Ukraine presses peace plan, points to N. Korean involvement in talks with Chinese envoy

A man photographs parts of an unidentified missile, which Ukrainian authorities believe to be made in North Korea and was used in a strike in Kharkiv earlier this week. (REUTERS)
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Updated 08 March 2024
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Ukraine presses peace plan, points to N. Korean involvement in talks with Chinese envoy

  • Ukraine’s peace plan calls for removing all Russian troops, restoring Ukraine’s 1991 post-Soviet borders and a process to make Russia accountable for its actions

KYIV: Senior Ukrainian officials, in a meeting with a Chinese regional envoy on Thursday, pressed Kyiv’s plan to end the two-year conflict with Russia and presented what they said was evidence of North Korean weaponry supplied to Moscow.

Andriy Yermak, head of Ukraine’s presidential administration, wrote on Telegram that he and his team presented the situation on the battlefield and Kyiv’s peace proposals to Li Hui, China’s special representative for Eurasian affairs.
Yermak said the Ukrainian side “discussed with Li Hui the prospects for establishing a just peace for Ukraine, the restoration of our country’s territorial integrity and sovereignty on the basis of the Ukrainian peace formula.”
Ukraine’s peace plan, as presented by President Volodymyr Zelensky, calls for removing all Russian troops, restoring Ukraine’s 1991 post-Soviet borders and a process to make Russia accountable for its actions.

Switzerland has pledged to stage a peace summit and several preparatory meetings have already taken place. Kyiv has been trying to cultivate good relations with Beijing, and China has attended at least one of the meetings, though Russia has not been invited.
Li, making his second trip to Europe, last week met a Russian deputy foreign minister in Moscow and said it was impossible to discuss a Ukraine settlement without Moscow’s participation.
In his account of Thursday’s talks, Yermak said they showed the Chinese delegation examples of fragments of downed missiles and weapons that North Korea made and gave to Russia to attack Ukraine.
Ukraine’s prosecutor general last month said experts had found that Russia had fired at least 24 North Korean-made missiles over a period of several weeks.
Yermak’s account of the meeting also said Ukraine raised what it described as Russian violations of international conventions on prisoners of war and how China might help secure the return of deported Ukrainian children.
Russia denies such deportations have taken place, saying children were removed from the war zone for their own safety.


Drone-backed militants attack Nigerian army base, several soldiers dead

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Drone-backed militants attack Nigerian army base, several soldiers dead

  • The militants struck the Sabon Gari base before dawn
  • The ⁠army regained control after reinforcements arrived

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria: Islamist militants backed by armed drones raided an army base in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state, killing several troops in the early hours of Thursday, the military said, in the second assault reported there this week.
The use of drones by the fighters from Daesh West Africa Province (Daesh-WAP) in recent attacks has marked a significant escalation in the violence in the region, military spokesman Lt. Col. Sani ⁠Uba said.
The militants struck the Sabon Gari base before dawn, storming the perimeter and briefly breaching part of the facility, Uba said.
While they were fighting, their drone bombardment destroyed several military vehicles, including an excavator and a low-bed trailer, he added.
The ⁠army regained control after reinforcements arrived, repelled the attack and were pursuing the militants, Uba said.
Some soldiers and Civilian Joint Task Force members “paid the supreme price,” he said, without giving details on the numbers.
Two security sources told Reuters at least nine soldiers and two task force members were killed, with around 16 others wounded.
Nigeria’s military has pushed deeper into insurgent strongholds in the northeast this ⁠year as part of a renewed offensive against militant groups.
But despite repeated operations, Boko Haram and its splinter faction Daesh-WAP continue to mount large-scale attacks, exploiting difficult terrain, porous borders and a weak state presence across parts of the arid northeast. Borno, where Boko Haram and Daesh-WAP fighters have intensified attacks on military convoys and civilians, remains the epicenter of the 17-year Islamist insurgency.