Russian troop casualties may reach around 40,000 for October, Estonian intelligence suggests.
Janek Kesselmann, the deputy commander of the Estonian Military Intelligence Center, told Estonian media EER “Russia’s losses are quite high. And this month seems to be one of the biggest in terms of losses for Russia.”
Kyiv reported that Russian forces had suffered 1,630 casualties on Friday alone breaking the previous second-highest tally of 1,530, set on October 18.
Kesselmann added that Russian tactics have shifted recently so troops no longer enter settlements as it recquires “sophisticated preperation”.
“Therefore, they besiege settlements with indirect fire. After the settlement is surrounded, they simply destroy it. It is a very cynical and disgusting thing,” Kesselmann said.
It came as North Korean troops will be deployed into Ukraine to fight with Russian forces as early as this weekend, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky claimed.
This would be a major escalation in the war with geopolitical consequences now reaching the Indo-Pacific region, western officials warned, as the grinding conflict approaches three years.
Ukrainian intelligence had determined that “the first North Korean military will be used by Russia in combat zones” between Sunday and Monday, Mr Zelensky said.
Vladimir Putin has not denied the presence of North Korean troops in Ukraine.
583 children were killed, two of them within the past day, reported the Prosecutor General’s Office on Telegram.
One child was killed in Kyiv and one in Dnipro in overnight airstrikes.
“As of the morning of October 26, 2024, according to official information from juvenile prosecutors, 583 children were killed and more than 1,655 sustained injuries of varying severity.
“Children were most affected in the following regions: Donetsk region – 595, Kharkiv region – 454, Dnipropetrovsk region – 183, Kherson region – 181, Kyiv region – 133, Zaporizhzhia region – 145,” the report says.
In total, more than 2,238 children have been affected by the war.
Barney Davis26 October 2024 14:05
Ukrainian PM Denys Shmyhal emphasised that Ukraine needs more weapons after Russian strikes killed at least four overnight.
“Unfortunately, there are casualties — people died, including children,” the Prime Minister noted on Telegram.
“More weapons, long-range capabilities, and harsher sanctions pressure on the enemy— this is what Ukraine needs right now for the safety of our citizens, for the safety of Europe, and to achieve a just peace.”
Barney Davis26 October 2024 13:34
Ukraine has claimed to have shot down 44 Russian strike drones overnight as they continue to count casualties.
“As a result of air combat, as of 12:00, October 26, 44 enemy drones have been confirmed downed in Kirovohrad, Sumy, Chernihiv, Kyiv, Cherkasy, Vinnytsia, Zhytomyr, Khmelnytskyi, and Kursk regions,” a Telegram post by the Ukrainian Air Force message reads.
It came after the Russians were accused of conducting missile strikes on civilian infrastructure in the Sumy region and Dnipro, resulting in civilian casualties.
A Russian drone strike killed a teenager in Kyiv during a nighttime barrage on the Ukrainian capital that lasted for hours, officials said, while four people were reportedly killed in a missile attack on central Ukraine that also left at least 20 injured.
As reported, three missile strikes hit Dnipro overnight. Twenty people were injured, and four people, including a 14-year-old child, were killed.
Over ten high-rise buildings, two private houses, medical facility buildings, a garage, and thirty civilian vehicles were damaged.
In Kyiv’s Solomianskyi district, a Russian strike drone hit a residential building, resulting in one death and six injuries.
(Telegram)
Barney Davis26 October 2024 12:24
Russian troop casualties over October may reach around 40,000, Janek Kesselmann, the deputy commander of the Estonian Military Intelligence Center has said.
Kesselmann told ERR: “The advance of the Russian Federation armed forces has been made possible by massive bombings, including cluster bombs, killer drones and indirect fire.
“This effect is carried out by meat attacks, so to speak, where Russia cynically wastes its personnel.
“The losses in Russia are quite high. And it seems that this month will be one of the biggest losses in Russia
“We estimate that the enemy will lose somewhere around 40,000 soldiers both wounded and killed during the month.”
Barney Davis26 October 2024 11:18
According to Kyiv mayor Vitalii Klitschko, a drone slammed into a 25-storey apartment block Friday night in the city’s west, killing a 15-year-old girl and injuring five others.
