Zelensky says Russians tried to use air strikes as cover for ground attacks

Damaged vehicles lie at the site of a Russian ballistic missile strike in Kyiv, Apr. 24, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 25 April 2025
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Zelensky says Russians tried to use air strikes as cover for ground attacks

  • “This will be further proof of the criminal nature of the alliance between Russia and Pyongyang,” Zelensky said

KYIV:  President Volodymyr Zelensky, quoting Ukraine’s top commander, said early on Friday that Russian forces had tried to use mass air strikes as cover for intensified land-based attacks, but these were repelled.
“The Russians in fact tried, under cover of their mass air strikes, to make ground advances,” Zelensky said on the Telegram messaging app, referring to a report from top commander Oleksandr Syrskyi.
“When our forces were concentrating to the maximum on defending against missiles and drones, the Russians went ahead with intensified ground attacks. But they were repelled in worthy fashion.” 

Russia used a North Korean ballistic missile for the deadly overnight strike that hit a residential building in Kyiv, Zelensky said on Thursday, citing preliminary information.
“If the information that this missile was made in North Korea is confirmed, this will be further proof of the criminal nature of the alliance between Russia and Pyongyang,” he said on X.


Japan to test mine rare-earth mud from deep seabed

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Japan to test mine rare-earth mud from deep seabed

TOKYO: Japan will conduct test mining of rare-earth-rich mud from the deep seabed off Minamitori Island, some 1,900 ​kilometers (1,180 miles) southeast of Tokyo, from January 11 to February 14, the head of the government-backed project said on Tuesday.
The operation will mark the world’s first attempt to continuously lift rare-earth mud from a depth of around 6,000 meters on to a vessel.
Tokyo, like its Western allies, is seeking to secure stable supplies of critical minerals as China, the ‌dominant supplier ‌of rare earths, tightens export controls.
“One of ‌our ⁠missions ​is ‌to build a supply chain for domestically produced rare earths to ensure stable supply of minerals essential to industry,” Shoichi Ishii, program director of the Cabinet Office’s national platform for innovative ocean developments, told reporters.
The Japanese government is pressing ahead with a national project as part of broader efforts to strengthen maritime and economic ⁠security.
The January test will focus on connecting the deep-sea mining system and confirming ‌its ability to lift 350 metric ‍tons of rare-earth mud per day. ‍Environmental impacts will be monitored both on board and on ‍the seabed throughout the operation.
No production target has been set, but if successful, a full-scale mining trial will be conducted in February 2027.
The government-funded project has spent about 40 billion yen ($256 million) ​since 2018, Ishii said, though estimated reserves have not been disclosed.
Ishii also said that while their research ⁠vessel was conducting rare-earth surveys within Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) around Minamitori Island from May 27 to June 25, a Chinese naval fleet entered the waters on June 7.
“We feel a strong sense of crisis that such intimidating actions were taken, despite our activities being limited to seabed resource surveys within our EEZ,” he said.
China’s foreign ministry said the activities of its military vessels are in line with international law and international conventions, and called on Japan to “refrain from hyping up threats and provoking ‌confrontation,” in a reply to Reuters’ request for comment.