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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Mabel Banfield-Nwachi, Martin Belam and Jordyn Beazley

UK will train Ukraine pilots, Sunak tells Zelenskiy; Russia and Iran appear to be expanding cooperation, US says – as it happened

Evening summary

It is almost 9pm in Kyiv. Here is a round-up of some of the day’s main stories:

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy visited Chequers in Buckinghamshire for talks with the UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak on Monday. Sunak said Britain would provide Ukraine with hundreds of air defence missiles and further unmanned aerial systems, including new long-range attack drones with a range of more than 200km, to be delivered over the coming months. Zelenskiy’s visit comes off the back of trips to Berlin and Paris, and with the UK last week having pledged to send longer ranger cruise missiles to support Ukraine’s efforts to oust Russian forces from its territory.

  • The United States is seeing more indications that Russia and Iran are expanding an unprecedented defence partnership that will help Moscow prolong its war in Ukraine as well as pose a threat to Iran’s neighbours. Iran reportedly provided Russia with one-way attack drones, including more than 400 since august, US national security adviser John Kirby said at a news briefing.

  • The World Health Organization’s European office decided to close a specialised WHO office in Moscow and move its functions to Denmark. Calls from members to shut the office came last year over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

  • Belarusian president, Alexander Lukashenko, inadvertently confirmed on Monday that four military aircraft had been shot down over Russia last week near the borders of Ukraine and Belarus, saying the capital city Minsk had responded by putting its armed forces on high alert. Photos also emerged of Lukashenko today visiting an air force installation, who had not been seen since 9 May, which caused speculation about his health.

  • Data published on the Federal Treasury’s online budget portal Russia spent 2tn roubles (£21bn) on defence in January and February alone. This is a 282% jump on the same period a year ago, data on the budget portal showed, illustrating the spiralling costs for Moscow of its conflict in Ukraine.

  • Russia’s defence ministry said it scrambled a fighter jet today to prevent French and German patrol aircraft from entering its airspace over the Baltic Sea after it detected them flying towards Russia. Russia said the flights were being conducted by a German P-3C patrol aircraft and a French Atlantic-2 maritime patrol jet.

  • Russia’s defence ministry has claimed for the first time today that it had downed a long-range Storm Shadow missile supplied to Ukraine by Britain, which announced last week that it was providing them. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said earlier on Monday that Russia viewed Britain’s decision to supply the missiles “extremely negatively”.

  • UN aid chief, Martin Griffiths, said today that efforts will continue to extend a deal allowing the safe Black Sea export of Ukraine grain, a pact Moscow has threatened to quit on 18 May over obstacles to its grain and fertiliser exports, Reuters reports.

  • Ahead of the trip Zelenskiy’s trip to the UK on Monday, he tweeted: “The UK is a leader when it comes to expanding our capabilities on the ground and in the air. This cooperation will continue today. I will meet my friend Rishi. We will conduct substantive negotiations face-to-face and in delegations.”

  • Sunak said in a statement: “This is a crucial moment in Ukraine’s resistance to a terrible war of aggression they did not choose or provoke. They need the sustained support of the international community to defend against the barrage of unrelenting and indiscriminate attacks that have been their daily reality for over a year. We must not let them down.”

  • Zelenskiy issued a new appeal to Nato on Monday to make a “positive political decision” on Kyiv’s membership at its July summit. Zelenskiy made his remarks in a video address to the Copenhagen democracy summit. He said that Finland joining Nato showed the strength of security guarantees, and thanked Denmark and other allies for their resolve in assisting Ukraine against Russia.

  • The defence of Bakhmut continues and recent days have shown that Ukraine can move forward and counter the Russian forces there, the commander of Ukrainian ground forces, Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, said on Monday.

Updated

Photos and videos emerged showing Alexander Lukashenko visiting an air force installation in Belarus today, AP reports.

The 68-year-old was last seen on 9 May and there had been speculation about his health.

He is a close ally of Russian president, Vladimir Putin, allowing the Kremlin to use his country as a staging ground for its war in neighboring Ukraine, although he has stopped short of committing his troops to the conflict

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, speaks to officers as he visits the Central Command Post of the air force and air defence forces in Belarus, Monday, 15 May 2023.
Belarusian president, Alexander Lukashenko, speaks to officers as he visits the Central Command Post of the air force and air defence forces in Belarus, Monday 15 May 2023. Photograph: AP

Updated

Russia and Iran appear to be expanding defence cooperation, US says

The United States is seeing more indications that Russia and Iran are expanding an unprecedented defence partnership that will help Moscow prolong its war in Ukraine as well as pose a threat to Iran’s neighbours, Reuters reports.

As part of the cooperation, Iran is providing Russia with one-way attack drones, including more than 400 since August, US national security adviser John Kirby said at a news briefing.

Updated

The World Health Organization’s European office decided to close a specialised WHO office in Moscow and move its functions to Denmark, AFP reports.

The move, which was decided during a virtual session held today, follows calls from members last year to shut the office over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The session was also convened after a group of 30 member states requested a special session in a letter in April, which noted that the “immediate and long-term health impacts in Ukraine and beyond” caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine “continue to be a matter of utmost concern”.

A majority of the 53 European region member states agreed to the decision, which means the closure of the health body’s “Office for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases,” in Moscow, with its functions to be relocated to the regional office in Denmark “no later than” 1 January 2024.

The matter does however not concern the WHO’s country office for Russia.

Updated

Belarusian president, Alexander Lukashenko, inadvertently confirmed on Monday that four military aircraft had been shot down over Russia last week near the borders of Ukraine and Belarus, saying the capital city Minsk had responded by putting its armed forces on high alert, Reuters reports.

The Russian news outlet Kommersant reported on Saturday that a Russian raiding party comprising an Su-34 fighter-bomber, an Su-35 fighter and two Mi-8 helicopters had been shot down in an ambush near Klintsy in Russia’s Bryansk region. It said they had been due to attack targets in the Chernihiv region of Ukraine, directly over the border.

The Russian state news agency Tass said on Saturday that a Russian Su-34 warplane had crashed, but did not specify a cause, and cited emergency services as saying an engine fire had brought down a helicopter. It did not mention the Su-35 or a second helicopter, although several heavily followed Russian pro-war military bloggers also said the four aircraft had been shot down.

The Pul Pervovo Telegram channel, a Belarusian state outlet that reports on Lukashenko’s activities, said on Monday that he had visited an air force command base, and quoted him as saying:

Three days after the events near us – I mean in the Bryansk region, when four aircraft were shot down. We are forced to respond. Since then, we, our troops, have been on high alert.

Lukashenko’s reported visit to the base was his first public appearance in almost a week, after speculation over the health of the 68-year-old leader.

The Russian defence ministry did not respond to a request for comment on the Kommersant report. There was also no official response to the incident from Ukraine.

