Putin accuses Ukraine of ‘large-scale provocation’ at the Russian border

Putin accuses Ukraine of ‘large-scale provocation’ at the Russian border


Russia’s President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with organizers of the “Russia” forum and exhibition, which celebrates the country’s major achievements, in Moscow, Russia July 8, 2024. 

Artyom Geodakyan | Via Reuters

Russia President Vladimir Putin accused Ukraine on Wednesday of carrying out “yet another large-scale provocation” at the Russian border.

“As you know, the Kiev regime has undertaken yet another large-scale provocation, delivering indiscriminate fire from various types of weapons, including missiles, at civilian buildings, residential houses, ambulances,” he said in comments released by the Kremlin on the Telegram social media platform.

The comment comes after Russia’s defense ministry on Tuesday claimed that 300 Ukrainian “militants” had launched a cross-border attack into the Russian region of Kursk, using tanks and armored vehicles.

The Russian defense ministry said on Wednesday that its forces and Russian border authorities “have been destroying armed formations of the Ukrainian Armed Forces during the last night in Kursk region’s areas immediately adjacent to the Russian–Ukrainian border.”

“Air and missile strikes, artillery fire as well as units of the State Border Covering Force prevented the enemy from advancing deep into the territory of the Russian Federation,” the ministry said.

In a Google-translated update on Telegram, Kursk’s Acting Governor Alexey Smirnov saidTuesday that two people had died and that 13 others were injured, in what he described as “massive shelling” of the region by Ukraine, particularly focused around the city of Sudzha.

CNBC was unable to verify the claims and Ukraine has not publicly commented on the attacks. CNBC has reached out to Ukraine’s defense ministry for comment.

President Putin stated Thursday that he would meet with security chiefs and defense and law enforcement agencies to discuss the situation in Kursk, adding that he would also meet members of the defense ministry and FSB security service’s border agency.



Source

No fear of ‘cockroaches’? Private credit funds raise billions as investors look past warnings
World

No fear of ‘cockroaches’? Private credit funds raise billions as investors look past warnings

Wall Street, Manhattan, New York. Andrey Denisyuk | Moment | Getty Images Investor appetite for private credit remains undeterred even as warnings mount over looser loan approval and risk-assessment practices, as well as rising pockets of borrower stress. The troubles at First Brands Group last September became a flashpoint for critics of private credit after […]

Read More
Japan’s 40-year bond yield hits 4% record on fiscal jitters following election call
World

Japan’s 40-year bond yield hits 4% record on fiscal jitters following election call

Bird’s-eye view of central Tokyo including Tokyo Tower at sunrise hours. Vladimir Zakharov | Moment | Getty Images Japan’s 40-year government bond yield hit a record high on Tuesday amid a broad selloff in government bonds, as investors worried that proposed cuts to the food sales tax could worsen the country’s fiscal position. The long-dated […]

Read More
China keeps benchmark lending rates unchanged despite slowing economic growth
World

China keeps benchmark lending rates unchanged despite slowing economic growth

BEIJING, CHINA – JANUARY 06: The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) building is seen on January 6, 2025 in Beijing, China.  Visual China Group | Getty Images China’s central bank kept its loan prime rates unchanged on Tuesday as the authorities focus on targeted support for specific sectors to bolster a slowing economy instead of […]

Read More