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Zelensky celebrates Ukraine’s Independence Day alongside Canadian PM

Update Zelensky celebrates Ukraine’s Independence Day alongside Canadian PM
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, front left, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, front right, shake hands as they take part in a ceremony on Independence Day in Sophia Square in Kyiv, Ukraine on Aug. 24, 2025. (The Canadian Press via AP)
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Updated 24 August 2025

Zelensky celebrates Ukraine’s Independence Day alongside Canadian PM

Zelensky celebrates Ukraine’s Independence Day alongside Canadian PM
  • Canadian leader was invited to Kyiv as a “special guest,” to mark the occasion

KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky marked Independence Day on Sunday alongside Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who said Ukraine would receive more than C$1 billion ($723 million) in military aid from a previously announced package next month.

Three and a half years since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Zelensky is facing pressure from Washington to make concessions to Russia as US President Donald Trump seeks to broker a peace deal.

“We are all working to ensure that the end of this war would mean the guarantee of peace for Ukraine, so that neither war nor the threat of war are left for our children to inherit,” Zelensky told a crowd of dignitaries in Kyiv’s Sophia Square, against the backdrop of an 11th century cathedral.

As well as Carney, on his first visit to Ukraine since taking office in March, Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, attended the ceremony. Zelensky presented Kellogg with a state honor.

“We need peace,” Zelensky told Kellogg as he handed him the medal in a leather case.

Zelensky acknowledged the human cost of the war, but said that Ukrainians would fight to remain on their land.

Ukraine is now working with its European allies to draft potential frameworks for post-war security guarantees for Kyiv, which Trump has expressed openness to.


Pirates board tanker off Somalia in biggest escalation since 2024

Pirates board tanker off Somalia in biggest escalation since 2024
Updated 3 sec ago

Pirates board tanker off Somalia in biggest escalation since 2024

Pirates board tanker off Somalia in biggest escalation since 2024
  • Crew members took shelter in the ship’s 'citadel,' or fortified safe room, and still had control of the vessel
  • Somali pirate gangs have been relatively inactive in recent years after previously being a major menace around the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean
ATHENS: Pirates boarded a Malta-flagged products tanker off Somalia on Thursday, but the crew took refuge in a fortified safe room and remain in control of the vessel, maritime security sources said.
A burst of armed attacks on vessels in the region — including the first involving suspected Somali pirates in a year — has reignited concerns for shipping lanes used to transport critical energy and goods to global markets.
The Hellas Aphrodite, which was carrying gasoline, was en route from India to South Africa when a “security incident” took place on Thursday morning, its Greek manager Latsco Marine Management said. All the crew were safe, it added.
Pirates on a skiff opened fire on the tanker, maritime security firm Ambrey said. The pirates had also fired a rocket-propelled grenade at the vessel, maritime security sources said.
The European Union’s naval force said one of its assets was “close to the incident and closing distance, ready to take the appropriate actions to respond effectively to this piracy alert.”

The crew members took shelter in the ship’s “citadel,” or fortified safe room, and still had control of the vessel, officials from maritime security company Diaplous and British maritime risk management group Vanguard said.
The vessel’s captain is Montenegrin, a source with knowledge of the operation said. Five of the crew members, including the chief engineer, are Greek and the rest are Filipino nationals, the source added.
“All 24 crew are safe and accounted for and we remain in close contact with them,” Latsco Marine Management said in a statement.
Latsco said it had activated its emergency response team and was coordinating with authorities to ensure the continued safety and welfare of the crew.
“The crew reported they could hear noise on the vessel,” one of the maritime security sources said.
A Japanese aircraft conducted a surveillance flight over the area, but did not detect any movement or signs of activity on the ship, the source added.
The last comparable boarding in the region was in May 2024, when suspected pirates got onto the Liberian-flagged vessel Basilisk around 380 nautical miles east of Mogadishu. EU naval forces later rescued the 17 crew members after rappelling by fast-rope onto that vessel.
On Monday, in the first suspected Somali piracy incident of its kind since 2024, armed assailants attacked a commercial tanker off the coast near the capital Mogadishu, firing at the vessel after attempting to board it, maritime sources said.
Maritime security sources said pirates had also taken over an Iranian fishing vessel this week for use as a mothership to launch attacks.
The last hijacking took place in December 2023, when the Maltese-flagged Ruen was taken by assailants to the Somali coast before Indian naval forces freed the crew and arrested the attackers.
Somali pirate gangs have been relatively inactive in recent years after previously being a major menace around the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean.
Yemen’s Iran-affiliated Houthi militia have posed a greater threat to shipping through the Red Sea, which leads into the Gulf of Aden, since the group first launched attacks on commercial ships in November 2023, in solidarity with Palestinians over Israel’s war in Gaza.
While the Houthis have agreed to a truce on targeting US-linked shipping, many shipping companies remain wary of resuming voyages through those waters.