Updated

Russia spent 2tn roubles (£21bn) on defence in January and February alone, a 282% jump on the same period a year ago, data on the budget portal showed, illustrating the spiralling costs for Moscow of its conflict in Ukraine, Reuters reports.

The data, published on the Federal Treasury’s online budget portal, gives specific insight into military expenditure. According to the data, defence spending amounted to 1.18tn roubles in January and 822.4bn roubles in February.

Data published last week showed that Russia’s budget deficit stood at 3.4tn roubles for January to April, compared with a 1.2tn-rouble surplus in 2022, as Moscow has spent heavily and energy revenues have dropped.

The data shows Russia spent just over 40% of its planned annual allocation for the defence sector in January-February. Last year, Russia spent 5.51tn roubles, or 17.1% of its total expenditure on defence, up from 3.57tn roubles, or 14.4%, in 2021.

In January-February 2023, national defence spending was 36.2% of the total budget expenditure, nearly double the amount spent on social policy and almost four times more than spending on the “national economy”.

Updated

Russia claims it scrambled jet to stop French and German patrol flights entering airspace

Russia’s defence ministry said it scrambled a fighter jet today to prevent French and German patrol aircraft from entering its airspace over the Baltic Sea after it detected them flying towards Russia, Reuters reports.

Russia said the flights were being conducted by a German P-3C patrol aircraft and a French Atlantic-2 maritime patrol jet. After the Russian jet was scrambled and the French and German ones turned away from Russia, the Su-27 returned to base, the defence ministry said.

In a statement, the defence ministry said:

Two air targets were detected approaching Russia’s state border.

In order to identify the targets and prevent the Russian state border being violated, an Su-27 fighter from the Baltic Fleet air force was scrambled.

Russia’s defence ministry said today it had scrambled fighter jets to prevent French and German patrol aircraft from entering its airspace over the Baltic Sea, Reuters reports.

More details soon …

Updated

Here are some of the latest images to be sent to us from near Bakhmut, Ukraine over the news wires, where battles continue as Russia controls most of the city.

Ukrainian soldiers fire a cannon near Bakhmut, where fierce battles against Russian forces have been taking place, in the Donetsk region, Ukraine.
Ukrainian soldiers fire a cannon near Bakhmut, where fierce battles against Russian forces have been taking place, in the Donetsk region, Ukraine. Photograph: Libkos/AP
Ukrainian soldiers fire a cannon near Bakhmut, an eastern city where fierce battles against Russian forces have been taking place, in the Donetsk region.

Updated

UN aid chief, Martin Griffiths, said today that efforts will continue in the coming days to extend a deal allowing the safe Black Sea export of Ukraine grain, a pact Moscow has threatened to quit on 18 May over obstacles to its grain and fertiliser exports, Reuters reports.

In a UN security council meeting on Ukraine, Griffiths said:

Continuation of the Black Sea Initiative is critically important, as is recommitment by the parties to its smooth and efficient operation.

We will continue to call on all to meet their responsibilities as the world watches us very closely.

Updated

The Russian embassy in London has been rather less impressed on social media with Zelenskiy’s visit.

Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. By April 2023 the UN had recorded 18,280 civilian casualties – 6,596 people killed and 11,684 injured – in territory controlled by Ukraine’s government since Russia began the campaign.

Here is another official photo that has been issued of the meeting this morning between Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Rishi Sunak.

A handout photo made available by the British prime minister's Downing Street office.
A handout photo made available by the British prime minister's Downing Street office. Photograph: Simon Dawson/NO 10 DOWNING STREET HANDOUT/EPA

An image of the guest book has also been released by the UK government, carrying the message “together we will win”.

A handout photo made available by Downing Street shows the visitor's book signed by Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
A handout photo made available by Downing Street shows the visitor's book signed by Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Photograph: Simon Dawson/NO 10 DOWNING STREET HANDOUT/EPA

The UK’s defence secretary, Ben Wallace, is taking questions live in parliament in London. You can watch live on this blog. You may need to refresh the page for the play button to appear.

Updated

There are conflicting and unverified reports that the Russian-installed minister of the interior for the occupying authorities in Luhansk has been injured in an explosion.

Tass is reporting that law enforcement agencies of the region have told it that Igor Kornet was among five people reported injured when a grenade exploded in a hairdressing salon in central Luhansk.

The Telegram channel used by Leonid Pasechnik, the Russian-imposed leader in occupied Luhansk, has reported “seven people were injured. All the wounded were hospitalised in medical institutions of the republic. Four men are in serious condition, including a 17-year-old, as well as acting minister of internal affairs Igor Kornet. Doctors are fighting for the lives of the victims.”.

None of the claims have been independently verified.

The RIA Novosti agency has carried some video footage of what appears to be the aftermath of an explosion, and the Guardian has seen still images which purport to show wounded people at the location, but it remains unclear what happened.

More details soon …

Updated

Here is the video clip of Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Rishi Sunak together earlier.

The German Football Association (DFB) vice- president, Hermann Winkler, on Monday apologised for a social media post mocking the visit of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to Berlin at the weekend.

Reuters reports Winkler had complained about road closures and other security restrictions, saying “at least the Soviet Memorial in Treptower Park is still standing for now”. He said the city had shut down for the visit “of a former Ukrainian actor.”

Winkler, who has since deleted his post, apologised and said he also had a discussion with the DFB leadership on the matter. Germany will host the Euro 2024 competition.

Updated

Here are some of the latest images to be sent to us from Ukraine over the news wires, including from areas occupied by Russia.

Local resident Vladimir Kopytkov, 62, inside a flat which Russian-imposed authorities claim was damaged by recent shelling in Yasinovataya in occupied Donetsk.
Local resident Vladimir Kopytkov, 62, inside a flat which Russian-imposed authorities claim was damaged by recent shelling in Yasinovataya in occupied Donetsk. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
A local resident inside a block of flats damaged by recent shelling in Yasinovataya town in Russian-occupied Donetsk.
A local resident inside a block of flats damaged by recent shelling in Yasinovataya town in Russian-occupied Donetsk. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
People are seen inside a volunteer centre amid in Chasiv Yar.
People are seen inside a volunteer centre amid in Chasiv Yar. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
A car and a block of flats which authorities claim was damaged by recent Ukrainian shelling in Russian-occupied Luhansk.
A car and a block of flats which authorities claim was damaged by recent Ukrainian shelling in Russian-occupied Luhansk. Photograph: Reuters

Russia claims it shot down a British Storm Shadow missile in Ukraine

Russia’s defence ministry has claimed for the first time today that it had downed a long-range Storm Shadow missile supplied to Ukraine by Britain, which announced last week that it was providing them, Reuters reports.

The ministry said in its daily briefing on the Ukraine conflict that it had shot down the cruise missile, as well as shorter-range US-built Himars-launcher and HARM missiles. The claims have not been independently verified.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said earlier on Monday that Russia viewed Britain’s decision to supply the missiles “extremely negatively”.

Ukraine says it has already used the longer range missiles to strike at targets deeper within Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine.

