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Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says

Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says
State Emergency Service men working to put out the fires caused by Russian missile and drone attacks in Kyiv, Ukraine. (Handout)
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Updated 07 July 2025

Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says

Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says
  • 20 people were wounded following a Russian drone attack on Kharkiv as fires spread through residential buildings and a kindergarten

At least three children were among 20 people wounded as a result of a Russian drone attack on Ukraine’s second-largest city of Kharkiv overnight that damaged apartments and a kindergarten, Ukrainian authorities said on Monday. Kharkiv, which lies in northeastern Ukraine near the border with Russia, has been the target of regular Russian drone and missile attacks since the start of the war that Moscow launched with a full-scale invasion more than three years ago.
A fire broke out in a multi-story residential building in Kharkiv as a result of the attack, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said.
Oleh Sinehubov, governor of the broader Kharkiv region of which the city of Kharkiv is the administrative center, said that most of the injuries occurred in the city’s Shevchenkivskyi district.
Emergency services were working at the site, Sinehubov said on the Telegram messaging app.
The full scale of the attack was not immediately clear. There was no comment on the attacks from Moscow. Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war. But thousands of civilians have died in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainian.
A Russian attack on the region of Sumy, also in Ukraine’s northeast, on Sunday afternoon killed two people and injured another two, while damaging about 20 buildings, State Emergency Service of Ukraine said on Telegram.
An overnight attack damaged several buildings and cars in three of the 10 districts of the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Telegram. There were no reports of injuries, he added.


French FM vows to ‘defeat’ drug trade on Colombia trip

Updated 6 sec ago

French FM vows to ‘defeat’ drug trade on Colombia trip

French FM vows to ‘defeat’ drug trade on Colombia trip
PUERTO ANTIOQUIA: France’s foreign minister vowed Saturday to “defeat” rapidly spreading drug trafficking in Europe, as he spoke to AFP on a trip to Colombia, a major narcotics producer.
Jean-Noel Barrot is in the South American country for a summit between the European Union and the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), which will take place in the city of Santa Marta on Sunday and Monday.
Speaking in nearby Puerto Antioquia, a port terminal in northwestern Colombia where the powerful Clan del Golfo cartel operates, Barrot said France was “resolved to defeat trafficking of all kinds — not just in drugs — which raises public health (and safety) concerns.”
He said Paris would not sit by and watch “the explosion of drug trafficking in Latin America, in the Caribbean, and also in Europe, where we are now seeing not only drugs flooding in, but also traffickers moving around and setting up laboratories.”
“All of this must stop,” he said, adding that the French government planned to open a regional academy in the Dominican Republic that will train investigators and customs officers to help combat organized crime.
The training program, planned for next year, will take place in cooperation “with Colombia in particular, the (world’s) top cocaine producer,” Barrot said.
The EU-CELAC summit risks being overshadowed by no-shows and disputes, with Colombia accusing the United States of pressuring countries to skip the event.
Ties between Washington and Bogota have soured since US President Donald Trump ordered a military deployment in the Caribbean to combat a surge in drug trafficking that he has blamed partly on his leftist Colombian counterpart, Gustavo Petro.
Barrot repeated his “concern” about regional tensions, saying the US deployment had “disregarded the rules of international law and the law of the sea.”