Russia has been accused of making “hollow statements about peace” after launching a missile strike that wounded dozens of people, including children, as it held talks with the US on a proposed ceasefire at sea in the war in Ukraine.
Russian and US officials met in Saudi Arabia on Monday, with Ukrainian and American delegations due to gather in Riyadh on Tuesday.
Both Russia and Ukraine have accused the other of undermining efforts to reach a pause in the three-year-old war.
Image: The Ritz-Carlton hotel, where talks between Russia and the US are being held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Pic: Reuters
There was no immediate word on whether an agreement had been hammered out or progress made in Monday’s talks with Russia.
A Russian source told the Reuters news agency that a draft joint statement on the talks’ outcome has been sent to Moscow and Washington for approval, with the parties aiming to release it on Tuesday,
A White House source said the talks have been going “extremely well” and a positive announcement is expected soon.
The talks were expected to cover energy infrastructure and a potential pause in attacks in the Black Sea to ensure the safety of commercial shipping.
In an exchange with reporters at the White House, Donald Trump said territorial lines and the potential for US ownership of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine have been part of the talks.
As the Russia-US meeting was under way, a Russian missile strike damaged a school and a hospital in the northeastern Ukrainian city of Sumy, wounding at least 88 people, including 17 children, according to the local council.
“Moscow speaks of peace while carrying out brutal strikes on densely populated residential areas in major Ukrainian cities,” Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha said.
“Instead of making hollow statements about peace, Russia must stop bombing our cities and end its war on civilians.”
Sumy is about 18.6 miles from the Russian border and is subject to regular drone and missile strikes by Russia.
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Meanwhile, Ukraine’s main intelligence agency claims Russia is recruiting unwitting Ukrainian teenagers to carry out terrorist attacks.
Russian intelligence agencies are promising children easy money on social media for delivering packages, which are remotely detonated, the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said.
The SBU said the Russian Federal Security Service used a 15-year-old boy as an “assassin” in Kharkiv and killed a teenager in Ivano-Frankivsk, western Ukraine.
Sky News cannot independently verify these claims.
As they count the cost of this massive earthquake, the people of Myanmar will be hoping for a silver lining, that the disaster may hasten the fall of their despised dictator.
The catastrophe comes at a very bad time for General Min Aung Hlaing, who seized power in a coup four years ago.
The Myanmar junta is losing a civil war against an array of opposition forces, ceding territory now largely kettled into the country’s big cities. And some of the quake’s worst damage has been done in its urban strongholds.
The disaster is so bad that Hlaing has broken his government’s self-imposed isolation to appeal for help from the outside world. But the country’s inaccessibility will remain a huge obstacle to aid efforts.
Image: Rescuers work at the construction site where a high-rise collapsed in Bangkok. Pic: AP
The US president has promised Myanmar aid for the earthquake. On the same day, his administration was letting go of the last of USAID staff to lose their jobs.
In reality, Trump has fired most of the people most expert at organising help after this earthquake and the means to provide it. This will be the first major disaster to suffer the brunt of his devastating cuts.
Myanmar is a deeply superstitious country. The generals who have ruled it since the end of colonial rule have consulted astrologers and use talismanic objects and animals, including white elephants, to protect their grip on power.
But earthquakes are thought to portend great change in Myanmar and sometimes the fall of leaders. That in itself may accelerate the toppling of its hated junta.
It remains powerful, supplied by ally China with advanced weaponry. It has used fighter jets to wreak havoc and carnage on opponents and civilians as the civil war has intensified.
But its enemies are gaining strength too, improvising with drones and other tactics to maintain momentum against a regime that lost all legitimacy. They will be encouraged in the belief that this disaster will bring closer their day of victory.
Bangkok felt like it erupted into chaos when the tremors hit.
No one knew what was happening and there was no warning.
In a city where lives are lived, there were suddenly incongruous sights in the sky – pools overflowing, high-rise walkways connecting expensive apartments broken apart, and huddles of confused and scared people outside offices.
The busy skytrain that millions rely on in Thailand‘s capital was shut down, bringing the city to a grinding halt and people struggling to move around.
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Mayhem in Thailand as Myanmar quake shocks
My producer Rachael and I had to share a motorbike to try and get to the scene of the worst building collapse – a slow route through gridlocked traffic.
On arrival, the devastation was clear. A mass of rubble, a sea of rescue workers, and panicked onlookers.
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We were told that 90 construction workers were still trapped inside.
One of the men trying to rescue them told me he had heard some voices and was hopeful they would be able to pull people out alive.
But he acknowledged it was “very difficult” work and, as he spoke, we were engulfed with dust, the light already fading as specialist bulldozers were brought in.
Many of those inside, we were told, were Cambodians about to finish building the structure.
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0:20
Moment building collapses in earthquake
Why no warnings?
As the rescue effort continued, Thailand’s Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra suddenly arrived.
I asked her why there were no warnings – in a nation that 20 years ago suffered a devastating earthquake.
She did not respond.
But many will no doubt continue to press her government on why there was no emergency alert system, no texts, nothing. Not for hours after, at least.
“It’s cold as s*** here,” said the US vice president when he touched down in Greenland.
He meant it, both literally and metaphorically.
There was no warm welcome from islanders for JD Vance and the second lady.
A small US team with a list of engagements evolved into a large delegation and just one engagement.
Everything changed when the organisers of a dogsled race, an annual spectacle on the cultural calendar, said the Americans weren’t invited.
The scaled-up US delegation and scaled-down schedule did little to address the concerns of Greenlanders.
The White House didn’t just send the vice president, they sent embattled national security advisor Mike Waltz too.
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Instead of being greeted by residents, they were greeted by their own troops manning an outpost tasked with warning them about long-range missile attacks.
And the vice president, who’s fast becoming the chief critic of Europe, made Denmark the focus of his attack.
But listen carefully to his speech and you’ll hear the same word twice: “think”.
“This is what we think is going to happen” re. their hopes islanders will vote for independence from Denmark and then engage with America.
“We do not think military action will be necessary,” he added, when asked about that potential.
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2:22
Why does the US want Greenland?
There is a world of difference between thinking something and knowing something.
So, what happens if what JD Vance “thinks” will or won’t happen doesn’t come to pass?