EU edges towards using ‘reparations loan’ using Russian frozen Kremlin pressing ahead with year-round conscription. What we know on day 1,344Ukraine sent drones towards Moscow for the third consecutive night, closing airports, Russian authorities said late on Tuesday. Rosaviatsiya, the air transport watchdog, said Moscow’s Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo and Zhukovsky airports had flights halted or restricted. Russia usually says all incoming drones were destroyed, regardless of the outcome, and typically gives limited details about the effects of Ukrainian strikes unless civilians or civilian infrastructure are hit. Over the previous two nights, Russia’s defence ministry said there were 35 Ukrainian drones destroyed over the Moscow region. Ukraine says its long-range drone strikes of recent months on Moscow and other Russian regions are aimed at hitting military and industrial assets, damaging Russia’s war economy and bringing the conflict home to Russians.Ukraine also launched several drones targeting the Budyonnovsk industrial zone in Russia’s Stavropol oblast, said its governor, Vladimir Vladimirov. Online reporting suggested the drones targeted a petrochemical and plastics plant, with videos showing a fire.The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and leaders of Nordic countries said on Tuesday that they were confident that using frozen Russian assets for Ukraine’s benefit would be approved by December. EU leaders last week stopped short of approving a mammoth “reparations loan” backed by the assets, because Belgium, where the bulk of the €200bn pot is held, fears facing any legal consequences alone. Instead, they told the European Commission to move ahead with options for funding Ukraine for two more years, leaving the door open for a €140bn “reparations loan” using frozen Russian assets. “It’s legally a sound proposal, not trivial, but a sound proposal,” said von der Leyen.Russia is poised to enforce year-long military conscription, rather than just in the spring and autumn. Russian conscripts are theoretically not liable to be sent to Ukraine, but human rights groups and media reports say many have been coerced into signing contracts as volunteers for the war. The Russian parliament is in the process of approving a permanent draft. Putin has ordered the number of active troops to be increased by 180,000, to 1.5 million. He said in September that the military has over 700,000 troops fighting in Ukraine. Putin in 2022 ordered a “partial mobilisation” of 300,000 reservists into the war but was forced to abandon the hugely unpopular programme after protests erupted, recruiting stations were burned and many thousands of men fled to other countries. Russia has since relied on recruiting volunteers with the promise of relatively high wages and other benefits.Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukrainian and European officials would meet at the end of the week to discuss the details of a ceasefire plan, Reuters reported. “It is not a plan to end the war. First of all, a ceasefire is needed,” said the Ukrainian president. “This is a plan to begin diplomacy … Our advisers will meet in the coming days, we agreed on Friday or Saturday. They will discuss the details of this plan.”Ukraine plans to begin limited exports of weapons next month, Zelenskyy said. During his meeting with a government team, Zelenskyy also ordered a continued increase in drone production and sought to ensure that domestically produced weapons and ammunition cover about 50% of the army’s needs.The Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk, announced plans to reopen two border crossings with Belarus in Kuźnica-Bruzgi and Bobrowniki to facilitate local traffic and trade, saying it was possible thanks to strengthened controls alongside the entire border line. Poland closed its border with Belarus on 12 September as a result of Russia-led military exercises taking place in Belarus and 21 Russian drones entering Polish airspace on the night of 9-10 September. Tusk noted that the opening needed to be coordinated with Lithuania, acknowledging its decision to close its crossings with Belarus in response to balloons coming across the border over the last week. Lithuania says the balloons are used to smuggle cigarettes but the Belarusian ruler, Alexander Lukashenko, allows the flights to take place as a form of “hybrid warfare” harassment. Continue reading...
