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    You are at:Home»Trending & Viral News»Russia claims to have foothold in new Ukraine region as Zelenskyy pleads for more air defences – Europe live | Europe
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    Russia claims to have foothold in new Ukraine region as Zelenskyy pleads for more air defences – Europe live | Europe

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondJuly 7, 20250016 Mins Read
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    Russia claims to have foothold in new Ukraine region as Zelenskyy pleads for more air defences – Europe live | Europe
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    Russia claims first foothold in new Ukraine region

    Back to Ukraine, Russia claimed it captured its first village in Ukraine’s central Dnipropetrovsk region after grinding towards the border for months, dealing a physchological blow for Kyiv as its worries mount, AFP reported.

    The Russian defence ministry said its forces captured the village of Dachne in the Dnipropetrovsk region, an important industrial mining territory that has also come under mounting Russian air attacks.

    Russian forces appear to have made crossing the border a key strategic objective over recent months, and deeper advances into the region could pose logistics and economic problems for Kyiv, the agency noted.

    But Ukraine has so far denied any Russian foothold in Dnipropetrovsk, and its army said earlier on Monday that its forces “repelled” attacks in Dnipropetrovsk, including “in the vicinity” of Dachne.

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    Key events

    Ukraine says it hit Russia’s chemical plant involved in drone production

    Back to Ukraine, the country’s military said it had struck a chemical plant in Russia’s Moscow region that manufactures explosives, ammunition and thermobaric warheads for Shahed attack drones.

    “A series of explosions were recorded in the area of the city of Krasnozavodsk and the movement of fire trucks in neighbouring settlements,” Kyiv’s General Staff said in a statement on the Telegram messaging site, reported by Reuters, adding that the final results of the strike were still being clarified.

    They added:

    “The Defence Forces continue to take measures to undermine the offensive potential of the Russian occupiers and force the Russian Federation to stop its armed aggression against Ukraine.”

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    Ireland’s Donohoe on course to be re-elected Eurogroup president

    Meanwhile in Brussels, the Eurogroup – an informal body of eurozone finance ministers – appears to be set to re-elect the Irish finance minister Paschal Donohoe as its head after his rivals reportedly decided to drop out from the race.

    President of the Eurogroup Paschal Donohoe (L) and UK’s chancellor of the exchequer Rachel Reeves attend a Eurogroup meeting on the international economic dialogue with the UK in Brussels, Belgium in December last year. Photograph: Olivier Matthys/EPA

    Earlier today, Spanish newspaper El Mundo reported the country’s economy minister Carlos Cuerpo was planning to withdraw after concluding he would not get the votes necessary to be elected.

    Arriving in Brussels, Cuerpo confirmed the report, saying that after conversations with fellow eurozone ministers over the weekend, he concluded he had no chance of winning and wanted to “avoid the fragmentation” of the group.

    Shortly afterwards, Lithuania’s Rimantas Šadžius declared himself out of the race too.

    The Lithuanian said it was “an honour” to be involved in the race coming from a country that introduced the euro only 10 years ago – and Šadžius was the country’s finance minister at the time, too – but he insisted that the eurogroup “should work on the basis of consensus,” and that should guide the choice of the next president.

    “Today we will be able to choose the next president, for the next two and a half years, by consensus as well,” he said.

    That leaves Donohoe the clear favourite to get the nod for another, third term later today.

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    Macron’s UK state visit underlines effort to move on from Brexit nightmare

    Angelique Chrisafis

    Angelique Chrisafis

    Later this week, UK prime minister Keir Starmer and French president Emmanuel Macron will lead a working session with leaders of the countries taking part in the coalition of the willing that continues supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russia.

    The online meeting will take place on Thursday, as part of Macron’s state visit to the UK, which begins tomorrow.

    Union Jack and French flags are displayed down the Mall in London. Photograph: Benjamin Cremel/AFP/Getty Images

    The strong Franco-British unity on display is seen as crucial at a time of war in Ukraine and the Middle East and faced with the unpredictability of the US president.

    Our Paris correspondent Angelique Chrisafis looked at the preparations for the visit in her analysis here.

    When Emmanuel Macron rides in a horse-drawn carriage to Windsor Castle this week, it will be to celebrate the return of close political relations between London and Paris, drawing a line under the damaging spats of the Brexit years.

