Ukraine expands evacuations in Sumy region amid offensive fears

Ukraine ordered the evacuation of 11 more villages in its Sumy region bordering Russia on Saturday amid fears Moscow was gearing up for a fresh ground assault. (AFP/File)
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Updated 31 May 2025
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Ukraine expands evacuations in Sumy region amid offensive fears

  • Authorities in Ukraine’s Sumy region said Saturday they were evacuating 11 villages
  • “The decision was made in view of the constant threat to civilian life,” the regional administration said

KYIV: Ukraine ordered the evacuation of 11 more villages in its Sumy region bordering Russia on Saturday amid fears Moscow was gearing up for a fresh ground assault.

Russia claims to have captured several villages in the northeastern region in recent weeks, and has massed more than 50,000 soldiers on the other side of the border, according to Kyiv.

The evacuations came just two days before a possible meeting between the two sides in Istanbul, as Washington called on both countries to end the three-year war.

Russia has confirmed it will send a delegation to the Turkish city, but Kyiv has yet to accept the proposal, warning the talks would not yield results unless the Kremlin provided its peace terms in advance.

On Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Moscow of doing “everything” it could to sabotage the potential meeting by withholding its peace terms.

Authorities in Ukraine’s Sumy region said Saturday they were evacuating 11 villages within a roughly 30-kilometer (19-mile) range from the Russian border.

“The decision was made in view of the constant threat to civilian life as a result of shelling of border communities,” the regional administration said on social media.

A spokesman for Ukraine’s border guard service, Andriy Demchenko, said Thursday that Russia was poised to “attempt an attack” on Sumy.

In total, 213 settlements in the region have been ordered to evacuate.

Russia’s defense ministry said Saturday that its forces had taken another Sumy region village, Vodolagy.

Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, launched in February 2022, has resulted in tens of thousands of
deaths and the destruction of towns and villages across parts of the east and south of the country.

The Kremlin’s army now controls around a fifth of the country and claims to have annexed five Ukrainian regions as its own, including Crimea, which it seized in 2014.

US President Donald Trump has spearheaded diplomatic efforts to bring an end to the fighting, but Kyiv and Moscow have both accused each other of not wanting peace.

The Kremlin has proposed further negotiations in Istanbul on Monday, after a May 16 round of talks that yielded little beyond a large prisoner-of-war exchange.

Kyiv has not yet said whether it will attend the Monday meeting, and said Friday it did not expect any results from the talks unless Moscow provided its peace terms in advance.

Russia says it will provide its peace memorandum in person on Monday.

But Ukraine suspects it will contain unrealistic demands that Kyiv has already rejected, including that Ukraine cede territory still under its control and abandon its NATO ambitions.

In a statement to the United Nations on Friday, Russia’s UN ambassador Vassily Nebenzia suggested the memorandum might call for Western countries to halt arm supplies to Kyiv and for Ukraine to abandon its military mobilization.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has fostered warm relations with both Zelensky and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, has become a key mediator amid efforts to end the conflict.

In a call with Zelensky late Friday, the Turkish leader urged both sides to send “strong delegations” to ensure momentum toward peace, according to Turkish state news agency Anadolu.

Turkiye has offered to host a summit between Putin, Zelensky and Trump, but the Kremlin has turned down the offer.

Putin has consistently rebuffed calls for a 30-day, unconditional ceasefire in Ukraine.


US intensifies airstrikes in Somalia

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US intensifies airstrikes in Somalia

  • The US has long been involved in the Horn of Africa country and has been targeting Al-Shabab and Daesh militants since the mid-2000s

ABUJA: The US has picked up the pace of its airstrikes against Al-Shabab and Daesh in Somalia this year, according to US Africa Command data.

The US has long been involved in the Horn of Africa country and has been targeting Al-Shabab and Daesh militants since the mid-2000s after the former first emerged.

Since Jan. 1, the US has conducted 23 strikes in Somalia, Africom spokeswoman Major Mahalia Frost said.

The “uptick” since the New Year, Frost said, is related to a broader US push against Daesh-linked militants on the continent, which included Christmas Day strikes in Nigeria.

In the last year, “we’ve gotten a lot more aggressive and (are) working with partners to target, kinetically, the threats, mainly Daesh,” Africom Lt. Gen. John Brennan said last week on the sidelines of a US-Nigeria security meeting in the Nigerian capital.

Following the Nigeria strikes on what Washington and Abuja said were targets linked to Daesh in Sahel province, the Pentagon has pledged increased intelligence sharing with their Nigerian counterparts.

“From Somalia to Nigeria, the problem set is connected.

So we’re trying to take it apart and then provide partners with the information they need,” Brennan said.

“It’s been about more enabling partners and then providing them equipment and capabilities with less restrictions so that they can be more successful.”

Frost added that 23 bombardments in Somalia this year “also includes strikes against Al-Shabab.”

President Donald Trump sharply escalated US strikes in Somalia during his first term, ordering 219 strikes and ground operations over four years — compared to 48 by Barack Obama in eight years.