Updated

Britain says it will send long-range drones and train pilots as Zelenskiy visits Sunak in UK

Here is a recap of events earlier today, when Ukraine’s president made an unannounced visit to the UK:

Britain promised the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, long-range attack drones when he visited the country today as part of a European tour aimed at securing new weapons for a counteroffensive against Russia.

Zelenskiy met prime minister Rishi Sunak at the British leader’s Chequers country residence, where the pair also discussed Ukraine’s request for western fighter jets.

Britain said it would begin basic training of Ukrainian pilots this summer “hand in hand with UK efforts to work with other countries on providing F-16 jets”.

Sunak said Britain would provide Ukraine with hundreds of air defence missiles and further unmanned aerial systems, including new long-range attack drones with a range of more than 200km, to be delivered over the coming months. It remains unclear exactly what type of drones the announcement referred to.

Sunak’s spokesperson confirmed again that Britain had no plans to send fighter jets directly to Ukraine.

The Ukrainians made the decision to train their pilots on F-16s and you will know the RAF don’t use those,” he said.

In response, the Kremlin said Russia takes an “extremely negative” view of Britain’s decision to supply Ukraine with more military hardware but does not believe London’s help will change the course of the conflict.

Sunak said:

The conflict is at a pivotal moment. The UK will remain steadfast in supporting Ukraine and its people to defend itself … it is important for the Kremlin to also know that we are not going away. We are here for the long term.

Updated

Prigozhin tries to laugh off reports he was in contact with Ukraine's military intelligence

Andrew Roth, the Guardian’s Moscow correspondent, reports:

Yevgeny Prigozhin, the self-acknowledged founder of the Russian paramilitary army Wagner, has tried to laugh off a report published in the Washington Post that claimed he had offered to reveal Russian military positions to Ukrainian intelligence if Kyiv pulled its troops back from the battlefield city of Bakhmut.

Yet the rate and tone of his denials as of Monday afternoon could indicate that the Russian warlord is getting nervous about being regarded as a traitor.

The explosive report was based on information from the Discord leaks and was corroborated by intelligence sources, the Washington Post said. [See 6.10 BST]

“They could have put more effort into it and [falsified] some telephone screenshots,” Prigozhin said on Monday of the reporting, which suggested he had held direct meetings with officers from Ukraine’s military intelligence (HUR) in Africa.

In another statement, he claimed he hadn’t been in Africa since before the beginning of the conflict and blamed his enemies for “pouring shit on me”, suggesting it could be “people from Rublyovka”, an expensive area just outside Moscow, meaning his enemies could be in the Russian establishment.

For Prigozhin, it would be an obvious act of treason to suggest revealing Russian military positions. The bloodthirsty businessman with ties to Vladimir Putin has grown more erratic in recent weeks, as he has engaged in a growing conflict with the Russian military and defence minister Sergei Shoigu, whom he has accused of depriving his men of artillery shells.

But directly collaborating with the enemy would be a big escalation on Prigozhin’s part and one that he would know would leave him vulnerable to his enemies inside Russia and abroad.

He also has a long track record in Russia of trolling and toying with his enemies, helping found bot farms, fake newspapers and the now-notorious paramilitary group that he is said to bankroll.

Tatiana Stanovaya, the founder of the R.Politik analysis firm, wrote that she “did not believe” that Prigozhin was an open traitor. She, like other analysts, suggested that even if contacts with Ukrainian military intelligence were confirmed, that would not directly imply that he was betraying the Kremlin.

First, Prigozhin’s “‘Betrayal’ could be a special task – to lead a counteroffensive into a trap”, she wrote on Monday. “2. Betrayal would be very beneficial to Prigozhin’s enemies inside and outside Russia.”

Updated

Jennifer Rankin reports from Brussels

The EU is ready to enforce sanctions against foreign companies helping Russia evade trade restrictions, the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has reiterated.

The EU’s 27 member states are discussing plans to blacklist several Chinese companies for their role in supplying Russia with goods banned under western sanctions. The proposal is part of a wider set of measures to clamp down on countries in the Caucasus, Central Asia and Middle East believed to be helping Russia dodge western sanctions.

Some EU member states, led by Germany, the EU’s export powerhouse, fear that targeting China and other non-EU countries could drive them closer into an alliance with Russia.

Asked about this at a press conference, Von der Leyen did not respond directly, or name specific countries, but doubled down on the commission’s approach.

She said:

[The EU proposal was] basically a warning that we’re serious about our sanctions, that we could ban these goods from going to a third country, if there is clear evidence that this is a circumvention of time of sanctions and [there are] deliveries to Russia”.

Von der Leyen, with EU council president Charles Michel, will represent the EU at an upcoming Council of Europe summit in Reykjavik and a G7 gathering in Hiroshima.

Ahead of these events, she said countries had a duty to show “the same level of stamina, perseverance” that she had witnessed from Ukrainians on a visit to Kyiv last week.

Leaders should rally behind two main principles, Von der Leyen said:

One is that we will keep supporting Ukraine for as long as it takes and the second principle is nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine. As long as it takes must translate basically into stable financial support, of course also beyond 2023, and accelerated military support focused on the now and here. And nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine means very strong support for President Zelenskiy’s peace formula.

Updated

Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, on Monday lauded “important and powerful” military aid from Britain, France and Germany, and said he was pleased with agreements reached during a tour of Europe, Reuters reports.

Zelenskiy said:

The priority [during our talks] was our counteroffensive actions, I am very pleased with the achievements and agreements.

Updated

Stoltenberg: no point discussing how Ukraine can join Nato if it does not prevail in war first

Nato’s secretary general has said he expects the alliance to agree a “multi-year programme” to assist Ukraine in its desire to join the organisation, and that there was no “meaning in discussing when and how Ukraine can become a member of the alliance” unless it prevails in the war “as a sovereign independent nation in Europe”.

At the Copenhagen democracy summit, Jens Stoltenberg was being interviewed by one of his predecessor at the helm of Nato, Anders Fogh Rasmussen. He said

Nato allies will, when they meet in July, the heads of state and government, they will send a very clear message of support to Ukraine, and this will be manifested in many different ways.

When it comes to membership. I expect that Nato allies will say that Ukraine will become a member of the alliance. This has been stated several times.

Ukraine has the right to choose his own path. It is not for Moscow to decide what Ukraine can do, it is for Ukraine. And it is for Nato allies to decide on the issue of membership … and of course those the Nato’s door remains open.

I also expect that we will agree a multi-year programme for Ukraine where we will work on how to help Ukraine transition from Soviet-era standards, doctrines and equipment to Nato standard doctrines and equipment, and to become fully interoperable with Nato. And of course, to do that also helps them to move towards Nato membership.

I also strongly believe that all allies will state that of course, the most urgent task now, is to ensure that Ukraine prevails. That President Putin do not does not win this war.

