UK prime minister Rishi Sunak told Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky that he backed the idea of a coalition to provide Ukraine with Western-made fighter jets, but didn’t promise any UK planes.
The UK will provide hundreds of air defence missiles and further unmanned aerial systems, including new long-range attack drones, according to a UK government statement.
The visit followed Zelensky’s visits with French President Emmanuel Macron and German chancellor Olaf Scholz over the weekend.
Key developments
- UK’s Sunak backs coalition to send fighter aircraft to Ukraine
- Russia hosts Belarus official with Lukashenko out of public view
- South Africa says row with US resolved after investor alarm
- Russia’s seaborne flows of crude oil climb to anew high
- Putin’s war revives Russia’s dark tradition of informers
(All times CET)
Russian premier, sanctioned tycoons to visit China forum (4pm)
Russian prime minister Mikhail Mishustin will lead a government delegation to China next week to attend a business forum, along with sanctioned tycoons, as Moscow leans on Beijing to help it withstand economic pressure over the Kremlin’s war in Ukraine.
Billionaire Oleg Deripaska plans to go to the Russia-China Business Forum in Shanghai on May 23, while fertiliser tycoons Andrey Guryev and Andrey Melnichenko, pipe maker Dmitry Pumpyansky and Alexey Mordashov of steel and mining giant Severstal, have also been invited, according to people with knowledge of the plans. Deripaska won’t be attending the forum, his spokesperson said after publication of the original story.
UK backs coalition to send fighter jets (3pm)
Sunak pledged support for a coalition to help provide Ukraine with a fleet of Western-made fighter jets, though he stopped short of promising actual aircraft during Zelensky’s visit.
Zelensky says his recent trip to Italy, Germany, France and Great Britain brought important agreements regarding military support, according to an emailed statement from his office.
“Really important, powerful defence packages,” Zelensky said.
Russia hosts Belarus official with Lukashenko out of view (2.45pm)
The foreign minister of Belarus begins a three-day visit to Moscow on Monday amid speculation about the whereabouts of the country’s long-serving president Alexander Lukashenko.
G-7 to strengthen Russia sanctions enforcement (1pm)
Group of Seven leaders plan to bolster their co-ordination in combating the circumvention of sanctions imposed on Russia when they meet in Hiroshima, Japan, later this week.
“The impact of sanctions is highly linked to the quality of the co-ordination with our partners, be they in the G-7 or beyond,” European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said during a news conference on Monday.
The EU is working on a new package of sanctions that would close loopholes and hit companies and countries that are helping Russia obtain sanctioned goods. The bloc could ban goods from going to a certain country if there’s clear evidence of them ending up in Russian territory, Von der Leyen said.
Something that should be reached as soon as possible, immediately, without waiting as much as is necessary — the message should be that there’s not another decade.
— Alliance chief, Jens Stoltenberg
Nato needs to devise framework for Ukraine (12.52pm)
Nato allies need to devise “some kind of framework” to prevent Russia from continuing to chip away at European security and re-invading Ukraine after the war ends, alliance chief Jens Stoltenberg said, declining to provide more details on what that should look like.
“What I can say is that if Nato allies, and especially the big ones, start to issue security guarantees bilaterally to Ukraine, we are very close to Article 5,” Stoltenberg told his predecessor Anders Fogh Rasmussen in a live interview at the Copenhagen Democracy Summit. Article 5 refers to the collective defence commitments allies enjoy once they are full members of Nato.
Stoltenberg said he would push allies to agree to a stronger defence investment pledge and said the goal to spend at least 2% of GDP on defence is “something that should be reached as soon as possible, immediately, without waiting as much as is necessary — the message should be that there’s not another decade”.
Asked about another potential extension to his role, Stoltenberg said he had made it clear he had no other plans than to leave this fall.
Germany to send more air defence systems to Ukraine (12.20pm)
Germany will provide Ukraine with eight IRIS-T air defence systems, a spokesperson for the defence ministry in Berlin said.
Germany has already supplied two such systems and delivery of the rest will depend on a number of issues, including production capacities at manufacturer Diehl Defence GmbH & Co. KG, the spokesperson added.
Ukraine says defence of Bakhmut continues (10am)
Russia is pressing Ukrainian troops in Bakhmut, which remains an epicentre of fighting along with the town of Maryinka in the Donetsk region, according to Ukraine’s general staff.
However, the army managed to advance in the direction of Bakhmut, which is the “first success of offensive actions during the defence of the city”, the Ukrainian military media centre said, citing commander of the ground forces Oleksandr Syrskyi.
“Still, it is only a partial success and should be treated as such,” he said, adding the operation to defend Bakhmut was ongoing.
UK to announce more military aid to Ukraine (8.49am)
Prime minister Sunak will also discuss what support Ukraine needs from the international community, both immediate military equipment and long-term defences, according to a UK government statement.
France to provide more support to Ukraine (3.39am)
France will continue providing political, financial, humanitarian and military support to Ukraine for as long as necessary, the presidential office said, adding the two nations will support efforts to curtail the circumvention of sanctions against Russia.
Macron met with Zelensky in Paris on Sunday, where the leaders discussed the support required to help end the war. They agreed on the need to increase collective pressure on Russia through new sanctions to weaken the country’s ability to wage its illegal war of aggression, the French presidency said in a statement.
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