Ukraine, US start talks on security guarantees, official says

US President Joe Biden (L) speaks at an event with G7 leaders next to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to announce a Joint Declaration of Support for Ukraine during the NATO Summit in Vilnius on July 12, 2023. (AFP/File Photo)
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Updated 04 August 2023
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Ukraine, US start talks on security guarantees, official says

Kyiv and Washington started talks on Thursday aimed at providing security guarantees for Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky’s chief of staff said, a follow-up to pledges by G7 countries at last month’s NATO summit.

Ukraine was told that the Group of Seven (G7) would draw up and honor security guarantees and help bolster its military in light of Russia’s 17-month-old invasion of Ukraine.
The Kyiv government sees the talks as an interim stage pending its accession to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization military alliance. At the summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, NATO leaders offered support to Ukraine but ruled out any notion of membership until the war with Russia is resolved.
Presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak, writing on the Telegram messaging app, said the agreement reached in Vilnius was “the basis for working out corresponding bilateral agreements.”
“It is symbolic that the United States — our biggest strategic partner — became the first country with which Ukraine has started this process,” Yermak wrote. “Through this process we will create a successful model for other partners.”
Members of the G7 agreed for each nation to negotiate agreements.
Yermak restated Ukraine’s position that guarantees “will strengthen Ukraine along the path to future membership of the Euro-Atlantic community, including NATO and the European Union.”
Yermak did not say where the talks were taking place or who was taking part, but a photo accompanying his post showed him sitting at a table at what appeared to be the Ukrainian president’s office in the capital Kyiv.


35 million Nigerians ‘risk hunger after global funding collapse’

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35 million Nigerians ‘risk hunger after global funding collapse’

  • The UN can only aim to ‌deliver $516 million to provide lifesaving aid to 2.5 million people this year, down from 3.6 million in 2025, which in turn was about half the previous year’s level

ABUJA: Nearly 35 million Nigerians are at risk of hunger this year, including 3 million children facing severe malnutrition, ​the UN said, following the collapse of global aid budgets.
Speaking at the launch of the 2026 humanitarian plan in Abuja, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Mohammed Malick Fall said the long-dominant, foreign-led aid model in Nigeria is no longer sustainable and ‌that Nigeria’s ‌needs have grown. 
Conditions in ‌the conflict-hit ​northeast ‌are dire, Fall said, with civilians in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states facing rising violence. 

BACKGROUND

UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Mohammed Malick Fall said the foreign-led aid model in Nigeria is no longer sustainable and ‌that the country’s needs have grown.

A surge in terror attacks killed more than 4,000 people in the first eight months of 2025, matching the toll for all of 2023, he said.
The UN can only aim to ‌deliver $516 million to provide lifesaving aid to 2.5 million people this year, down from 3.6 million in 2025, which in turn was about half the previous year’s level.
“These are not statistics. These numbers represent lives, futures, and Nigerians,” Fall said.
He also said ​the UN had no choice but to focus on “the most lifesaving” interventions given the drop in available funding. 
Shortfalls last year led the World Food Programme to also warn that millions could go hungry in Nigeria as its resources ran out in December and it was forced to cut support for more than 300,000 children. 
Fall said Nigeria was showing growing national ownership of the crisis response in recent months through measures such as local funding for ‌lean-season food support and early-warning action on flooding.