Because it is only if Ukraine prevails as a sovereign independent nation in Europe, that there is any meaning in discussing when and how Ukraine can become a member of the alliance.

Britain has no plans to send fighter jets to Ukraine after the Ukrainian military indicated it would prefer to use F-16 fighter jets, the UK’s prime minister Rishi Sunak’s spokesperson said on Monday, Reuters reports.

Asked if Britain would send fighter jets to Ukraine, the spokesperson said:

There are no plans to do that. The Ukrainians made the decision to train their pilots on F-16s and you will know the RAF don’t use those.

On Twitter, the head of the Ukrainan president’s office, Andriy Yermak, said he is with Volodymyr Zelenskiy in the UK, working on “strengthening defence support”.

In a tweet, he said:

Today in 🇬🇧 together with the president Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

Our team is working on strengthening defence support and Euro-Atlantic integration.

And we understand that we don’t have time for certain issues to “ride” – they must “fly”.

Updated

Sunak: 'not a straightforward thing' to supply fighter jets to Ukraine

The UK’s prime minister, Rishi Sunak, has said the UK will be ready to help train Ukrainian pilots to use western fighter jets “relatively soon” but says it is “not a straightforward thing”, PA reports.

Speaking after his talk with the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, at Chequers, Sunak said:

We are going to be a key part of the coalition of countries that provides that support to Volodymyr and Ukraine.

It is not a straightforward thing as Volodymyr and I have been discussing to build up that fighter combat aircraft capability.

It’s not just the provision of planes, it is also the training of pilots and all the logistics that go alongside that, and the UK can play a big part in that.

One thing we will be doing starting actually relatively soon is training of Ukrainian pilots and that’s something we’ve discussed today and we’re ready to implement those plans in relatively short order.

Updated

Russia takes an “extremely negative” view of Britain’s decision to supply Ukraine with more military hardware such as long-range attack drones, but does not believe it will change the course of the conflict, Reuters reports.

Asked about Britain’s military aid, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said:

We take an extremely negative view of this. Britain is trying to be one of the leading countries which keeps pumping weapons into Ukraine.

It cannot have any significant or major impact on the course of the special military operation

But it all leads to more destruction, to further military action and so on. So for Ukraine, it makes things much more complex.

“Special military operation” is Russia’s preferred term for its invasion of Ukraine.

Updated

Earlier, Rishi Sunak noted that today’s meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskiy at the prime minister’s country estate of Chequers was taking place in the buildup to a Council of Europe leaders’ meeting in Iceland and a G7 summit in Japan later this week.

“The frontlines of Putin’s war of aggression may be in Ukraine but the fault lines stretch all over the world,” Sunak said.

Zelenskiy told broadcasters after the meeting that the supply of jets was crucial to Ukraine.

“Today we spoke about the jets. Very important topic for us because we can’t control the sky,” he said, adding that Ukraine and the UK were “real partners,” with Sunak being informed of details of developments on the battlefield.

Britain's prime minister, Rishi Sunak (L), walks with Ukraine's President, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, after greeting him on his arrival.
Britain's prime minister, Rishi Sunak (L), walks with Ukraine's President, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, after greeting him on his arrival. Photograph: Reuters

UK’s prime minister, Rishi Sunak, has said he discussed “long-term” security arrangements from allied countries for Ukraine to protect itself against “future Russian aggression” in his meeting with the country’s leader, PA reports.

Speaking to broadcasters after his talk with Volodymyr Zelenskiy at Chequers, the prime minister said:

Another topic of conversation we’ve had today is about the security arrangements we should put in place among allied countries for Ukraine for the long term to ensure it can defend itself and provide effective deterrence against future Russian aggression.

Updated

Zelenskiy discussed 'coalition of jets' with Sunak on UK visit

Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said that he discussed “a coalition of jets” in discussions with the British prime minister at Chequers today.

“I see that in the closest time, you will hear some, I think, very important decisions but we have to work a little bit more on it,” he said after a meeting with Sunak.

Earlier the UK government said “This summer we will commence an elementary flying phase for cohorts of Ukrainian pilots to learn basic training. This will adapt the programme used by UK pilots to provide Ukrainians with piloting skills they can apply a different kind of aircraft. This training goes hand in hand with UK efforts to work with other countries on providing F16 jets – Ukraine’s fighter jets of choice.”

However, so far London has been reluctant to directly supply modern jet fighters, arguing that it is logistically difficult to put them into operation in Ukraine.

The UK has issued another picture of Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Rishi Sunak together at Chequers earlier today.

Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak (R), shakes hands with Ukraine’s President, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, as he greets him on his arrival at Chequers.
Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak (R), shakes hands with Ukraine’s President, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, as he greets him on his arrival at Chequers. Photograph: Reuters

The Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has left Chequers by helicopter.

Updated

Ukraine cannot rule out that a deal allowing the safe Black Sea export of Ukrainian grain will end on 18 May, when it is due to expire, and no additional talks are planned this week, a foreign ministry official said on Monday, Reuters reports.

Olha Trofimtseva, a foreign ministry ambassador at large, told a briefing that Ukraine was receiving conflicting signals about the future of the deal, the extension of which was discussed at talks in Turkey last week.

She said:

The situation overall (after talks) has not changed much, and we receive quite conflicting information about the grain deal and the possibility of its continuation.

Moscow has threatened to quit the agreement on 18 May unless a list of demands is met to remove obstacles to Russia’s own grain and fertiliser exports. These include lifting western sanctions on the Russian Agricultural bank.

Trofimtseva added:

Such a termination, [Russia’s] exit from the grain initiative is possible, but for everyone and primarily for the Russian side that will mean an escalation of the situation and they will complicate their future negotiation position for themselves.”

She said Ukraine had exported 2.5m tonnes of agricultural goods in April despite a slowdown in the use of the grain corridor, caused by halts in the inspection regime which Ukraine has blamed on Moscow.

Sunak compares Zelenskiy's wartime leadership to Churchill during Chequers welcome

Rishi Sunak has compared Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s wartime leadership to that of Winston Churchill.

Welcoming the Ukrainian leader to Chequers, Sunak said: “You are actually the first foreign leader I have had the privilege of welcoming here as prime minister, and there’s a lot of great history here.

“In fact this room that we are standing in, Winston Churchill made many of his famous speeches in the second world war from this room. And the same way today, your leadership, your country’s bravery and fortitude are an inspiration to us all. I look forward to us discussing what more we can do to support you and your country.”

PA report Zelenskiy thanked the UK for the support shown to Ukraine since the invasion.

As he met Sunak at Chequers, Zelenskiy said: “Your support is already a lot for us, you did a lot – you, your government and his majesty the king and of course your people, your society. We are thankful from all our hearts, from Ukrainians, from our soldiers, we are thankful.”

Zelenskiy said his discussions with Sunak would cover “very important issues, urgent support for Ukraine”.

The crisis was a matter of “security not only for Ukraine, it is important for all of Europe” he added.

