Borrell added that he believes Russia will only negotiate if it wins the war.

“I am not optimistic about what will happen in Ukraine this summer. I see a concentration of troops on both sides, I see Russia’s clear intent to win the war, (Russia) will not go into a negotiation if it doesn’t win the war,” he stated, speaking in Barcelona, Spain.

Borrell’s remarks come as Moscow hit Kyiv with an array of missile fire Monday in a surprise daytime attack, hours after an overnight barrage of the Ukrainian capital and across the country.


Ukraine promises swift retaliation after latest barrage of Russian missile attacks

The head of Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence promised retribution “very soon” after the latest wave of Russian missile and drone attacks against Kyiv and other locations.

“All those in Russia who still believed, believe or maybe dream that they can frighten Ukraine, I want to disappoint you — this is not true. Everyone has been and is still at their workplaces and continues to do their jobs,” Kyrylo Budanov said in an interview Monday.

He added: “All those who tried to scare us, dreaming that it would have some effect, will regret it very soon. Our response will not be delayed. Everyone will see everything soon.”

Dozens of drones and missiles have been fired by Russian forces since Sunday night, according to Ukrainian officials, who say the great majority were intercepted.

Yurii Ihnat, spokesperson for the Ukrainian Air Force, said that the missile barrage Monday appears to have been largely with Iskander missiles, either in ballistic or cruise mode. Ballistic missiles travel faster and are more difficult to intercept, though the Ukrainian military insists all 11 missiles that were fired toward Kyiv in a rare daytime barrage were brought down.

Ihnat also noted on Ukrainian television that there’s a possibility that S-300 and S-400 missiles were used.

“The direction of the attack was from the north,” Ihnat added, without indicating whether the missiles were fired by Russian units based in southern Belarus or in Russia.

Asked whether recently received US Patriot missile batteries had been in action, Ihnat said: “I think you can guess, if Iskander-M missiles were shot down, then one can conclude what kind of means were used to hit such targets, ballistic targets.”

The Kyiv city military administration, said the daytime barrage was the 16th attack on the capital since the beginning of the month.

“Thus, the enemy changed its tactics — after prolonged, nighttime attacks only, it struck a peaceful city during the day, when most residents were at work and outside. In other words, the Russians are clearly demonstrating that they are aiming to destroy the civilian population,” it added.


1 person killed, several injured after shelling in Russia’s Belgorod Region: Governor

One person was killed and several others were injured by shelling in the town of Shebekino in Russia’s Belgorod region, the region’s governor stated.

Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said on his Telegram channel on Monday that it was a “difficult day” and that there was “a lot of shelling.”

Gladkov noted that in recent days Belgorod region endured a “large amount of damage caused by hours of shelling” that caused the power, cell phone connection, heat and water to go off in numerous areas, which have now been restored.

The governor mentioned Novaya Tavolzhanka, Grafovka, Murom and Arkhangelsky being among the affected areas.


At least 2 killed in air strike near Bakhmut

The State Emergency Service of Ukraine released video Monday of the immediate aftermath of what it says was a Russian air strike on a gas station in Toretsk, a town near the eastern city of Bakhmut.

At least two people were reportedly killed and eight were wounded in the strike, the unit said on Facebook, and three injured individuals were removed from the rubble.

Toretsk is regularly hit by Russian artillery as well as occasional air strikes.

Iran tourism: Breathtaking oak forests of Lorestan Province

Oak forests of Lorestan Province

Take a look at a collection of images from the region:

Official: Iran destination for some 63% of Afghan refugees

Afghan Refugees

Ali Kazemi said Iran has been doing its utmost to be hospitable to the Afghan refugees while respecting their dignity, criticizing a lack of international support for Tehran’s efforts to properly host the nationals of its crisis-torn neighbor.

“International organizations and other countries are expected to provide more assistance in this regard in line with their humanitarian responsibilities arising from human rights documents,” he added.

Kazemi highlighted an Iranian law that binds the government to provide equal support to all minors bellow the age of 18 who live inside the Islamic Republic’s borders, regardless of their nationality, ethnicity and religion.

Iran is hosting around four million Afghan refugees without any substantial international aid. The global community has repeatedly praised the Islamic Republic’s hospitality to Afghans.

The August 2021 Taliban takeover of Afghanistan made matters worse and sent another huge influx of asylum seekers into neighboring countries including Iran.

Iranian president’s office rejects rumors of cyberattack on its website

Cyber attack

In a statement, the Presidency said its website, president.ir, was undergoing maintenance as a new overhauled version was unveiled.

“Las week, the new version of the website was unveiled, and today it was made temporarily unavailable by the technical team of the website as a security improvement project was being completed,” it said.

Iran busts ‘Israeli-tied’ terror group planning assassinations

Iran Police

Hojjatoleslam Abdollahi, the head of the Judiciary’s intelligence department, said the 14 members of the terror group were arrested by intelligence forces in Iran’s West Azarbaijan Province in coordination with the Judiciary.

The terrorists, he added, were planning to identify certain individuals and assassinate them.

The Israeli regime has a long record of sabotage operations in Iran, mainly targeting its nuclear facilities.

The regime has the blood of several senior Iranian nuclear scientists on its hands.

Iranian-made hypersonic missile to be unveiled soon: Senior IRGC cmdr.

Amir Ali Hajizadeh

Brigadier General Amir-Ali Hajizadeh, the head of the Aerospace Division of the IRGC, said Monday that the hypersonic missile has undergone testing and would be unveiled soon.

“The hypersonic missile has a high speed and can maneuver in and out of the atmosphere,” said the commander.

“This new missile is capable of passing through all missile defense systems. It targets the enemy’s anti-missile systems and is a big leap in the field of missiles,” Hajizadeh added.

Last week, Iran unveiled a new ballistic missile, named Khaibar or Khorramshahr-4, with a range of 2,000 kilometers and capable of carrying warheads weighing over a ton.

Iranian military experts and technicians have made great progress in manufacturing a broad range of equipment by relying on the country’s domestic capabilities, making the armed forces self-sufficient in the defense sector, despite the tough sanctions in place against the country.