Zelensky celebrates Ukraine’s Independence Day alongside Canadian PM

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, front left, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, front right, shake hands as they take part in a ceremony on Independence Day in Sophia Square in Kyiv, Ukraine on Aug. 24, 2025. (The Canadian Press via AP)
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Updated 24 August 2025
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Zelensky celebrates Ukraine’s Independence Day alongside Canadian PM

  • Canadian leader was invited to Kyiv as a “special guest,” to mark the occasion

KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky marked Independence Day on Sunday alongside Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who said Ukraine would receive more than C$1 billion ($723 million) in military aid from a previously announced package next month.

Three and a half years since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Zelensky is facing pressure from Washington to make concessions to Russia as US President Donald Trump seeks to broker a peace deal.

“We are all working to ensure that the end of this war would mean the guarantee of peace for Ukraine, so that neither war nor the threat of war are left for our children to inherit,” Zelensky told a crowd of dignitaries in Kyiv’s Sophia Square, against the backdrop of an 11th century cathedral.

As well as Carney, on his first visit to Ukraine since taking office in March, Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, attended the ceremony. Zelensky presented Kellogg with a state honor.

“We need peace,” Zelensky told Kellogg as he handed him the medal in a leather case.

Zelensky acknowledged the human cost of the war, but said that Ukrainians would fight to remain on their land.

Ukraine is now working with its European allies to draft potential frameworks for post-war security guarantees for Kyiv, which Trump has expressed openness to.


Australia police detain 7 men suspected to have ideological links to Bondi Beach gunmen

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Australia police detain 7 men suspected to have ideological links to Bondi Beach gunmen

  • Government to launch gun buyback scheme in bid to prevent further violence
  • Prime minister announces ‘day of reflection’ one week after attack

SYDNEY: Australian police said that seven men detained ​in Sydney’s southwest on Thursday had ideological connections to the two gunmen who allegedly fired at hundreds ‌celebrating Hanukkah ‌in ‌Bondi ⁠Beach, ​killing ‌15 people.
“We don’t have definitive links between the individuals who committed these atrocities on Sunday ⁠and this yesterday ‌apart from potential commonality ‍in ‍some thinking, but ‍no associations at this stage,” New South Wales state Police ​Deputy Commissioner Dave Hudson told ABC Radio on ⁠Friday.
Investigations were at an initial stage, Hudson said, adding one of the locations the group was planning to visit was Bondi.

Amid an outcry over the latest gun violence, Prime ‌Minister Anthony Albanese ‍said ‍on Friday that the government will ​launch a national gun buyback scheme to encourage civilians to get rid of their guns.

“We ‍expect hundreds of thousands of ​firearms will be collected and ⁠destroyed through this scheme,” Albanese told a news conference. 

Albanese also said Australia will hold a national “day of reflection” one week after the mass shooting.

“This day is about standing with the Jewish community, wrapping our arms around them, and all Australians sharing their grief,” Albanese said as he declared Australia would honor the attack’s 15 victims on Sunday, December 21.