Here is some video of the arrival.

Updated

The Kremlin said on Monday that it categorically disagreed with French President Emmanuel Macron, who said that Russia had “entered a form of subservience with regards to China” since being shunned by the west over the conflict in Ukraine, Reuters reports.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Russia’s ties with China were those of a strategic partner and had nothing to do with dependence.

Updated

Summary of the day so far …

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy has arrived at Chequers in Buckinghamshire for talks with the UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak. The prime minister published an image of the pair of them embracing.

  • Zelenskiy’s visit comes off the back of trips to Berlin and Paris, and with the UK last week having pledged to send longer ranger cruise missiles to support Ukraine’s efforts to oust Russian forces from its territory.

  • Ahead of the trip Zelenskiy tweeted: “The UK is a leader when it comes to expanding our capabilities on the ground and in the air. This cooperation will continue today. I will meet my friend Rishi. We will conduct substantive negotiations face-to-face and in delegations.”

  • Sunak said in a statement:“This is a crucial moment in Ukraine’s resistance to a terrible war of aggression they did not choose or provoke. They need the sustained support of the international community to defend against the barrage of unrelenting and indiscriminate attacks that have been their daily reality for over a year. We must not let them down.”

  • Zelenskiy issued a new appeal to Nato on Monday to make a “positive political decision” on Kyiv’s membership at its July summit. Zelenskiy made his remarks in a video address to the Copenhagen democracy summit. He said that Finland joining Nato showed the strength of security guarantees, and thanked Denmark and other allies for their resolve in assisting Ukraine against Russia.

  • The defence of Bakhmut continues and recent days have shown that Ukraine can move forward and counter the Russian forces there, the commander of Ukrainian ground forces, Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, said on Monday.

  • Suspilne, Ukraine’s state broadcaster, is reporting that four people have been killed in a Russian strike on a hospital in Avdiivka, in Donetsk oblast.

  • Leonid Pasechnik, the Russian-installed head of Ukraine’s occupied Luhansk region, has posted to Telegram to say that there are no casualties reported from the earlier reported Ukrainian shelling of Luhansk.

  • Ukraine’s foreign ministry has said no additional negotiations on the Black Sea grain initiative are planned for this week.

  • Russia’s air defences continue to be compromised after a core airbase in the western part of the country was struck by several uncrewed aerial vehicles on 3 May, the latest UK intelligence briefing has said. Russia’s Seshcha airbase, located 150km north of the Ukrainian border, has played a major role in enabling Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and is also used to launch uncrewed aerial vehicles towards Kyiv.

  • South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Monday the country’s non-aligned position did not favour Russia over other states and reiterated its call for a peaceful resolution to the conflict in Ukraine.

  • A top Chinese envoy will begin a tour of Ukraine, Russia and other European cities on Monday in a trip Beijing says is aimed at discussing a “political settlement” to the Ukraine crisis. Li Hui, China’s special representative for Eurasian affairs and former ambassador to Russia, will also visit Poland, France, Germany on the multi-day trip.

  • Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the Wagner mercenary force, allegedly offered to reveal the position of Russian troops to the Ukranian government, the Washington Post reported on Sunday, citing leaked US intelligence documents.

Updated

Our defence and security editor Dan Sabbagh has some further thoughts on what those long-range drones the UK has promised Ukraine might be, after earlier the Ministry of Defence was unable to specify them.

Four killed in Russian strike on hospital in Avdiivka – reports

Suspilne, Ukraine's state broadcaster, is reporting that four people have been killed in Avdiivka, in Donetsk oblast. It writes:

On the morning of 15 May, Russian troops launched an air missile attack on Avdiivka. Rockets hit the hospital where people were hiding. According to preliminary data, four civilians were killed

The claims have not been independently verified.

Here is a screengrab of Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Rishi Sunak together at Chequers earlier this morning.

Rishi Sunak (right) with President Zelenskiy at Chequers this morning
Rishi Sunak (right) with President Zelenskiy at Chequers this morning Photograph: BBC News

Reuters has a quick snap that Ukraine’s foreign ministry has said no additional negotiations on the Black Sea grain initiative are planned for this week.

As Ukraine’s president visits the UK, the Guardian’s Berlin bureau chief Philip Oltermann recaps how his weekend trip to Germany went:

On Sunday Volodymyr Zelenskiy welcomed Germany’s “powerful support” in the form of an aid package worth nearly $3bn, as he was awarded the prestigious Charlemagne prize.

Over the weekend Berlin announced Germany’s largest pledge in military aid since the start of the war. In a statement, the German defence ministry said the package would include 30 Leopard and 20 Marder tanks from industrial reserves, as well as armoured personnel carriers, reconnaissance drones and ammunition.

At the Charlmagne ceremony in the western German city of Aachen, Zelenskiy thanked chancellor Olaf Scholz for his “fantastic solidarity”, saying “everything in this security package will significantly strengthen our defence”. The Charlemagne Prize, named after the Frankish founder of what became the Holy Roman empire, is the oldest prize to be awarded for services to European unification.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy (C) speaks on Sunday next to (L-R) European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Poland’s prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and European parliament president Roberta Metsola after he was awarded the International Charlemagne prize.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy (C) speaks on Sunday next to (L-R) European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Poland’s prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and European parliament president Roberta Metsola after he was awarded the International Charlemagne prize. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Scholz said Europe had to thank the Ukrainian people for standing up for European values in the face of Russian aggression. “We stand together!”, the Social Democrat politician said. “We belong together! And: our joint history will continue.”

The German head of government was more reserved in response to Zelenskiy’s bid for German support for a “fighter jet coalition”, which the Ukrainian president described as the main concern behind his tour of European capitals.

Updated

Our defence and security editor, Dan Sabbagh, suggests there is some confusion over what the promise of long-range drones from the UK to Ukraine actually means.

Updated

Zelenskiy arrives in the UK to meet Sunak with Ukraine's Nato membership on agenda

Volodymyr Zelenskiy has arrived at Chequers in Buckinghamshire for talks with the UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak. The prime minister published an image of the pair of them embracing.

Zelenskiy’s visit comes off the back of trips to Berlin and Paris, and with the UK last week having pledged to send longer ranger cruise missiles to support Ukraine’s efforts to oust Russian forces from its territory.

Ahead of the trip Zelenskiy tweeted: “The UK is a leader when it comes to expanding our capabilities on the ground and in the air. This cooperation will continue today. I will meet my friend Rishi. We will conduct substantive negotiations face-to-face and in delegations.”

Sunak said in a statement “This is a crucial moment in Ukraine’s resistance to a terrible war of aggression they did not choose or provoke. They need the sustained support of the international community to defend against the barrage of unrelenting and indiscriminate attacks that have been their daily reality for over a year. We must not let them down.”

Britain announced on Monday that it will send hundreds of new long-range attack drones with a range of over 200km to Ukraine. “Today the prime minister will confirm the further UK provision of hundreds of air defence missiles and further unmanned aerial systems including hundreds of new long-range attack drones with a range of over 200km.”

