Those travelling between the two stations should check before they travel
Seven trains have been cancelled today after ‘more trains than usual’ need to be repaired. Would-be passengers hoping to travel between Cambridge and Norwich are impacted by the cancellations. Greater Anglia trains running between Cambridge and Norwich have been cancelled after a number of trains need urgent repairs, which have taken them out of service today. According to the trainline, the cancellations will only impact passengers travelling between the two stations today (Sunday, February 22). The cancellations have affected at least seven journeys between the two major stations. Those wishing to travel to Cambridge or Norwich from either destination are advised to check before they travel. Routes which are impacted for the rest of the day: 1:08pm Norwich to Cambridge due 2.30pm 2.40pm Cambridge to Norwich due 3.57pm 4.06pm Norwich to Cambridge due 5.30pm 5.41 Cambridge to Norwich due 6.59pm 7.15pm Norwich to Cambridge due 8.32pm 8.42pm Cambridge to Norwich due 10.02pm
The fire was reported on Roosevelt Street in Kearsley on the afternoon of Sunday February 22 at around 3.30pm.
Firefighters and police officers were called to the scene on Sunday afternoon and officers say no injuries were reported because of the 3.30pm blaze.
A Greater Manchester Police spokesperson said: “We were called around 3.30pm on February 22 2026 to reports of a fire at a property.
“Emergency services attended. The fire was extinguished and no injuries reported.
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Emergency services were on the scene (Image: Public)
“Enquiries are ongoing.”
It is understood that no one was inside at the house on Roosevelt Street while the fire was underway.
Members of the public have reported that emergency services were called again to the same house later that same day at around 10pm in the evening.
They reported that a fire appeared to have broken out again at the same house with images from the scene showing firefighters going about their work to make the scene safe.
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Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service have been approached for further information.
Members of the public have been encouraged to always call 999 in the event of an emergency.
The adverse weather conditions have caused several flights to be cancelled with passengers advised to contact their airlines for updates
Olivia Beeson, Bairbre Holmes and Press Association
08:04, 23 Feb 2026
Flights arriving and departing from Dublin Airport have been cancelled due to a huge storm.
Storm Hernando is causing chaos in the USA and, as a result, 13 flights to and from the Irish airport have been cancelled on Monday, February 23.
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The weather conditions on the east coast of the USA have already caused thousands of flights to and from the region to be cancelled.
Posting on X, the airport said: “Due to adverse weather (Storm Hernando) on the east coast of the US, airlines have cancelled a number of flights due to operate to/from Dublin Airport on Monday.”
Dublin Airport said airlines had cancelled seven outbound and six inbound flights so far as a result of the storm.
It said flights to JFK airport in New York, Newark airport in New Jersey and Boston airport are affected.
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Passengers have been advised to contact their airlines for the latest updates.
The National Weather Service has warned: “A major winter storm is expected to bring heavy snow, strong winds, and coastal flooding across the Mid-Atlantic and north-east that may cause impossible travel conditions and power outages.”
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The war in Ukraine has become a grinding test of attrition, where movement on the map is measured in metres, not miles. In the frozen wastelands where this fight is being waged, it feels never-ending.
At stake are huge consequences not just for Ukrainians, but for Europe and the wider international order – whether borders can be changed by force.
On the ground, the conflict feels less like grand strategy and more like a daily slog to survive.
We joined a unit from the 117th Brigade, tasked with defending one of the most heavily contested areas of the Donbas, known as the “fortress belt”.
Just getting to their positions is a test of nerve, as moving forward often means walking across open ground. It is terrifying.
All around, the landscape bears the scars of war. It used to be only the scream of a shell you had to fear, but now it is also the menacing buzz of a drone – and the sky here is full of them.
A drone spots us
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The soldiers scan the skies for any unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and use handheld drone detectors.
One drone heads over our position, hunting for a target, and the radio soon alerts us that it is tracking back. The drone detector doesn’t stop bleeping, indicating that our movement has been spotted.
Image: Sky’s Alex Rossi is hiding behind a small tree as the drone flies overhead
We hear it before we see it, and the increasingly louder whizzing sound means the drone is getting closer and closer.
The deputy commander we are with opens fire with his assault rifle, and another soldier joins the fight. While hitting a small, fast-moving target is not easy, it’s the only way to combat the threat and has become routine for the soldiers.
