On Saturday, Russia launched a missile attack on a town in central Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region, killing at least four people.said President Volodymyr Zelensky. Officials said more than a dozen people, including children, were injured and homes and businesses were damaged. President Zelenskiy said a rescue operation was underway. Tsarichanka is located approximately 50 km (30 miles) north of the region's capital, Dnipro.
Former British Ambassador to Russia Sir Tony Brenton said Zelensky was “playing a very sophisticated game” by calling for Ukrainian-controlled areas to be brought under the “NATO umbrella”.. But he added that Ukraine's president had made “quite significant concessions” with a view to a cease-fire and was then willing to negotiate the return of Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory for a long time. President Zelensky has previously suggested that Ukrainian territory under his control should be brought under NATO's umbrella to prevent a “hot phase” of war with Russia. he told Sky News He said such a proposal had never been “officially” proposed and therefore “never considered” by Ukraine.
Ukraine was attacked by 10 Russian drones, eight of which were shot down over Kiev, Cherkasy, Kirovohrad, Dnipropetrovsk and Kherson regions.The Air Force announced on Saturday. One drone returned to Russian-occupied territory, but the last one disappeared from radar, which is often a sign of the use of electronic defense.
11 Ukrainian drones shot down by Russian air defensessaid the Ministry of Defense. Andrei Proshnin, the mayor of Sochi in southwestern Russia, and Sergei Melikov, head of Russia's Dagestan region, said drones had been destroyed in both regions overnight and into Saturday. No casualties were reported.
Ukraine asks Latin American parliamentarians, diplomats to help defend country During the war with Russia. Representatives from Argentina, Belize, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, El Salvador, Ecuador, Peru and Costa Rica traveled to Kyiv for talks with Volodymyr Zelensky.
North Macedonian police arrest Macedonian on suspicion of joining Russian forces to fight in Ukraineaccording to the same Ministry of the Interior. This is the first time a Macedonian has been charged with a specific crime. The man, identified only as JK, could be sentenced to at least three years in prison if convicted. The ministry said the suspect had been in online contact with someone claiming to have been ordered by the Russian military to recruit soldiers for a fee of 3,000 euros (about $3,175). The suspect flew to Moscow in October and was interrogated at Skopje airport when he returned to North Macedonia a week later.