UK trade minister Nigel Huddleston said he expects President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to ask for more support from the UK, saying “To be honest we’re continually providing more, whether that’s military aid and support, and of course that does come at considerable cost to UK taxpayers, but we believe it’s worth it because we support our friends and allies in need. I’m not at all surprised that Zelenskiy will be coming here asking for more.”

Andriy Yermak from Zelenskiy’s office said that Ukraine’s potential future membership of Nato would be on the agenda. Earlier on Monday, in a video address in Denmark, Zelenskiy said it would be a “timely signal” to “approve a positive political decision on membership in Nato” at July’s Nato summit, which he is due to attend in person.

Updated

Former head of the British army Sir Richard Dannatt has said Ukraine must defeat Russia this year or risk waning western support.

PA report that speaking on Times Radio on Monday, the former chief of the general staff said the Russian military “might crumble” in an anticipated Ukrainian counter-offensive later this year.

He said: “The major counter-offensive which we are all expecting and which the Ukrainians are preparing for has not begun yet but probably is not that far away. If Ukraine is going to succeed in its stated objective of freeing its territory from Russian occupation this is the year they’ve got to do it.

“There is a danger that western support will wane. There is also a danger that Putin will see that time is on his side, so it is really important that the Ukrainians do mount this offensive effectively at the right time.

“If there are decisive blows struck against the Russians there is a chance that Russian military morale might crack and the Russian army might crumble in the way that we saw around Kharkiv last September.”

Suspilne, Ukraine's state broadcaster, is reporting that explosions have been heard in Yevpatoriya, on the west coast of Crimea, which Russia unilaterally annexed from Ukraine in 2014. The claims have not been independently verified.

Zelenskiy arrives at Chequers to meet Sunak

The UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak, has tweeted a picture of Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s arrival at Chequers.

He is the first foreign leader to be invited to the grace and favour residence of the UK prime minister since Sunak took up the role.

Updated

Here is the quote from Volodymyr Zelenskiy about Ukraine joining Nato which he gave in a video address shown at the Copenhagen deomcracy summit.

“It is time to remove the biggest security uncertainty in Europe – that is, to approve a positive political decision on membership in Nato,” Reuters report he said, adding “This is worth doing at the July summit already. This will be a timely signal.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy issued a new appeal to Nato on Monday to make a “positive political decision” on Kyiv’s membership at its July summit.

Reuters reports Zelenskiy made his remarks in a video address to the Copenhagen democracy summit. He said that Finland joining Nato showed the strength of security guarantees, and thanked Denmark and other allies for their resolve in assisting Ukraine against Russia.

Here is a little more from the UK government’s statement about Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s visit to the UK. It says:

In their talks, the prime minister will reiterate the importance the UK places on providing a total package of support to Ukraine to put them in the strongest possible position to secure a lasting peace for their country.

This means the military equipment we provide must be bolstered by training, by economic support, by biting sanctions against Putin’s regime and by long-term security assurances to ensure Ukraine’s sovereignty can never be breached in this way again.

To that end, in the last year the UK has trained 15,000 Ukrainian troops to battlefield readiness. In February the prime minister announced the UK would develop a new training programme for Ukrainian pilots to support their efforts to build a new Ukrainian air force with Nato-standard, F16 jets.

This summer we will commence an elementary flying phase for cohorts of Ukrainian pilots to learn basic training. This will adapt the programme used by UK pilots to provide Ukrainians with piloting skills they can apply a different kind of aircraft. This training goes hand in hand with UK efforts to work with other countries on providing F16 jets – Ukraine’s fighter jets of choice.

Leonid Pasechnik, the Russian-installed head of Ukraine’s occupied Luhansk region, has posted to Telegram to say that there are no casualties reported from the earlier shelling of Luhansk. [See 7.47 BST]

Updated

UK trade minister Nigel Huddleston said he expects President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to ask for more support from the UK when he meets the prime minister later on Monday.

Asked about the visit to Chequers, PA reports Huddleston told LBC: “We’ve got a strong partnership with Ukraine and President Zelenskiy in particular, and this is all part of building that continuing relationship.

“I do think our Ukrainian friends appreciate the support we’ve given them to date and I expect they’re coming here, as we all respect, with Zelenskiy to ask for more.”

Asked whether the UK was prepared to give more support, the minister replied: “To be honest we’re continually providing more, whether that’s military aid and support, and of course that does come at considerable cost to UK taxpayers, but we believe it’s worth it because we support our friends and allies in need.

“I’m not at all surprised that Zelenskiy will be coming here asking for more, but one thing I’ve always seen with him and any of his colleagues coming over is that they’re also very grateful for what we’ve given already.”

Suspilne, Ukraine's state broadcaster reports that in the last 24 hours, six people were killed and three others were injured due to shelling in the Kherson region. It cited the local authority. The claims have not been independently verified.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy will meet Rishi Sunak for talks at Chequers in Buckinghamshire, rather than at Downing Street, during his UK visit, PA reports.

Updated

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Monday the country’s non-aligned position did not favour Russia over other states and reiterated its call for a peaceful resolution to the conflict in Ukraine.

His comments in a weekly presidential newsletter came on the heels of US allegations last week that weapons were loaded on to a Russian ship from a naval base in Cape Town late last year, which sparked a diplomatic row. South African officials swiftly rejected claims made by the US ambassador to South Africa.

“We do not accept that our non-aligned position favours Russia above other countries. Nor do we accept that it should imperil our relations with other countries,” Reuters reports Ramaphosa said.

South Africa would continue to honour international agreements and treaties it is a signatory to and its approach to US allegations of arms shipment would abide by them, he added.

US ambassador Reuben Brigety was summoned on Friday to meet South African foreign minister Naledi Pandor and he apologised “unreservedly” to the government and the people of South Africa, a foreign ministry statement said.

“I was grateful for the opportunity to speak with Foreign Minister Pandor … and correct any misimpressions left by my public remarks,” Brigety said in a tweet that did not confirm whether he had apologised.

Updated

Suspilne is also carrying reports of explosions in occupied Luhansk this morning. On its Telegram channel for the Donbas region, it writes:

On the morning of 15 May, explosions rang out in occupied Luhansk. This information was confirmed to Suspilne by residents of the occupied city. According to them, the smoke is visible from the side of the former Luhansk military aviation school of navigators.

The report is accompanied by a still image which appears to show smoke rising above the city. The claims have not been independently verified. Luhansk is one of four regions of Ukraine that the Russian Federation has claimed to annex.

Suspilne, Ukraine's state broadcaster, has reported that “the air force shot down four Shahed attack drones and one Orlan reconnaissance drone in the east around midnight, the command said.”

The claims have not been independently verified.