We are relieved when we see the drone fall from the sky, but there is no time to linger, as more drones could follow and artillery might be called in on our position.
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Image: They hear the drone before they see it through the bare branches of the tree
Image: The deputy commander is firing at the drone above us
The next leg of the journey to the village where the unit is stationed is by quad bike, racing over icy roads.
As we speed forward, smashed Ukrainian vehicles lie abandoned along the route; they are stark reminders of the danger ahead.
Ukrainian drones are our eyes in the sky, tracking our movement overhead, thereby offering some protection.
Image: A Ukrainian drone tracks our movement on the icy roads
Cheap, mass-produced and deadly
The small “drone hunter” unit operates largely in the shadows, helping protect the logistical hub of Sloviansk, a key city anchoring the defensive line in eastern Ukraine.
Inside their bunker, where they live and plan missions, they show us a drone they shot down that morning. It is cheap, mass-produced and deadly.
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Image: This drone was retrieved after it was shot down by the unit
Bohdan, the commander of the anti-aircraft battery unit of the 117th Brigade, explains: “There are men working with pump-action shotguns because the drones fly at their lowest altitude there.
“That is within the effective range for a shotgun. But here, they fly higher and faster so the Kalashnikov is the most effective tool.”
Image: Bohdan, commander of the unit
Desperate fight for survival
The drones are relentless, and the landscape has been battered by years of war.
The soldiers show us something extraordinary: two civilians are still living in this shattered place.
For four years, Alexander and his wife have survived under constant bombardment. He tells me they are frightened, but have no money and nowhere to go.
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Image: Alexander and his wife remain because they can’t afford to move
As we speak, we move for cover, as another drone has been spotted overhead.
For the men defending this territory, the danger is constant.
One soldier describes the rhythm of their days: “It happens two, three times a day: icy roads, sleeper drones, flying drones, and the Russians. It couldn’t be more dangerous. Threats from everywhere – within seconds.”
Life in eastern Ukraine is a desperate fight for survival.
We are taken to a secret location deep in a forest. Access to the brigade’s headquarters is tightly restricted.
Inside, we descend into a bunker – a labyrinth of screens and monitors that reflects what this war has become.
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This is now a conflict of microchips and mud, with drones sketching digital kill chains and men doing whatever they must to survive.
Image: The 117th Brigade’s secret bunker
Image: Soldiers gather in front of a wall of screens, showing footage of drones monitoring the area
Colonel Dmytro Yaroshenk, the commander of the 117th Brigade, says the transformation has been profound: “The war has changed fundamentally.
“We used to fight ‘on horseback’, so to speak; now we fight in the sky. We’re even taking down helicopters with drones. Not my brigade specifically, but there are units doing it.”
On one screen, he shows us what remains of a group of Russian soldiers who tried to use the mist to launch a probing attack. Surveillance drones – and the algorithms guiding them – see everything and everyone.
Image: Colonel Dmytro Yaroshenk
“Logistics are currently a nightmare because technology has evolved so much; drones are flying almost everywhere. If the enemy spots a vehicle, it’s highly likely to be quickly destroyed,” the colonel adds.
Another image appears: a bunker where Russian troops were spotted entering. Attack drones are called in, striking the hideout. No one comes out.
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Image: Smoke is billowing from the Russian bunker after a drone strike
The 21st century has fused with the muddied trench battlefields of the First World War, and the result is grim and brutal.
The fighting here may feel remote to those thousands of miles away, but the implications are not.
This war will help determine whether might makes right in the 21st century, whether international law is enforced or eroded.
After four years of merciless combat, the battle for the Donbas is about more than territory. It is about the kind of world that will emerge when the guns finally fall silent.
Clive Howard, now 67, was branded the “Night Stalker” after he was jailed for life for attacking at least six women over a 28-year period in Norfolk and Cambridgeshire
A rapist dubbed the “Night Stalker” after he preyed on lone women over a 28-year period could walk free – just 10 years after he was jailed for life.
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Clive Howard, then 57, hunted the streets of Cambridgeshire and Norfolk for victims before attacking them in his Volvo estate car. The loner, who lived with his parents, was described as “every woman’s living nightmare” by a judge after he attacked at least six women from 1986 onwards.
