Ukrainians can’t be intimidated by Russian missile strikes - Britain at UN
Russia will not be able to intimidate Ukrainians and force them to surrender by launching missile strikes on Ukraine.
09 March 2024
Russia will not be able to intimidate Ukrainians and force them to surrender by launching missile strikes on Ukraine.
Twelve regions across Ukraine have already started the sowing of spring grain and leguminous crops.
08 March 2024
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky said that, according to the special services, he had been assassinated more than 10 times.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis addressed the Kremlin during a conference of the European People's Party in Bucharest after witnessing a Russian air strike on Odesa.
The Presidential Office on Thursday hosted a briefing chaired by Head of the Presidential Office Andriy Yermak on the security situation in Ukraine and other topical issues for the delegation of the People's Republic of China headed by Li Hui, Special Representative of the Chinese Government for Eurasian Affairs.
07 March 2024
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky will pay an official visit to Türkiye tomorrow, March 8.
It could not be ruled out that a Russian missile strike on Odesa port on March 6 had targeted the delegations of Volodymyr Zelensky or Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, a top Ukrainian presidential adviser said.
06 March 2024
During their visit to the Odesa port, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis inspected the functioning of the "grain corridor" in the Black Sea, created in August 2023.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis have listened to information from the military command regarding the security situation in Odesa and discussed the bolstering of air defenses, notably in the Odesa region.
04 March 2024
Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal finds it important to study the question of why the export of Russian goods to the EU has been on the rise after the full-scale invasion.
The Ukrainian side will later announce the amount of damage caused by the blockade of the Polish-Ukrainian border, but Poland is losing more than Ukraine.
Two years ago, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. With the expansion and escalaction of the war theater, the information component of aggression was also enhanced. Kremlin propaganda simultaneously tries to justify an unprovoked attack, discredit Ukraine in the eyes of the international community and strip the nation of much needed support, demoralize and disorient the Ukrainians, and minimize the country’s ability to resist aggression.
03 March 2024
The situation on Ukraine's border with Poland, where the traffic of trucks has been blocked, has gone beyond economics and morality long ago.
Ukraine will continue to develop the Grain from Ukraine humanitarian program.
02 March 2024
In February 2024, Ukraine shipped 8 million tonnes of goods via its maritime corridor, including 5.2 million tonnes of domestically produced agricultural products.
01 March 2024
The Russian-Ukrainian war, now in its third year, is a reflection of the crises in the international system. Turkey is now, as before, ready to facilitate peace talks, as it considers itself a pioneer in solving problems in the region.
From now on, the Unity insurance program will cover not only sea transportation of grain and other important food products, but also ships carrying any non-military cargoes.
29 February 2024
Poland will study Latvia's experience in imposing an embargo on imports of agricultural products from Russia and may soon take similar steps.
28 February 2024
Turkey supports the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, stands for a just and lasting solution to the war in Ukraine, and is ready to host "peace talks" between Russia and Ukraine again.
The cap on the import of agricultural products from Ukraine to Poland, proposed by Brussels and Kyiv, are "unacceptable" for Warsaw so Poland is eyeing the possibility of temporarily closing the border for Ukrainian products.
Ukrainian grain spilling out of vehicles in Poland is unacceptable, and the Polish authorities will respond to such manifestations of anarchy and detain the perpetrators.
26 February 2024
Latvia has banned the import of Russian grain at the legislative level, and is now proposing that the EU undertake similar measures, since all such products can be replaced by cereals harvested in Ukraine.
Russia’s military launched two S-300 missile strikes at the settlement of Pisochyn in Kharkiv region on February 25.
Ukraine’s Ambassador to Poland, Vasyl Zvarych, called on the Polish authorities to do their utmost to find and prosecute those responsible for dumping Ukrainian grain from vehicles and rail cars heading via Poland.
25 February 2024
The Russian Navy has repeatedly been forced to reconsider its risk appetite following the successes of Ukraine’s Defense Forces in asymmetric strikes.
President Volodymyr Zelensky said that he would not like to see a border between Polish and Ukrainian societies and that it is important for Ukraine to maintain its alliance with Poland.
On the night of February 25, Ukrainian agricultural products were dumped from eight railroad cars at the Polish railway station Kotomierz, causing 160 tonnes of grain to be damaged.
In January, Ukraine exported 12 million tonnes of grain through the maritime corridor, equivalent to the pre-war volume.
The ongoing crisis around the export of Ukrainian grain on the border with Poland is caused by three factors.
Due to the modernization and strengthening of air defense systems that protect Ukrainian ports, grain exports reached pre-war levels.