Russia launched a widespread drone and missile attack on Ukraine early Saturday, killing at least three people in the capitol of Kyiv.
The total combat losses of the Russian forces in Ukraine from February 24, 2022, to January 31, 2025, amount to approximately 837,610 personnel, including 1,670 in the past 24 hours. — Ukrinform.
For Daria Shapovalova, co-founder of the digital fashion platform DressX, fashion isn’t just about fabric and buttons anymore —  it’s about pixels and animations. Founded in Los Angeles in 2020 by Ukrainian entrepreneurs Shapovalova and Natalia Modanova,
KYIV (Reuters) - Ukrainian investigators have opened a criminal case involving Defence Minister Rustem Umerov, a move likely to deepen a standoff in his ministry over arms procurement that could strain Kyiv's ties with important Western allies.
Kyiv says it struck a Russian oil refinery and a microchip factory in attack which Moscow says contained 120 drones
The volume of gas in Ukraine's storage facilities has fallen to near the critical 10% mark and the country urgently needs to start importing significant amounts to meet its needs, the former head of the transit operator Serhiy Makogon said on Facebook.
Ukraine said on Friday it had struck a Russian oil refinery and a microchip factory in a huge drone attack that caused fires at the refinery's production facilities and an oil pumping station.
Ukraine is rapidly depleting its own gas storage facilities and may experience a fuel shortage by mid-February, when gas extraction from reserves will become limited and in case of frosts from UGS facilities will simply not be able to raise sufficient volumes of fuel.
Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal and Speaker of the Croatian Parliament Gordan Jandroković have discussed military and humanitarian aid, as well as Ukraine's integration into the EU and NATO. — Ukrinform.
Russia on Sunday claimed its troops had captured a strategically important town in eastern Ukraine as part of a grinding campaign to weaken Kyiv’s grip on the country’s industrial heartland.
WASHINGTON – U.S-funded aid programs around the world have begun firing staff and shutting down or preparing to stop their operations, as the Trump administration's unprecedented freeze on almost all foreign assistance brings their work to a sudden halt.