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Ukraine presses counteroffensive after Russian setback

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Ukraine presses counteroffensive after Russian setback

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia attacked the Ukrainian president’s hometown with suicide drones on Sunday, and Ukraine pushed forward with its counteroffensive after taking again management of a strategic japanese metropolis.

Russia’s lack of Lyman, which it had been utilizing as a transport and logistics hub, is a brand new blow to the Kremlin because it seeks to escalate the struggle by illegally annexing 4 areas of Ukraine.

“The Ukrainian flag is already in Lyman,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy mentioned in his nightly handle. “Over the previous week, there have been extra Ukrainian flags within the Donbas. In per week there will likely be much more.”

In southern Ukraine, Zelenskyy’s hometown Krivyi Rih got here below Russian assault by a suicide drone that struck a faculty early Sunday and destroyed two tales of it, mentioned Valentyn Reznichenko, the governor of Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk area.

A hearth sparked by the drone assault has been put out, he mentioned.

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Russia in current weeks has begun utilizing Iranian-made suicide drones to assault targets in Ukraine. In southern Ukraine, the Ukrainian air pressure mentioned it shot down 5 Iranian-made drones in a single day, whereas two others made it by air defenses.

In the meantime, Russian assaults additionally focused town of Zaporizhzhia, authorities mentioned Sunday.

Ukraine’s army mentioned Sunday it carried out a strike on a Russian ammunition depot within the nation’s south, in Chernihiv, and hitting different Russian command posts, ammunition depots and two S-300 anti-aircraft batteries.

The reviews of army exercise couldn’t be instantly verified.

After being encircled by Ukrainian forces, Russia pulled troops out Saturday from Lyman within the east in what the British army described as a “vital political setback” for Moscow. Taking town paves the way in which for Ukrainian troops to doubtlessly push farther into territory Russia has occupied.

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Lyman had been an vital hyperlink within the Russian entrance line for floor communications and logistics. Lyman is within the Donetsk area close to the border with Luhansk, two areas that Russia annexed Friday after forcing the inhabitants to vote in referendums at gunpoint.

Russia’s Protection Ministry claimed to have inflicted injury on Ukrainian forces in battling to carry Lyman, however mentioned outnumbered Russian troops had been withdrawn to extra favorable positions.

In a day by day intelligence briefing, the British Protection Ministry referred to as Lyman essential as a result of it has “a key street crossing over the Siversky Donets River, behind which Russia has been making an attempt to consolidate its defenses.”

The British mentioned they believed that town had been held by “undermanned components” previous to the Russian withdrawal.

Moscow’s withdrawal from Lyman prompted speedy criticism from some Russian officers.

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“Additional losses of territory in illegally occupied territories will virtually definitely result in an intensification of this public criticism and improve the stress on senior commanders,” the British army briefing mentioned.

Ukrainian forces have retaken swaths of territory in a counteroffensive that began in September and has humiliated and angered Russia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin frames the Ukrainian beneficial properties as a U.S.-orchestrated effort to destroy Russia and this week heightened threats of nuclear pressure in a few of his hardest, most anti-Western rhetoric up to now.

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Observe AP’s protection of the struggle in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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‘They tried to murder everyone’: Haiti reels after deadly gang attack

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‘They tried to murder everyone’: Haiti reels after deadly gang attack

More than 6,200 people are staying with relatives or in makeshift shelters after massacre in central Haiti town.

Survivors of a deadly gang attack in central Haiti last week have described waking up to gunfire and walking for hours in search of safety, as the country continues to grapple in the aftermath of the assault that killed at least 70 people.

Dozens of Gran Grif gang members armed with knives and assault rifles killed infants, women, the elderly and entire families in their attack last Thursday on Pont-Sonde, about 100km (62 miles) northwest of Port-au-Prince in the Artibonite region.

“They tried to murder everyone,” Jina Joseph, a survivor, told The Associated Press news agency.

Jameson Fermilus, who had crouched in a corridor next to his house as smoke and gunfire filled the air, was among thousands of survivors who walked for hours, looking for safety.

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“We don’t know what we are going to do,” said another resident who joined them, 60-year-old Sonise Morino. “We have nowhere to go.”

The massacre has underscored the deadly violence and instability gripping Haiti, where powerful armed groups have carried out attacks and kidnappings across the capital of Port-au-Prince and in other parts of the country.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said at least 6,270 people were displaced in the attack on Pont-Sonde. The vast majority have sought refuge with relatives and friends in nearby communities.