Britain to send long-range attack drones to Ukraine

Britain will send hundreds of new long-range attack drones with a range of over 200km to Ukraine, the government said on Monday after President Volodymyr Zelenskiy arrived in the country for talks with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

“Today the prime minister will confirm the further UK provision of hundreds of air defence missiles and further unmanned aerial systems including hundreds of new long-range attack drones with a range of over 200km,” Reuters reports the government said in a statement.

“These will all be delivered over the coming months as Ukraine prepares to intensify its resistance to the ongoing Russian invasion.”

London’s elected mayor Sadiq Khan has also commented on Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s visit to the UK today. He told viewers of Sky News:

I think it is important we show our solidarity. We, of course, had a great time on Saturday [referring to hosting the Eurovision song contest on behalf of Ukraine], but the serious stuff is not to forget the plight of those in Ukraine.

Many women older Ukrainians and children are in London. And it’s really important we’ve opened our doors to Ukrainians

The men are fighting bravely against Putin’s forces, and it’s really important that not just our prime minister, but President Macron and European allies provide continued support to the brave people of Ukraine.

Sunak: 'UK is sustaining our support to Ukraine'

Rishi Sunak has said the UK will be “sustaining our support” for Ukraine as he prepares to meet the country’s leader, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, for talks in London on Monday.

PA quotes the prime minister as saying: “This is a crucial moment in Ukraine’s resistance to a terrible war of aggression they did not choose or provoke.

“They need the sustained support of the international community to defend against the barrage of unrelenting and indiscriminate attacks that have been their daily reality for over a year.

“We must not let them down.

“The frontlines of Putin’s war of aggression may be in Ukraine but the fault lines stretch all over the world. It is in all our interest to ensure Ukraine succeeds and Putin’s barbarism is not rewarded.

“That is why the UK is sustaining our support to Ukraine – from tanks to training, ammunition to armoured vehicles. And this message of solidarity will ring loud in all my meetings with fellow world leaders in the days ahead.”

The statement does not mention aircraft, which has been a repeated request from Ukraine which wants more modern air power to defend its cities.

Updated

A Liverpool man has spoken to the PA news agency, saying there were “so many extremely moving moments” during a trip made by a group of fellow aid workers to his home town for the Eurovision song contest.

Tim Johnson, a 37-year-old IT consultant, brought a group of volunteers: six Ukrainians and six Poles; who have worked with Ukrainians affected by war, to the UK to take part in Eurovision events.

Two of the group travelled from Ukraine via Warsaw, while the others joined Johnson from Poland, to watch two rehearsals for the Eurovision song contest and watch the grand final in Liverpool’s fan village.

One of the volunteers received a message during the show that her Ukrainian home of Ternopil had been attacked shortly before the Ukrainian band, Tvorchi, was to perform.

Johnson said the news of the missile strike on Ternopil – which is also the home town of the Ukrainian act – was a “moment of sheer fear and panic”.

“I had to get her very quickly out of a maintenance gate and try to make a call to check if everyone was alright and luckily her family were, but it’s just another example of what they’re going through.”

Some of the visiting aid workers by the Beatles statue in Liverpool.
Some of the visiting aid workers by the Beatles statue in Liverpool. Photograph: Tim Johnson/PA

In the run-up to the final, the group draped Ukrainian flags on the statue of the Beatles on Liverpool’s waterfront. Johnson said the large flag attracted the attention of passersby, saying: “Literally hundreds of people gathered around taking photos and nobody said a word but you could just feel the huge outpouring of support there.”

He continued: “It was one of those lump-in-the-throat moments. It’s hard not to be moved by so many people gathering around like that and the silent support.”

Updated

On Telegram, Andriy Yermak from Zelenskiy’s office has added a little more detail about the Ukrainian president’s trip to London, saying:

Today there are important meetings in London. We are working on strengthening the defense of Ukraine and supporting our progress with Nato.

Zelenskiy will be attending the next major Nato summit in person, with Ukraine pushing for more concrete steps and a timetable for joining the alliance.

Updated

Volodymyr Zelenskiy to meet Rishi Sunak in London on Monday

Ukraine’s president has announced that he will arrive in London on Monday for talks with UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak. In a tweet, Volodymyr Zelenskiy said:

Today – London. The UK is a leader when it comes to expanding our capabilities on the ground and in the air. This cooperation will continue today. I will meet my friend Rishi. We will conduct substantive negotiations face-to-face and in delegations.

Zelenskiy last visited London in February, when he also met King Charles III, and addressed parliament in Westminster Hall.

Updated

The defence of Bakhmut continues and recent days have shown that Ukraine can move forward and counter the Russian forces there, the commander of Ukrainian ground forces, Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, said on Monday.

“The advance of our troops along the Bakhmut direction – that is the first successful offensive operation in the city’s defence,” Reuters quotes Syrskyi as saying on Ukraine’s media military centre Telegram channek.

“The last few days have shown that we can move forward and destroy the enemy even in such extremely difficult conditions. The operation to defend Bakhmut continues. All necessary decisions for the defence have been made.”

It has been impossible for journalists to independently verify the battlefield situation in fiercely contested Bakhmut for months, with both sides engaged in the war issuing claims and counter-claims about progress.

Updated

Russia’s air defences compromised, says UK MoD

Russia’s air defences continue to be compromised after a core airbase in the western part of the country was struck by several uncrewed aerial vehicles on 3 May, the latest UK intelligence briefing has said.

Russia’s Seshcha Airbase, located 150km north of the Ukrainian border, has played a major role in enabling Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and is also used to launch uncrewed aerial vehicles towards Kyiv.

The briefing said:

The VTA [Russia’s Military Transport Aviation] is a well-resourced element of the Russian Air Force, essential for transport across the vast country. Russian leaders will be concerned that Russia’s air defences continue to be compromised, holding at risk key strategic assets such as VTA bases.

Top Chinese envoy to visit Ukraine, Russia on ‘peace’ mission

A top Chinese envoy will begin a tour of Ukraine, Russia and other European cities on Monday in a trip Beijing says is aimed at discussing a “political settlement” to the Ukraine crisis, Reuters reports.

Li Hui, China’s special representative for Eurasian affairs and former ambassador to Russia, will also visit Poland, France, Germany on the multi-day trip, the foreign ministry announced Friday without providing a detailed schedule.

He is the most senior Chinese official to visit Ukraine since Russia invaded in February last year, and his trip could coincide with the beginnings of a long anticipated counteroffensive by Ukraine to recapture territory seized by Russia.

Increasingly regular series of Russian drone and missile strikes are likely part of a new campaign focussed on Kyiv aimed at degrading Ukrainian abilities to conduct counteroffensive operations, according to US a thinktank.

The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) in its daily update on Monday said Russian forces conducted another series of drone and missile strikes over Saturday and Sunday night. It comes after the forces have conducted at least 10 series of strikes throughout Ukraine since 19 April.

It reported the new air campaign has been more regular than previous Russian campaigns against critical infrastructure, however the forces are using fewer high precision missiles.