    The French president’s office said the “shared interests” of the two countries were what mattered now, hailing France and the UK’s “essential” close relationship on the international stage. This reinvigorated cross-Channel bond was “vital”, a UK official said.

    For Paris, it is symbolic that Macron is the first European leader to be invited for a pomp-filled state visit to the UK since Brexit.

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    Russia claims first foothold in new Ukraine region

    Back to Ukraine, Russia claimed it captured its first village in Ukraine’s central Dnipropetrovsk region after grinding towards the border for months, dealing a physchological blow for Kyiv as its worries mount, AFP reported.

    The Russian defence ministry said its forces captured the village of Dachne in the Dnipropetrovsk region, an important industrial mining territory that has also come under mounting Russian air attacks.

    Russian forces appear to have made crossing the border a key strategic objective over recent months, and deeper advances into the region could pose logistics and economic problems for Kyiv, the agency noted.

    But Ukraine has so far denied any Russian foothold in Dnipropetrovsk, and its army said earlier on Monday that its forces “repelled” attacks in Dnipropetrovsk, including “in the vicinity” of Dachne.

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    EU calls for ‘close coordination’ between countries affected by reintroduction of border controls

    The commission also addressed the reintroduction of Polish border controls with Germany and Lithuania, confirming at its midday media briefing that it had received a formal notification from Poland on Friday.

    Polish border guards check the identity of drivers and their cars at the Polish-German border in Słubice, western Poland, close to the German city of Frankfurt an der Oder. Photograph: Wojtek Radwański/AFP/Getty Images

    EU spokesperson Markus Lammert confirmed that “reintroducing temporary internal border controls is possible subject to certain conditions, as set out in EU legislation, and in particular in the Schengen borders code.”

    He added the move requires “close coordination at EU level, and in particular with all member states concerned,” and said the EU was in close contact with all parties.

    “It is important, let me add, that that neighbouring countries with temporary border controls coordinate closely with each other to limit the impact of these border controls to a minimum, including as regards smooth traffic flows.”

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    EU’s von der Leyen spoke with US president Trump on trade over weekend, work towards 9 July deadline, commission says

    Meanwhile over in Brussels, European Commission spokesperson Stefan de Keersmaecker confirmed that commission president Ursula von der Leyen spoke with US president Donald Trump on Sunday and they had “a good exchange,” without going into further details.

    EU’s trade spokesperson Olof Gill offered a bit more colour, stressing “the EU has been completely unflinching and unchanging in its position.”

    We want to reach a deal with the US. We want to avoid tariffs. We believe they cause pain. We want to achieve win-win outcomes, not lose-lose outcomes.

    He added that EU’s trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič made “substantial progress” during his meetings in Washington DC last week, and the state of talks was discussed with member states on Friday, “as we have done systematically and in depth at all stages in this sorry saga.”

    “We have been continuing political and technical level contact with the US on substance, our aim remains to find an agreement before 9 July at present.”

    The spokesperson also declined to respond to comments by US officials over the weekend.

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    Updated at 11.59 BST

    EU border controls necessary to stop Belarus, Russia-inspired irregular migration flows, Tusk says

    Polish prime minister Donald Tusk has just been speaking about the border situation at a joint press conference with Dutch prime minister, Dick Schoof.

    Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk (R) and the Netherlands’ prime minister Dick Schoof give a press conference during their meeting in Warsaw, Poland. Photograph: Sergei Gapon/AFP/Getty Images

    He repeated Poland’s main argument that irregular migration flows in Europe were “organised by hostile powers, let’s call them for what they are, primarily by the Lukashenko regime [in Belarus], but also supported by Putin’s administration” in Russia.

    He said that the Polish border guard’s heavily militarised operation on the border with Belarus stops 98% of all attempts to cross into border, but he warned “it all won’t make any sense if other external borders of the EU won’t be as tightly guarded.”

    Tusk stressed that the decision to reintroduce controls with Lithuania are meant to catch all cases where someone fails to get into Poland from Belarus, but succeeds to go through the Baltics instead.

    He also offered a bit more detail on the four Afghan citizens stopped overnight at the Polish-Lithuanian border (12:05), saying that they had been previously registered as attempting the illegal crossing from Belarus.

    The Polish prime minister also repeated his thinly veiled criticism of Germany, saying the new controls will allow the Polish authorities to carefully scrutinise every case of a suspected irregular migrant being turned away by the German border force and pushed back into Poland.