Others with nowhere to go have crowded into a church, a school and a public plaza shaded by trees in the coastal city of Saint-Marc.

“These deaths are unimaginable,” Mayor Myriam Fievre said as she met with survivors.

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The attack – retribution for self-defence groups trying to stop the gang from erecting a toll on a nearby road – was the largest massacre in central Haiti in recent years.

It came just days after the United Nations reported that at least 3,661 people had been killed in Haiti in the first half of 2024 amid the “senseless” gang violence that has engulfed the country.

“To those who sow terror, I say this: You will not break our will,” Haiti’s interim Prime Minister Garry Conille said in a statement following the Pont-Sonde attack.

“You will not subjugate this people who have always fought for their dignity and freedom. We will never abandon our right to live in peace, security and justice.”

Yet, despite the defiant rhetoric, Conille late last month acknowledged that Haiti was “nowhere near winning” the battle against the gangs.

The UN Security Council recently extended the mandate of a Kenya-led policing mission meant to help restore security in the Caribbean nation, but the force has struggled to wrest control from the gangs.

Funding for the deployment – formally known as the Multinational Security Support Mission (MSS) – has lagged, and a UN expert said last month that the force remains under-resourced.

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Conille has travelled to Kenya and the United Arab Emirates this week to push for additional help.

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Explainer-The Electoral College and the 2024 US Presidential Race

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Explainer-The Electoral College and the 2024 US Presidential Race
By Tom Hals (Reuters) – In the United States, a candidate becomes president not by winning a majority of the national popular vote but through a system called the Electoral College, which allots electoral votes to the 50 states and the District of Columbia largely based on their population. Here are …
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Russia jails American Stephen Hubbard over fighting as a mercenary in Ukraine

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Russia jails American Stephen Hubbard over fighting as a mercenary in Ukraine

A Russian court sentenced a 72-year-old American to nearly seven years in prison Monday after he was convicted on charges of fighting as a mercenary in Ukraine. 

Investigators alleged during a closed-door trial that Stephen Hubbard of Michigan was paid $1,000 a month to enlist in a Ukrainian defense unit in Izyum, a city in the eastern part of the country, where he had been residing since 2014, according to Reuters. 

The news agency cited Russian investigators and state media as saying that Hubbard was trained and given weapons and ammunition after he allegedly signed up for the mercenary unit in February 2022. Two months later, he reportedly was detained by Russian soldiers and then pleaded guilty to charges of fighting as a mercenary. 

Hubbard was sentenced to six years and 10 months in prison. He is the first American known to have been convicted on charges of fighting as a mercenary in the Ukrainian conflict, according to the Associated Press.  

RUSSIAN ARMS DEALER VIKTOR BOUT, WHO WAS TRADED FOR BRITTANY GRINER, TO SELL WEAPONS TO IRAN-BACKED HOUTHIS 

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Stephen Hubbard, a U.S. citizen accused of fighting as a mercenary for Ukraine against Russia, is seen inside an enclosure for defendants as he attends a court hearing in Moscow, on Monday, Oct. 7. (Reuters/Moscow City Court Press Service)

The charges carry a potential sentence of 15 years, but prosecutors asked that his age be taken into account along with his admission of guilt, Russian news reports said. 

Last month, Hubbard’s sister Patricia Hubbard Fox and another relative told Reuters that he held pro-Russian views and was unlikely to have fought in battle at his age. 

Russian state media is saying Hubbard plans to appeal the verdict. The U.S. State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

UKRAINIAN STRONGHOLD VUHLEDAR FALLS TO RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE AFTER TWO YEARS OF BOMBARDMENT 

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Stephen Hubbard sentenced in Russia

Hubbard was sentenced Monday to nearly seven years in prison. He reportedly plans to appeal. (Moscow City Court Press Service via AP)

A court in the Russian city of Voronezh also sentenced American Robert Gilman on Monday to seven years and one month for allegedly assaulting law enforcement officers while serving a sentence for another assault. 

Robert Gilman attends court hearing in Russia

Marine veteran Robert Gilman attends a court hearing in Voronezh, Russia, on Oct. 7. (Reuters/Vladimir Lavrov)

 

Gilman, a U.S. Marine veteran, was arrested in 2022 for causing a disturbance while intoxicated on a passenger train, and then allegedly assaulted a police officer while in custody, Russian news reports say. He is already serving a 3 1/2-year sentence on that charge. 

State news agency RIA-Novosti said that last year, he assaulted a prison inspector during a cell check, then hit an official of the Investigative Committee, resulting in the new sentence.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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