Ukraine army chief says Kursk offensive ‘has advanced’

The head of the Ukrainian military Oleksandr Syrsky said Friday that the offensive in Russia’s Kursk region had advanced further. (AFP)
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Updated 16 August 2024
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Ukraine army chief says Kursk offensive ‘has advanced’

  • Syrsky said that fighting continued along the entire front line and that he hoped to take “many prisoners“

KYIV: The head of the Ukrainian military Oleksandr Syrsky said Friday that the offensive in Russia’s Kursk region had advanced further.
“The troops of the offensive group continue to fight and have advanced in some areas from one to three kilometers toward the enemy,” Syrsky told President Volodymyr Zelensky in a video posted on social media.
Syrsky said that fighting continued along the entire front line and that he hoped to take “many prisoners” from a battle ongoing in the village of Mala Loknya, about 13 kilometers (8 miles) from the border.
Ukraine launched a surprise offensive across the border 10 days ago and Kyiv claims to have taken control of more than 80 settlements.


Sri Lanka targets 3 million tourists to aid cyclone recovery

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Sri Lanka targets 3 million tourists to aid cyclone recovery

  • The tourist ‌arrival target, which ‌is an ambitious 27 percent increase ‌over the previous year, will help Sri Lankans recover from Cyclone Ditwah

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka is targeting 3 million tourist arrivals in 2026, a top official said on Monday, after a record 2.36 million last year, as the country seeks to boost revenue and support recovery from Cyclone Ditwah.

Famous for its pristine beaches, ancient temples and Ceylon Tea, tourism is Sri Lanka’s second-largest foreign exchange earner with $3.2 billion in revenues in ‌2025.

The tourist ‌arrival target, which ‌is an ambitious 27 percent increase ‌over the previous year, will help Sri Lankans recover from Cyclone Ditwah, which hit the island nation at the end of November killing 645 people, said Vijitha Herath, minister of foreign affairs and tourism. 

Torrential rains and hundreds of landslides damaged over 110,000 houses as well as ‌key roads, railroads, and bridges ‍causing $4.1 billion in damage ‍according to World Bank estimates.

Growth, which ‍was projected at 3.1 percent for 2026, was reduced to 2.9 percent by the International Monetary Fund in December. An IMF delegation is expected in Colombo this month to conduct the fifth review of a $2.9 billion program with Sri  Lanka.

“We are proud that Sri Lanka still managed to record the highest-ever tourism numbers. We are hopeful that tourism revenue will also continue to grow and this will help our economy at a crucial time,” Herath told reporters. 

Sri Lanka is also eyeing about $500 million in investment in the tourism sector in 2026 after attracting $329 million from 126 projects last ‌year, said Buddhika Hewawasam, chairman of the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority.