A Russian-guided bomb attack on Zaporizhzhia injured at least six people and damaged multiple buildings [Reuters]
Here is the situation on Friday, October 11, 2024.
Fighting
- The death toll from a Russian ballistic missile attack on port
infrastructure in Ukraine’s southern Odesa region rose to eight with
nine people injured, Regional Governor Oleh Kiper said. Wednesday’s
attack hit a Panama-flagged container vessel that was at the port.
- Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Oleksii Kuleba said Russia attacked
Ukraine’s port infrastructure almost 60 times in the last three months
and is intensifying such strikes.
- At least six people were injured after a series of Russian-guided
bomb attacks on the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia, regional
governor, Ivan Fedorov, said. The attack also damaged 29 buildings.
- A Russian drone attack on the central city of Kryvyi Rih injured two
people and damaged a five-storey residential building, causing a fire,
Dnipropetrovsk regional governor, Serhiy Lysak, said.
- Outmanned Ukrainian forces fended off assaults by Russian troops
inside the strategic city of Toretsk, Kyiv’s military said. Military
spokesperson Anastasia Bobovnikova told the Reuters news agency that
street fighting was raging in the hilltop town, with Russian troops pushing forward and “completely erasing” buildings.
- Russia said its missiles struck two launchers of a US-made Patriot
air defence system in central Ukraine, with Kyiv acknowledging the
weapon had been hit, but saying it remained operational. A Ukrainian
military blogger said the strike took place in Pavlohrad, in the
Dnipropetrovsk region.
- The Ukrainian military said it struck an ammunition depot at an
airfield in Russia’s Adygeya region in the North Caucasus, about 450km
(280 miles) from the front line in eastern Ukraine. Adygeya regional
head Murat Kumpilov said that the village of Rodnikovyi had been
evacuated after the drone attack started a fire, but there were no
casualties.
Politics and diplomacy
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy took a lightning tour of
Western European capitals as he details his “victory plan” to Ukraine’s
allies. He met
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and NATO Secretary-General Mark
Rutte in London, French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris and Italian
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni in Rome. He is expected to meet Pope
Francis on Friday morning before heading to Germany for talks with
Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
- Speaking in Paris, Zelenskyy denied media reports that he was
discussing the terms of a ceasefire with Russia. “This is not the topic
of our discussions,” he told reporters. “It’s not right.”
- In Rome, Meloni announced Italy would host the next “recovery
conference” to help Ukraine’s reconstruction. Meloni said the conference
would take place in Rome from July 10-11, 2025.
- Victoria Roshchyna, a Ukrainian journalist who went missing while
reporting from occupied east Ukraine in August 2023, has died in Russian
detention, a spokesperson from Ukraine’s prison of war coordination
headquarters said. Investigations were under way into the circumstances
of her death, he added.
- Ukraine’s parliament approved the first major tax hike since
Russia’s full-scale invasion as military spending soars. The law imposes
measures including an effective tax rate on bank profits of 50 percent,
a tax on financial companies of 25 percent, and an increase in the war
tax paid by civilians from 1.5 percent to 5 percent.
- Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov rejected comments from South Korea’s
defence minister that North Korean soldiers were likely to be fighting alongside Russian troops in Ukraine.
- Consumer products giant Unilever exited Russia after selling its
Russian operations to Arnest Group, a Russian manufacturer of perfume,
cosmetics and household products. It did not disclose the amount Arnest
paid. Unilever said the deal also included its Belarus business.
Weapons
- Russia has recruited about 200 young African women to work at a
Tatarstan factory producing Iranian-designed drones for use in Ukraine,
according to an investigation by The Associated Press news agency. AP
said the women were lured to Russia through a social media campaign that
offered a free flight and work-study programmes in areas like
hospitality and catering only to find themselves at the drone factory in
the Alabuga Special Economic Zone, about 1,000 kilometres (600 miles)
east of Moscow.
- The German-based Kiel Institute warned Western military and
financial aid to Kyiv could halve to about 29 billion euros ($31.6bn) in
2025 if Donald Trump wins the November 5 election in the United States.
Trump has claimed he would end the war “in 24 hours” if elected. He has
not said how.