The Sumy Oblast Military Administration reports that on November 8, Russia attacked 12 communities within Sumy Oblast, injuring 8 people.
The communities of Sumy (Khotin), Yunakivka (Velyka Pysarivka), Novoslobidsk (Putyvl), Shalyhyne (Druzhbivka), Seredyna-Buda and Znob-Novgorodske are targeted.
The Russian forces have fired 57 shots and caused 129 explosives.
Five people were injured by strikes in Krasnopillia. Strikes damaged homes, pharmacies and a school. They also damaged a shop and multiple cars.
A ballistic missile strike in Sumy resulted in the injuries of three people.
Throughout the day, Russia bombarded the border communities using drones, missiles, artillery and mortar attacks. A number of mines were also thrown.
Bilopillia, a town with a population of 15,600 residents before the war, was the site of the most attacks. 65 explosions were recorded in the region. Bilopillia is located just eight kilometers from the Ukraine-Russia border. It had a population of 15,600 people before the war.
In recent months, Russian strikes on Sumy Oblast became more destructive amid fears that Russia could launch a new offensive against Sumy Oblast.
Residents of the border settlements in the northeastern part of Ukraine are subjected to multiple attacks each day.
According to Ukrainian officials interviewed by The Guardian on November 7, the relationship between the U.K.
Reuters reported that the “small number” of contractors would not be involved in combat operations, and they will be stationed far away from the front lines.
Ukraine’s airspace is closed to all flights since the full-scale invasion began in February 2022. This is due to the threat of Russian attacks. Flights to Iran will not resume once air service is restored.
Elon Musk has a great deal of influence in American politics. He was reportedly on the phone during a recent conversation between U.S. President elect Donald Trump and President Volodymyr Zelensky, saying that he would continue to help Ukraine through his Starlink satellites.
The Kyiv Independent examines how Donald Trump’s U.S. presidency win will shape the future of Russia’s war against Ukraine. Russia is making its biggest gains since the beginning of the full-scale invasion.
On Nov. 8, Dmytro Lubinets, Ukrainian Ombudsman, met Tatyana Moskalkova in Belarus to discuss humanitarian issues relating to Russia’s full scale war against Ukraine.
Bloomberg reported on November 8 that unnamed sources familiar to the matter said that European officials met in Budapest, Hungary, on Nov. 7, to discuss whether or not the European Union was willing to continue funding Ukraine’s assistance if U.S. president-elect Donald Trump stopped U.S. aid.
The bodies of 320 soldiers have been recovered from Donetsk Oblast. 89 others were brought back from Zaporizhzhia Oblast. Another 154 bodies have been repatriated by Russian morgues.
Viktor Orban added: “Europe cannot finance this war alone.”
“Nobody is safe in Ukraine unless Russia stops its aggression,” Estonian Foreign Affairs Minister Margus Tsahkna stated in a social media post on Nov. 8th.
General Staff report: The Russian army uses munitions like K-51 and RG-VO that are loaded with hazardous chemical substances and are used to counter-riot operations but are prohibited as weapons.
Five times, guided aerial bombs were used by Russia to strike Zaporizhzhia. The attack damaged houses, an apartment building and a cancer hospital.
The missiles that Ukraine will be testing are designed to counter drones and can shoot targets at an elevation of up to two kilometers.
Matthew Miller, spokesperson for the U.S. State Department, said that “it’s not appropriate for us or any other country to force him into it.”
The city is home to the Saratov Oil Refinery (formerly known as Cracking Plant), which is a part of Rosneft – the state-run oil corporation
Since February 2022, Ukraine received over $37 billion of budget support from World Bank partnerships.
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