Ukraine’s Emergency Service said 100 people were evacuated following the strike, which damaged several apartments on the building’s upper floors.Serhii Popko, who heads Kyiv’s local military administration, said on Saturday that Russian forces overnight pummeled the city for seven and a half hours.
Air raid sirens wailed throughout the night, and Popko said that Ukrainian air defense shot down “up to a dozen” Russian drones.Also late on Friday, a Russian missile hit a residential area in the central city of Dnipro, killing a 14-year-old and two adult women, said regional governor Serhii Lysak, adding that at least 20 others were left with injuries, including an 8-year-old and teenagers.
He said the attack damaged thirteen apartment buildings, private houses and a medical facility.
Barney Davis26 October 2024 10:30
Chief of the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration Serhii Lysak wrote on Telegram that the number of the injured in overnight missile strikes on Dnipro has risen to 20.
“There are already 20 injured in Dnipro including children: girls aged 8 and 16, and two boys aged 17,” the message reads.
The regional chief stressed that only civilian areas were damaged after three separate missile strikes on Dnipro killed three including a child.
Barney Davis26 October 2024 09:42
Posting on X, he said: “Russian murderers have resumed their usual business.
“This proves once again that aggression cannot be stopped by words alone but only by decisive action in defense of the state and the people against whom this war is waged.
“Over the past evening and night, Russian forces attacked Kyiv, Dnipro, Sumy, Khmelnytskyi, and other regions of Ukraine. In Dnipro, one of Ukraine’s most important hospitals, the Mechnikov Hospital, was damaged, along with ordinary residential buildings. Tragically, three people were killed, including a child. In Kyiv, this Russian strike took the life of a girl who was only 14 years old.
“My condolences to their families and loved ones. Many were wounded in these strikes, and all received the necessary assistance. This war has continued for three years now, and there is only one culprit—Moscow. That is why we must exert pressure on the aggressor that can truly force them to end their terror and war. Reliable peace and security are achieved only through strength and determination.”
(Telegram)
Barney Davis26 October 2024 09:32
Weapons purchased from South Korea will not be transferred to Ukraine, the president of Poland Andrzej Duda has said.
Mr Duda was asked by reporters whether Poland would supply Kyiv with any arms it received from South Korea, if Seoul decides to supply Ukraine with weapons in future.
He said that Ukraine had requested the possible transfer of South Korean weapons to Kyiv – but Poland refused.
“There is no scenario in which we give someone the weapons we have recently bought for billions of zlotys from the pockets of our taxpayers. These weapons should serve the security and defence of the Republic of Poland,” he said.
Alex Croft26 October 2024 08:30
In a rare interview with the BBC’s Emma Barnett, Bush, 66, announced the release of a new short film – which she wrote and directed – inspired by Russia’s war on Ukraine Just over four minutes long, the animated clip depicts a little shrew searching for hope as she navigates a bombed-out city, soundtracked to “Snowflake”, Bush’s song from her 2011 album, 50 Words for Snow.
Read the full report by Roisin O’Connor:
Roisin O’Connor26 October 2024 08:00
Leaders of the Group of Seven wealthy democracies yesterday reached consensus on delivery of some $50bn in loans to Ukraine backed by the earnings from frozen Russian sovereign assets starting as early as December.
“These loans will be serviced and repaid by future flows of extraordinary revenues stemming from the immobilization of Russian Sovereign Assets,” the G7 statement said.
A fire burns in an apartment building that was hit during a Russian drone strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, 25 October 2024 (Reuters)
“Our aim is to begin disbursing the funds by the end of the year,” said the statement, which was released as global finance chiefs were meeting in Washington for the International Monetary Fund and World Bank annual meetings.
An accompanying statement from G7 finance ministers said that the loans would be disbursed through a series of bilateral loans, starting as soon as 1 December and continuing through the end of 2027 “in installments that will reflect Ukraine’s urgent financing needs.”
Each bilateral loan would enter into force no later than 30 June 2025, which provides some timing flexibility for G7 members to arrange details.
Namita Singh26 October 2024 07:45