Thursday 30 October 2025
.theguardian - 1 days ago
Ukraine war briefing: Moscow under drone siege for third night running
Tributes pour in for #39;fantastic mum #39; who died walking dog in Port Glasgow crash
- newzealandnewsDonald Trump and Xi Jinping to hold meeting in South Korea amid hopes for trade deal – live updates
- .theguardianTeenage cricketer in Australia dies after being hit with cricket ball in Melbourne’s east
- .theguardianOnly full abolition of two-child benefit cap will substantially cut poverty, thinktank says
- .theguardianNothing used to be off-limits when talking about sex. Now I’m in a long-term relationship, why is it taboo? | Natasha Sholl
- .theguardianMicrosoft reports strong earnings even as Azure outage brings down Xbox and investor pages
- .theguardianAustralian man living in Washington DC pleads guilty to selling trade secrets to Russian broker
- .theguardianVietnamese arrivals in UK by irregular means will be fast-tracked for deportation, says No 10
- .theguardianTributes paid after death of Mary McGee, who helped end Ireland’s ban on contraception
- .theguardian‘We’ve got to look at the future’: Edwards to turn to next generation after World Cup exit
- .theguardianArsenal v Brighton, Swansea v Manchester City and more: Carabao Cup clockwatch – live
- .theguardian‘This was a slaughter, not an operation’: the favela reeling from Rio’s deadliest police raid
- .theguardianThe Guardian view on hospices: investment in end-of-life care is a national priority | Editorial
- .theguardianGod has sent me here to do something good... : Shafali ahead of ICC Women s WC semis against Australia
- newzealandnewsThe Guardian view on Argentina’s election: one step closer to becoming a Trumpian client state | Ediorial
- .theguardianI won’t apologise for The Lost King – Leicester University’s treatment of Philippa Langley is a profound injustice
- .theguardianFootball Daily | Shamrock Rovers’ long, slow stumble towards League of Ireland title glory
- .theguardianTrump is often angry but rarely hurt – yet Canada has managed to pull it off | Emma Brockes
- .theguardianJulius Eastman: A Power Greater Than review – Davóne Tines celebrates the maverick musician
- .theguardianAkram Khan Company: Thikra – Night of Remembering review – forget the meaning, feel the colour and emotion
- .theguardianPro-Palestinian students threaten to sue US university amid antisemitism definition controversy
- .theguardianI’m the worst player on my social sports team. Why does it feel so good to be bad at something?
- .theguardianThe UK bond markets have become a political trap that strangles public spending. But there’s a way out | Sahil Dutta
- .theguardianNo half-assed performance: how playing with a live crowd turns video games into performance art
- .theguardianÔm mô hình tên lửa Đông Phong trong cuộc thi khiêu vũ trên băng, VĐV TQ bị Liên đoàn Trượt băng Quốc tế điều tra
- dknThe baffling appeal of the candy-coloured waterpark: Massimo Siragusa’s best photograph
- .theguardianAre you a ditherer, sharer or pre-preparer? What your menu ordering style says about you | Polly Hudson
- .theguardianVội vàng lấy lòng ông Trump? Trung Quốc âm thầm mua 3 lô đậu nành Mỹ trước “Hội nghị Trump-Tập”
- dknHội đàm với ông Lee Jae-myung, ông Trump được Hàn Quốc trao huân chương và tặng “Vương miện Vàng”
- dkn49 ngày Vu Mông Lung: Công chúng bùng nổ! ‘Đồ tể’ Triệu Lệ Hoa lộ mặt! Đàn quạ lớn lượn vòng trên Trung Nam Hải! Cơn ác báo lớn hơn còn ở phía sau!
- dknMitchell, Santner guides New Zealand to series-clinching win over England in Hamilton
- newzealandnewsWorld Insights: Xi s S.Korea visit expected to consolidate economic cooperation, boost partnership
- newzealandnewsShe should embrace this opportunity... : Bishop s message to Shafali ahead of ICC Women s WC semifinal against Australia
- newzealandnewsDepth, humanity and ice cream: Daniel Radcliffe to make Broadway return in Every Brilliant Thing
- .theguardianShohei Ohtani had an off night at the World Series but he still breaks baseball logic
- .theguardianAgyemang injury to defensive frailty: key takeaways as England start World Cup buildup
- .theguardianNhân sự tiếp tục chấn động sau Hội nghị TƯ 4, Kiểm toán trưởng Quân ủy TƯ và những người khác “gặp chuyện”
- dknShare your views on a Tory MP’s proposal to deport large numbers of legally settled UK immigrants
- .theguardian
‘It sounds like witchcraft’: can light therapy really give you better skin, cleaner teeth, stronger joints?
- .theguardian
‘The Rushmore story is hard to tell’: how an Indigenous park leader revealed the monument’s dark side
- .theguardian
‘Dangerously outdated’: high court overturns ruling implying domestic violence would not affect children
- .theguardian
Jimmy Carr’s Am I the A**hole? review – the idea for this comedy panel show is one of TV’s laziest
- .theguardian
UK reportedly faces more than £20bn hit from steeper productivity downgrade, fuelling tax rise speculation – business live
- .theguardian
‘We want people to get lost!’ Princeton’s new museum survives scandal to deliver a mazey art ambush
- .theguardian
At least 174 racehorses died from racing or training injuries in past 12 months in Australia, report finds
- .theguardian
Daisy May and Charlie Cooper’s NightWatch: their hilarious ghost show is a warm-hearted joy
- .theguardian
Physical: Asia review – some of these super-strong contestants look like barrels wrapped in muscles and hair
- .theguardian