Ukraine to raise overnight Russian attack at UN security council meeting on Thursday, minister says
Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha said that Ukraine would bring up the overnight Russian attacks on his country at tomorrow’s UN security council meeting.

Sybiha said that according to the latest available information at least 21 people were killed in the attack, including two children.
“We urge condemnation, justice, and strong responses. … Against the backdrop of such brutality, we reiterate our call for the provision of additional air defense and other equipment to protect our people,” he said.
Sybiha added that he had directed all embassies to lower flags and open books of condolences.
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Germany urges partners to help Ukraine as it faces growing pressure from Russia
Meanwhile, a German government spokesperson warned that the situation in Ukraine is very tense due to Russia’s ongoing attacks, and Kyiv urgently needs help with its defence from partners, Reuters reported.
“Russia’s unabated attacks are putting Ukraine under immense pressure, and all the more reason for Ukraine’s supporters to assist the country in its defence,” the government spokesperson said at a government news conference in Berlin.
At least 20 people, including two children, were killed in overnight Russian attacks on Ukraine.
Russia's attacks on EU infrastructure 'increasingly brazen,' bloc's foreign policy chief says, as she calls for better military mobility
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas addressed the Polish rail rabotage incidents over the weekend at a press conference earlier today, condemning “increasingly brazen” Russian attacks on EU infrastructure.

“Our critical infrastructure needs more protection,” she said, stressing the need to do more work to ensure “fast movement of Europe’s militaries” between countries.
“We have to ensure that forces can be in the right place and at the right time. Swift movement depends on many factors. Can our roads, tunnels, bridges bear the weight? Are there enough designated routes for the military movements? Do we have enough flatbed rail carriages, and what paperwork do we still have to fill when you want to cross border, for training, or in case of crisis?” she said.
Kallas said that “some countries stil require 45 days notice before other countries’ troops can pass through them,” which she said was “simply not good enough.”
“Military mobility is a critical insurance policy for European security. You hope you never have to use it full capacity, but having it ready ensures more credible deterrence and defence,” she said.
The bloc’s “Military Schengen,” formally proposed today, seeks to address some of these issues by removing regulatory obstacles, and working on the resilience of key infrastructure.
Social Democrats in Denmark suffer sweeping election losses

Miranda Bryant
Nordic correspondent
The Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, has admitted that a fall in support for the Social Democrats was “greater than we had expected” after her party suffered sweeping defeats across Denmark and lost control of Copenhagen for the first time in more than 100 years.

While the Social Democrats remain the largest municipal party in Denmark, the prime minister’s centre-left party lost more than five percentage points across the country in Tuesday night’s municipal and regional elections, dropping from 28.4% in 2021 to 23.2%. Support for the far-right Danish People’s party, meanwhile, rose slightly from 4.09% to 5.9%.
In Copenhagen, Frederiksen’s close personal friend, Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil, who is understood to have been handpicked by the prime minister to run for lord mayor in the Danish capital, failed to get the votes she needed.
The position of lord mayor, it was announced, will be held by Sisse Marie Welling from the Green Left (Socialistisk Folkeparti, known as SF), which won 17.9% of the vote. “We have written history at city hall,” she said. The Red-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten) remained the capital’s biggest party with 22.1% of the vote.
Looking disconsolate after the historic defeat, Frederiksen said: “We had expected to go back, but it seems that the decline is greater than we had expected. We will consider what is behind this.”
Frederiksen cited rising food prices, and an imbalance between rural and urban areas, for her party’s decline in popularity. She also pointed to crime committed by “people coming from outside”, reinforcing her hardline stance on immigration.
As well as Copenhagen, the Social Democrats also took hits in the former dependable municipalities of Frederikshavn, Køge, Fredericia, Gladsaxe and Holstebro.
'All facts indicate Russian trace' behind Polish rail sabotage incidents, Zelenskyy says
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has spoken with Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk this morning, discussing the overnight Russian attacks on Ukraine and the recent rail sabotage incident, which Warsaw blamed on Russia.
“Our information is the same: all the facts indicate that there is a Russian trace behind all of this,” Zelenskyy said.
He added that Ukraine faced similar attempted sabotage acts “on a daily basis,” and “put in place proper [measures] to counteract against such” activities.
“Ukraine is ready to work with Poland at various levels and to share all information,” he said.
The two countries will also set up “a Ukrainian-Polish group that will work to prevent similar situations from the Russian side in the future,” Zelenskyy said.
Lithuania to reopen Belarus border after balloon incidents
Lithuania will reopen its border crossings with Belarus, ending a closure imposed in response to airspace disruptions by smugglers’ balloons, the Baltic republic’s government said as reported by Reuters.

Lithuania last month said the two crossings on the border would remain closed until the end of November in response to incursions by weather balloons flying from Belarus that have disrupted air traffic and caused closures at Vilnius airport.
It was not immediately clear how soon the border crossings would reopen, Reuters noted.
Death toll from 'barbaric' overnight Russian attacks on Ukraine rises to 19, foreign minister says
Meanwhile, the Ukrainian foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, said the death toll from overnight Russian “barbaric” strike on Ternopil has gone up to 19, with 66 further people injured.
“This is how Russia’s ‘peace plans’ look like in reality. This terror can only be met with collective strength and pressure on Moscow,” he said.
'We know what you're doing,' UK defence minister says in response to Russian about spy ship activities near UK

Andrew Sparrow
There is also an emerging news line from the UK, with the country’s defence minister John Healey disclosing that a Russian spy ship called Yantar is on the edge of British waters and had been mapping undersea cables, and shining lasers at RAF pilots, which he said was “highly dangerous”.
He said:
My message to Russia and to Putin is this: We see you. We know what you’re doing. And if the Yantar travels south this week, we are ready.
Asked about this in the Q&A, Healey says this is the first time Yantar has done this.
The government is taking it extremely seriously. He says he has changed the terms of engagement, so that the UK can follow it more closely when it is in British waters. He says he will not give details, but he says the government has “military options ready”.
More on our UK politics live blog with Andrew Sparrow here:
Here is the full quote from Jacek Dobrzyński, the spokesperson for Poland’s security services minister.
“The Polish [security] services have much more information. They are on the trail of the principals; they are on the trail of the perpetrators.
I confirm that, indeed, the first arrests are now taking place. The people involved are being detained by the Internal Security Agency and by the police, and at this stage, I cannot provide you with more details.”
He later added that “several people are being detained” and “questioned” about their role in “this terrorist attack, because we can call it that.”
Poland detains 'several' people over rail sabotage incidents
Poland has detained “several” people linked with the rail sabotage incidents over the weekend, a spokesperson for the Polish security services minister said.
More to follow.

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