    “It will no longer be the case that anyone who has crossed the border illegally, and whose documentation is incomplete or unclear, will be sent to Poland from anywhere – whether from Germany or any other country.”

    He then added:

    “We are doing this for you: for the Germans, the Dutch, the French, because it’s the border of the European Union,” he insisted.

    “I really want Europe to understand why we, supporters of Schengen, of Europe without borders … have to partially reintroduce controls on the border.”

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    Updated at 11.42 BST

    Poland introduces border controls with Germany, Lithuania

    Poland has introduced border controls with Germany and Lithuania in a bid to address growing worries about irregular migration through the country, which Warsaw says is inspired by Russia and Belarus.

    Polish border guards check cars at the Polish-German border in Słubice, western Poland, close to the German city of Frankfurt an der Oder. Photograph: Wojtek Radwański/AFP/Getty Images

    Announcing the move last week, Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk said that the recent policy shift in Germany had placed undue pressure on Poland to accept individuals denied entry at the German border.

    In remarks at the beginning of the weekly cabinet meeting, Tusk blamed Germany for the move, accusing it of a policy shift resulting in “effectively refusing entry … to migrants who are heading to Germany to apply for asylum or other forms of status”.

    “With no border checks on the Polish side, it becomes difficult to determine whether those being returned or redirected to Poland should be sent there,” he said.

    Polish interior minister Tomasz Siemoniak defended the move this morning saying it was justified by what authorities see on the border.

    Poland has long been warning against what it says is a Russian-Belarusian campaign to destabilise the European Union by incentivising irregular migration through the bloc’s eastern borders with Belarus.

    He told private broadcaster TVN24:

    “We must take very clear action in a situation where the German side, on one hand, does not admit … migrants and does not subject them to the readmission procedure, and on the other hand, due to the tightening of our Polish-Belarusian border, (…) we are seeing a significant increase in illegal migrants crossing the border into Lithuania, Latvia, and then traveling to Poland.”

    Siemoniak added that minutes before the controls kicked in at midnight, the Polish border guard stopped an Estonian man attempting to smuggle four people, likely Afghan citizens, across the border without the necessary documents.

    By the end of June this year, 412 people have been detained at the Polish-Lithuanian border – just short of the total for the entire year of 2024, which was 432. More than 15,000 people attempted to cross the Polish-Belarusian border illegally, according to official figures.

    800 additional border guards, 300 police officers, and over 500 members of the territorial defence forces were sent to implement the new measures.

    The measure, introduced after a series of far-right-inspired protests along the border, was initially introduced for 30 days, but Siemoniak said, “If Germans don’t remove their controls, we will continue with ours too.”

    People take part in a picket, organised by the far-right-backed ‘Border Defense Movement’ (ROG) to oppose returns of migrants, at the Polish-German border bridge over the Lusatian Neisse near Porajów in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship, southwestern Poland. Photograph: Krzysztof Cwik/EPA
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    Zelenskyy discussed replacing Ukraine ambassador to US with Trump, Bloomberg says

    Back to Ukraine, Bloomberg News (£) has just reported that Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy discussed replacing the current ambassador to the US during his phone call with President Donald Trump on Friday.

    Bloomberg reported that Ukraine’s prime minister Denys Shmyhal is high on the list of potential candidates, with some other senior figures such as his deputy Olha Stefanishyna and defence minister Rustem Umerov also believed to be under consideration.

    Ukrainian prime minister Denys Shmyhal answers journalists’ questions during a press conference in Kyiv, Ukraine. Photograph: Global Images Ukraine/Getty Images
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    Updated at 10.34 BST

    Paris reopens Seine River to public swimming after century-long ban

    Kate Connolly

    Kate Connolly

    Parisians and tourists flocked to take a dip in the Seine River this weekend after city authorities gave the green light for it to be used for public swimming for the first time in more than a century.

    Parisians and visitors swimming near the Eiffel Tower. City authorities predict the reopening of bathing spots on the Seine will boost tourism. Photograph: Abdul Saboor/Reuters

    The opening followed a comprehensive clean-up programme sped up by its use as a venue in last year’s Paris Olympics after people who regularly swam in it illegally lobbied for its transformation.

    The outgoing mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, also helped to champion the plans, jumping in the river herself before the Olympics.

    About 1,000 swimmers a day will be allowed access to three bathing sites on the banks of the Seine for free, until the end of August.