After he was handed a life sentence another 15 women came forward to claim they were also targeted. Howard’s own brother said “it was terrifying to think of how many women Clive may have attacked”. He was jailed for a minimum of 10 years and three months, but the sentence was later cut by a year because it did not consider time spent on remand.
Now an official report reveals he went before a parole hearing in February last year but was denied his freedom because he still posed a danger to the public. The Parole Board review said he had undertaken training to address his use of “violence and sex offending” but “there had been some occasions when he had not obeyed the prison rules and had displayed hostility to staff”, reports the Mirror.
There are fears he will make a fresh bid for freedom within months – with insiders condemning the failure to adequately punish him for the “predatory” nature of his crimes. A source said: “It won’t be long before he’s referred to the parole board again. It’s a disgrace he could be released so soon after being jailed. His offending was horrific, predatory and targeted, so the thought he could be freed after a little more than a decade is terrifying.”
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Norfolk Police confirmed the investigation into Howard’s offending was closed “a few months after the sentencing”. A spokeswoman added: “We received a number of calls from members of the public following the sentencing of Clive Howard in 2015. Each of these were thoroughly investigated and no evidence of further criminal offences was found.”
Human rights barrister Harriet Wistrich, who spearheaded the legal battle to keep the so-called black cab rapist John Worboys behind bars, said: “The level of risk for serious sexual predators is not sufficiently recognised in these types of cases.”
Howard was ultimately apprehended in 2014 when a victim assisted police in tracing his Volvo after he raped her in a car park. It subsequently emerged that his reign of terror had spanned nearly 30 years.
In 2015, Howard admitted to seven rapes and received a life sentence. Judge Stephen Holt described Howard as “every woman’s living nightmare” who waged a “campaign of sexual offences over many years”.
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He told the father of six: “You did severe psychological harm to your victims. There was clearly a significant degree of planning and targeting.”
Howard – who had an 82-year-old girlfriend at the time of his arrest – pleaded guilty to seven rapes and was handed a life sentence, yet detectives believe he has targeted at least 15 further victims dating back to 1986. Following his sentencing, police revealed that more than a dozen women had come forward alleging they too had been attacked by the convicted rapist.
At the time, Howard’s brother David, 58, disclosed that it was he who had first alerted detectives to Howard, having become aware of the 1986 rape. Having been ostracised by his family for reporting Howard to the authorities, welder David said: “He’s a serial rapist, I had to go to the police, it was the right thing to do. I was so pleased when he was sentenced I celebrated in the pub.”
The reigning world champion beat Higgins 10-7 in Sunday’s final in Telford, bursting for the winning line with breaks of 104, 126 and 92 after the pair could not be separated for 14 frames.
The 28-year-old becomes the fourth player to win his first five ranking finals, after Steve Davis, Mark Williams and Neil Robertson.
The Cyclone is now the first player to win the World Grand Prix and the Players Championship since the Players Series came into being in 2018/19.
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He now has the chance to become the first to complete the hat-trick at the Tour Championship in Manchester next month.
Higgins was stunned by what he saw from the Chinese superstar, believing he can make more history in Sheffield this year and break the Crucible Curse, by becoming the first player to defend his first world title at the venue.
‘I couldn’t pot a long ball all day and Zhao doesn’t really miss any long balls,’ Higgins said on Channel 5. ‘The last three frames there it was absolutely poetry in motion.
John Higgins was bidding to become the oldest ranking event winner at 50 (Picture: Getty Images)
‘I’m lucky to have my kids here and I can remember my dad saying he was lucky to see footballers like George Best and Jimmy Johnstone. My kids are lucky to see someone like Xintong. He is an absolute genius, a genius.
‘I felt totally great, I felt really good, I just couldn’t pot long balls. You get down for them and think you’ve got to get them because if you don’t get them you know he’s going to punish you. The last three frames it was a joy to watch even though I was on the receiving end.
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‘I think he’ll be the man to beat at the World Championship this year, I really do.’
Zhao won the £150,000 top prize in Telford (Picture: Getty Images)
Stephen Hendry, who has tipped Zhao to reach ‘four or five’ World Championship wins, feels he is taking snooker to another level with his excellence.
‘I’m always looking for players who can take the game to the next level. I think this young man can,’ said the seven-time world champion. ‘I think he’s operating at a higher level than anyone else in the game at the moment.