Here are the latest images coming across the wires from Ukraine:

Children watch the performance of the group 4.5.0. at the festival in honor of Mother’s Day at the City Garden in Odessa, Ukraine.
Children watch the performance of the group 4.5.0. at the festival in honor of Mother’s Day at the City Garden in Odessa, Ukraine. Photograph: Viacheslav Onyshchenko, SOPA Images/Shutterstock. Photograph: Viacheslav Onyshchenko/SOPA Images/Shutterstock
Soldier who was wounded defending city of Bakhmut lying on a hospital bed.
General Director Ryzhenko Serhii shows soldier who was wounded defending city of Bakhmut. Photopgrah: Lev Radin, Pacific Press/Shutterstock Photograph: Lev Radin/Pacific Press/Shutterstock
Fresh graves of Ukrainian soldier, adorned with flowers and a framed pictures of the soldier.
Fresh graves of Ukrainian soldiers, Chervonohryhorivka, Ukraine. Photograph: Lev Radin, Pacific Press/Shutterstock Photograph: Lev Radin/Pacific Press/Shutterstock
A volunteer FRIDA Ukraine doctor examines her patient in an outpatient centre in Dream Berry in Kyiv.
A volunteer FRIDA Ukraine doctor examines her patient in an outpatient centre in Dream Berry in Kyiv. Photograph: Dominika Zarzycka, SOPA Images/Shutterstock Photograph: Dominika Zarzycka/SOPA Images/Shutterstock
Residential building in Dnipro that was destroyed by a Russian missile. Dozens of people, including children, were killed.
Residential building in Dnipro that was destroyed by a Russian missile. Dozens of people, including children, were killed. Photograph: Lev Radin, Pacific Press/Shutterstock Photograph: Lev Radin/Pacific Press/Shutterstock

Wagner head offered to reveal Russian troop locations to Ukraine

Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the Wagner mercenary force, offered to reveal the position of Russian troops to the Ukranian government, the Washington Post reported on Sunday, citing leaked U.S. intelligence documents.

Wagner’s soldiers have been at the forefront of a bloody Russian offensive to take the city of Bakhmut. In exchange for Ukraine withdrawing its soldiers from the area, Prigozhin in January offered to tell its intelligence service the positions of Russian forces, the Post reported.

The paper said Ukraine rejected the offer.

Prigozhin, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, has publicly threatened to withdraw his mercenaries from the area around Bakhmut, where they are at the vanguard of the Russian offensive, unless they receive much-needed ammunition.

He said Tuesday in an audio message that he and his men would be regarded as traitors if they abandoned the area.

The Post reported Prigozhin’s offer came through his contacts with Ukraine’s intelligence service.

France to send dozens of armoured vehicles, light tanks to Ukraine

France will send to Ukraine in the coming weeks dozens of armoured vehicles and light tanks, including the AMX-10RCs fighting vehicles, according to a joint statement issued after President Emmanuel Macron’s talks with Ukraine’s president, Reuters reports.

After a working dinner that lasted more than three hours between Macron and Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the French presidency indicated that Paris was also concentrating its efforts on supporting Kyiv’s air defence capabilities against Russian strikes.

After securing a bumper $3 billion new military package from Germany over the weekend, Zelenskiy said in Berlin on Sunday that Kyiv and its allies could make a Russian defeat “irreversible” as early as this year.

A source at the French presidency told reporters that additional, more modern defence systems would be made available to Ukraine.

Key event

G7 leaders to target Russian energy, trade in new sanctions steps

Leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) nations plan to tighten sanctions on Russia at their summit in Japan this week, with steps aimed at energy and exports aiding Moscow’s war effort, said officials with direct knowledge of the discussions, Reuters reports.

New measures announced by the leaders during the May 19-21 meetings will target sanctions evasion involving third countries, and seek to undermine Russia’s future energy production and curb trade that supports Russia’s military, the people said.

Separately, U.S. officials also expect G7 members will agree to adjust their approach to sanctions so that, at least for certain categories of goods, all exports are automatically banned unless they are on a list of approved items.

That change could make it harder for Moscow to find gaps in the sanctions regime.

The exact areas where these new rules would apply are still being discussed.

Updated

Opening summary

Hello and welcome back to our coverage of Russia’s war on Ukraine, now in its 446th day. I’m Jordyn Beazley and here’s a look at the latest.

Leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) countries plan to tighten sanctions on Russia at their summit in Japan this week, with steps aimed at energy and exports aiding Moscow’s war effort, officials with direct knowledge of the discussions told the Reuters news agency.

Meanwhile, France has announced dozens more light tanks and armoured vehicles for Ukraine’s army, together with training for the soldiers using them, after talks between the Ukrainian and French presidents in Paris. Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Emmanuel Macron also called for fresh sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. The leaders’ joint statement also said Paris would focus its efforts “in supporting Ukraine’s air defence capacities”.

French president Emmanuel Macron meets with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Paris
French president Emmanuel Macron, left, meets with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Paris. Photograph: Christian Hartmann/Reuters

More on both stories soon. In other developments:

  • The two leaders’ comments came after Zelenskiy flew into France late on Sunday on a whistle-stop tour of Europe and joined Macron for a dinner at the Élysée Palace. Zelenskiy had tweeted earlier as he arrived in France at an airbase in Villacoublay, south-west of Paris: “With each visit, Ukraine’s defense and offensive capabilities are expanding.”

  • Zelenskiy thanked Germany for its support and what he called the largest military aid package since the beginning of Russia’s invasion as he met with president Frank-Walter Steinmeier and the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, in Berlin on Sunday. The trip came after the German government announced a new military package worth €2.7bn as Ukrainian forces prepare for a counteroffensive to reclaim territory captured by Russia.

  • During Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s visit to Germany, he was awarded the prestigious Charlemagne prize on behalf of the Ukrainian people in honour of services to Europe. The Ukrainian president received the award, which honours services to European unification, in the western city of Aachen with Olaf Scholz after their talks in Berlin.

  • Russia has said two of its military commanders were killed in eastern Ukraine, as Kyiv’s forces renewed efforts to break through Russian defences in the embattled city of Bakhmut. The Russian defence ministry said on Sunday that commander Vyacheslav Makarov of the 4th motorised rifle brigade and deputy commander Yevgeny Brovko from a separate unit were killed trying to repel Ukrainian attacks.

  • Russia has “already lost geopolitically” its war in Ukraine and is transforming into a vassal state of China, Emmanuel Macron has said. “De facto, it has entered a form of subservience with regards to China and has lost its access to the Baltic, which was critical, because it prompted the decision by Sweden and Finland to join Nato,” the French president said in an interview with Opinion newspaper published on Sunday.

  • Russian forces are much diminished since the start of the war, the UK Ministry of Defence has said, with troops consisting of mostly poorly trained mobilised reservists and increasingly reliant on antiquated equipment. Many of its units were severely under strength, it said.

Updated

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