Putin says ‘understandings’ reached at Alaska summit open way to peace in Ukraine

Russian President Vladimir Putin said part of the source of the conflict ‘lies in the ongoing attempts by the West to bring Ukraine into NATO.’ (AFP)
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Updated 01 September 2025
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Putin says ‘understandings’ reached at Alaska summit open way to peace in Ukraine

  • Russian leader: ‘We highly appreciate the efforts and proposals from China and India aimed at facilitating the resolution of the Ukrainian crisis’
  • ‘The understandings reached at the recent Russia-US meeting in Alaska, I hope, also contribute toward this goal’

SHANGHAI: Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that “understandings” he reached with US President Donald Trump at a summit in August opened a way to peace in Ukraine, which he would discuss with leaders attending a regional summit in China.

Kyiv and its Western allies call Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, launched in February 2022 an imperial war of conquest to annex territory, though Russia says it is special military operation aimed to demilitarize and denazify Ukraine.

Putin, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and leaders from Central Asia, the Middle East, South Asia and Southeast Asia are attending the Shanghai Cooperation Organization forum in the city of Tianjin, hosted by President Xi Jinping.

“We highly appreciate the efforts and proposals from China and India aimed at facilitating the resolution of the Ukrainian crisis,” Putin told the forum.

“The understandings reached at the recent Russia–US meeting in Alaska, I hope, also contribute toward this goal.”

He said he had already detailed to Xi on Sunday the achievements of his talks with Trump and the work “already underway” to resolve the conflict and would provide more detail in two-way meetings with the Chinese leader and others.

“For the Ukrainian settlement to be sustainable and long-term, the root causes of the crisis must be addressed.”

Part of the source of the conflict “lies in the ongoing attempts by the West to bring Ukraine into NATO,” Putin reiterated.


Philippine volcano eruption sends ash 2.5 kilometers into sky

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Philippine volcano eruption sends ash 2.5 kilometers into sky

  • Kanlaon Volcano, one of 24 active volcanoes in the archipelago nation, has had several major eruptions in the past century
  • A 1996 blast killed three hikers who were near the summit at the time
MANILA: A volcano erupted in the central Philippines on Thursday evening, sending a billowing plume of ash about 2,500 meters (1.5 miles) into the nighttime sky.
The two-minute eruption began at 7:04 p.m. (1104 GMT), state volcanology agency director Teresito Bacolcol said, saying “there might be a bigger explosive eruption in the next few days.”
Kanlaon Volcano, one of 24 active volcanoes in the archipelago nation, has had several major eruptions in the past century — including a 1996 blast that killed three hikers who were near the summit at the time.
“This is the second moderate eruption in a week,” Bacolcol said in a phone interview, adding his agency would monitor the volcano for 24 hours before deciding if it should raise the alert level from two to three on its five-point scale.
“This event generated a plume that rose 2,500 meters above the crater before drifting southwest. Incandescent ballistics were observed to have rained around the crater,” the volcanology center said in a statement released minutes later.
John De Asis, a rescuer in the nearby town of La Castellana, said that ash had begun to descend on local neighborhoods.
“Tonight, we heard a sudden, loud boom, then after a few minutes, people started reporting that there was ashfall in their areas,” he said, noting that rescue personnel were handing out facemasks.
Bacolcol said it was possible that “gas pressure had built up at the vent” of the volcano. He said recent low sulfur dioxide emissions suggested a potential blockage that would have caused pressure to build.
The volcano, which straddles Negros Oriental and Occidental provinces, currently has a four-kilometer exclusion zone in place.
The Philippines is on the seismically active region of the Pacific known as the “Ring of Fire,” where more than half the world’s volcanoes are located.
The most powerful volcanic explosion in the Philippines in recent years was the 1991 eruption of Pinatubo, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) from Manila, which killed more than 800 people.