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Ukraine war: UK arms giant in Kyiv, Russia spurns grain deal proposal, Moscow Kursk drone strikes


UK arms giant in Kyiv, Russia spurns grain deal proposal, Moscow Kursk drone strikes
UK arms giant in Kyiv, Russia spurns grain deal proposal, Moscow Kursk drone strikes


Ukrainian drones hit Kursk as Moscow repels attack


Ukrainian forces targeted Russia's Kursk region with two drones early on Friday, damaging residential and administrative buildings, local authorities said.


Two buildings were damaged, which emergency services were still assessing, the region's governor Roman Starovoit wrote on Telegram.


Russian forces downed another drone bound for Moscow on Friday morning, the capital's mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.


The drone was shot down just 20 kilometres southeast of central Moscow, Sobyanin wrote on Telegram, without disclosing further details.


Moscow's three major airports had to reschedule and cancel flights after an unidentified flying object was detected by air defences, the Russian state-run news agency TASS reported.


Sobyanin has been vocal about expanding the Russian capital's air defence capabilities, after repeated attacks in recent months – one even striking the Kremlin building in May.


UK defence firm to speed up arms supply to Ukraine


UK arms giant BAE Systems has set up a legal body in Ukraine to speed up supplies of arms and equipment to the war-torn nation.


President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with the firm's chief executive Charles Woodburn on Thursday to iron out the details of the new agreement.


"The development of our own weapons production is a top priority," Zelenskyy wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, following Thursday's meeting.


He said Ukraine will be able to deploy BAE-manufactured artillery L119 and M777 systems and armoured vehicle robust CV90.


BAE has been a large contributor to the UK's defence supplies to Kyiv following the start of the invasion in February 2022. It is, by value, Europe's biggest defence contractor operating in more than 40 countries across the globe.


The defence firm, however, has not yet decided on setting up a physical office in Ukraine, despite Zelenskyy's previous claims that Kyiv was in negotiation to do so.


Russia unhappy with Black Sea grain deal proposal


Russia wants the West to follow "a list of actions" in addition to the United Nations chief's new Black Sea grain proposal, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Thursday.


UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had sent a new letter addressing Lavrov, hoping to revive the deal that lifted a Russian blockade and allowed Ukraine to ship almost 33,000 tons of grain at a time of growing global hunger.


But Moscow wasn’t satisfied with the letter, Lavrov hinted after a meeting with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, whose country helped broker the deal.


“As soon as talks turn into concrete decisions, we’ll be ready to resume the Ukrainian part of the grain package that same day," Lavrov said.


Describing the grain deal as “quite a complicated and laborious job,” Turkey's Fidan said when Erdogan and Putin get together they “will take a more strategic and political view.”


Guterres told UN reporters on Thursday he had written a letter to Lavrov with “a set of concrete proposals, allowing to create the conditions for the renewal of the Black Sea initiative.”


The United Nations and Turkey brokered the deal in July 2022 that allowed Ukraine to ship grain and other foodstuffs from three Black Sea ports.


A separate memorandum between the UN and Russia, following the start of the invasion, pledged to overcome obstacles to Moscow’s shipment of food and fertilizer to world markets.


Russia suspended the Black Sea grain initiative in July, calling it a lop-sided deal, repeatedly alleging Ukraine of fostering its wealthy allies in the West.


Source: Euronews

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