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    Zakynthos hit by earthquake, with no injuries reported

    The Greek island of Zakynthos was hit by a 4.1 magnitude earthquake overnight, Kathimerini reported.

    No injuries or significant damage were reported, it added.

    The paper noted that “Zakynthos was all but destroyed in a 6.8 magnitude tremor in 1953.”

    View from air on the full Navagio Shipwreck beach on Ionian island, Greece Photograph: SVphotography/Getty Images/iStockphoto
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    Fresh scandal hits Spain’s ruling party as official quits over sexual harassment claims

    Sam Jones

    in Madrid

    Pedro Sánchez’s efforts to reset Spain’s ruling socialist party after damaging corruption allegations that threatened to topple his coalition government have suffered a severe setback over the weekend after a party official resigned over accusations of sexual harassment.

    Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez arriving for the PSOE Federal Committee in Madrid, Spain. Photograph: Pablo Blazquez Dominguez HANDOUT/EPA

    The prime minister had hoped this weekend’s meeting of the federal committee of his Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE) would help the party move past weeks of scandals that have undermined the ethical and anti-corruption pledges on which it came to power seven years ago.

    But such hopes were flattened late on Friday night after the online newspaper elDiario published allegations from various female PSOE workers who said they had been subjected to sexual harassment by Francisco Salazar, who oversaw institutional coordination at the Moncloa palace, the office and official residence of the prime minister.

    The accusations prompted Salazar to announce on Saturday that he was stepping down from that post and from his new role as a deputy in the PSOE’s organisational secretariat.

    He told elDiario he could not recall any inappropriate interactions. “I’ve racked my brains over it and it seems mind-boggling to me,” he said. “I keep wondering if I’ve screwed up and said something inappropriate to a workmate, and the truth is, I can’t find [an example].”

    Sources at Moncloa, in Madrid, said an investigation had been launched, but added that no official complaints had so far been made against Salazar.

    On Saturday, Sánchez apologised again for what he called his misplaced confidence in those accused of wrongdoing, adding: “I was wrong to place my trust in people who didn’t deserve it, but we won’t fall short in a time of democratic regeneration.”

    The prime minister, who is under growing pressure to call a snap election, said he had no intention of stepping down.

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    Zelenskyy tells partners to ‘fulfil everything we agreed on’ as he seeks more air defence for Ukraine

    Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has now responded to the overnight attacks on Ukraine, ramping up pressure on the US and European allies to help with air defence systems.

    “We very much expect that our partners will fulfil everything we agreed on. Air defence is the main thing for protecting life,” he said.

    Zelenskyy added that Ukraine was developing investments plans to increase its own weapon production, including “all types of drones,” and with “special attention paid to interceptor drones.”

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    Updated at 12.54 BST

    Morning opening: What’s next for Ukraine?

    Jakub Krupa

    Jakub Krupa

    At least four people were killed and more than 30 injured in another round of Russian strikes on Ukraine overnight, just days after a series of phone calls between US president Donald Trump, Russian president Vladimir Putin, and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    A view shows the site of apartment buildings hit by a Russian drone strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Odesa, Ukraine. Photograph: State Emergency Service Of Ukraine/Reuters

    The latest attack will once again pose questions on what’s next for Ukraine as the US ceasefire proposal, pursued by Trump, appears to be failing to make any further progress.

    Zelenskyy’s top aide Andriy Yermak said in an update on Telegram that “one of the important principles of defence is the destruction of the enemy’s ability to produce weapons,” as he called for “Russia’s military-industrial complex … to be weakened in various ways: from sanctions to direct strikes.”

    The western world must realise that Russia’s scaling up of weapons production only brings us closer to the day when it will be used not only against Ukraine.

    Elsewhere, some parts of Europe still battles heatwave with temperatures close to 40 Celsius in Greece, while others in central and eastern Europe are on alert for storms and torrential rains.

    In Strasbourg, the European parliament will hold a debate ahead of this Thursday’s vote of no confidence in Ursula von der Leyen’s EU commission.

    We are also waiting for more updates from EU-US trade talks, and on the latest situation on the Polish border with Germany after Poland has reintroduced controls overnight in an attempt to prevent irregular migration.I will bring you all the updates from Ukraine and across Europe here.

    It’s Monday, 7 July 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

    Good morning.

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    Air Claims defences Europe foothold Live pleads Region Russia Ukraine Zelenskyy
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