British-led coalition to provide Ukraine with anti-drone systems

A granary destroyed in a Russian drone attack at night is seen in a Danube port near Odesa, Ukraine, on Aug. 16, 2023. (Odesa Regional Administration Press Office via AP)
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Updated 18 August 2023
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British-led coalition to provide Ukraine with anti-drone systems

LONDON: A British-led group of European countries said on Friday it would provide about 90 million pounds ($115 million) of air defense equipment to help Ukraine defend itself against Russian attacks.

This includes a 56-million-pound contract with the Norwegian defense company Kongsberg to provide vehicle-mounted Cortex Typhon systems, which are used to detect and destroy drones.

“These air defense systems have the capability and flexibility to be rapidly deployed to either protect Ukraine’s civilian population and infrastructure, or be put to use on the frontline,” said Britain’s defense minister Ben Wallace.
The International Fund for Ukraine — a group of countries including Britain, Norway, the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden — has also agreed two other contracts for air defense equipment, which will be revealed at a later date.
Both Ukraine and Russia have stepped up attacks on each other’s troops recently as Ukraine seeks to dislodge Russian forces that have dug in across southern and eastern Ukraine since their invasion last year.
Odesa, Ukraine’s largest port and naval base, has been repeatedly attacked with missiles and drones after Russia pulled out of an agreement allowing grain shipments from Ukraine’s ports in July.

 


M23 rebel spokesperson killed in Congo army drone strike, officials say

Updated 24 February 2026
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M23 rebel spokesperson killed in Congo army drone strike, officials say

  • M23 controls large swathes ⁠of North and South Kivu provinces
  • The attack happened near Rubaya, in North Kivu

DAKAR: The military spokesperson for the M23 rebel group, Willy Ngoma, was killed in an army drone strike in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday, a regional diplomat, a senior rebel official and a Western adviser to the government said.
The killing comes as Qatar-mediated ceasefire efforts continue, with Kinshasa and M23 having signed agreements ⁠in Doha to establish ⁠a joint ceasefire monitoring and verification mechanism involving Qatar, the United States and the African Union as observers.
M23, which the United Nations says is backed by Rwanda, controls large swathes ⁠of North and South Kivu provinces after a rapid offensive last year in which the rebels seized the strategic cities of Goma and Bukavu.
The attack happened near Rubaya, in North Kivu, at around 3 a.m. (0100 GMT), and came after several days of sustained drone attacks on the area by the Congolese army, ⁠the ⁠senior M23 official told Reuters.
Rubaya is a strategic coltan-mining hub that produces around 15 percent of the world’s supply, making it a key financial stronghold for the M23 rebels. A spokesperson for the Congolese presidency declined to comment and a spokesperson for Congo’s army did not immediately respond.