‘He seems to have shrugged the expectation of being world champion and the pressure of that. And now just playing with a freedom and a confidence. Best player in the world at the moment, no doubt about it.’
Zhao is straight back in action on Tuesday at the Welsh Open (Picture: Getty Images)
Zhao was not always at his best in Telford, struggling at times against Elliot Slessor and Mark Allen in round one and the semi-finals, but bouncing back to 6-5 victories against both.
He also faltered at times in the final, before surging to the winning line in style.
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‘I still can’t believe that, last week I was in Hong Kong and now back to Telford. I can’t believe that,’ he said of triumphing at the Grand Prix before Players Championship glory.
Zhao Xintong’s run to the Players Championship title
Final: 10-7 John Higgins Semi-final: 6-5 Mark Allen Quarter-final: 6-3 Shaun Murphy Last 16: 6-5 Elliot Slessor
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‘This week I played not really good, but tonight I think the last three frames I played really nice frames. I’m really happy.
‘Our Chinese people really respect John, Ronnie [O’Sullivan] and Mark [Williams], they’re 50 years old and can beat everyone in the world, so I’m really a lucky one.’
On his chances of defending his World Championship title, he said: ‘I don’t want to think a lot. I just want to enjoy snooker.’
Former Masters champion Alan McManus feels Zhao is on course to become one of the all-time greats, saying: ‘That’s what generational talents do in winning big tournaments.
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‘He’s put away a legend and put him away in style. He is something incredibly special.
‘We’re talking about six, seven or eight players in the history of our sport are that special. He’s definitely the next one.’
The opportunity and ability for teams to rewrite their own narratives in the space of just a few weeks is part of what makes the Six Nations so compelling.
Lacklustre and outgunned in Rome in week one, Scotland are now France’s biggest challengers after following up the Calcutta Cup demolition of England with a nailbiting, nerve-wrenching win in Wales.
The hosts were 23-12 up with just over 20 minutes to go but Scotland roared back to win 26-23 after some brilliant quick thinking from fly-half Finn Russell.
He switched the momentum of the match with a kick that caught Wales out and allowed Darcy Graham to score in the corner. Yet again, the Bath number 10 was the difference-maker.
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“Big-game players turn up when it matters and Russell had moments when he bailed Scotland out,” former Wales captain Sam Warburton told BBC Rugby Special.
“He was exceptional at managing the team when they were down in the game. He waits for the perfect moment to get involved.
“He plays what he sees, he has that licence and his clutch kicking was immense. The big-game player rocked up in the last 30 minutes, he was immaculate and a big part of the comeback.”
“Scotland found a way to win ugly,” added their former flanker John Barclay.
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“They found solutions and ground their way in. In some ways that was the most important win they have had in a while. It has given them a strong position in the table.”
Up next? France at Murrayfield on Saturday, 7 March, and the chance to end Les Bleus’ Grand Slam dreams after three successive wins.
Raya made a rare mistake in Arsenal’s deflating 2-2 draw with Wolves last week, colliding with Gabriel and allowing the basement boys to score an injury-time equaliser.
Neville questioned how Raya would respond to his uncharacteristic blunder in Arsenal’s huge north London derby on Sunday but was impressed by his reaction.
Viktor Gyokeres and Eberechi Eze stole the headlines after both scoring twice in an emphatic 4-1 win, but Neville was keen to praise Raya for his ‘dominant’ performance in between the posts.
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Raya looked back to his best as Arsenal breezed past Spurs and Neville said he has been an ‘absolutely incredible’ signing for Mikel Arteta’s side.
But £27m signing Raya quickly displaced Ramsdale as Arsenal’s No. 1 and has been one of the most consistent goalkeepers in the Premier League ever since.
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From the latest transfer rumours and managerial moves to analysis of the biggest games and a lot more, our experts have you covered.
David Raya after Arsenal’s north London derby win (Picture: Getty)
Asked how Arsenal coped with the growing title pressure against Tottenham, Neville said on his Sky Sports podcast: ‘Really well in the end.
‘At half-time they may have looked back and thought, “how are we in this position?” because they were so dominant in the game.
‘They caused their own problems once or twice and I was wondering if these mistakes were becoming contagious and would cost a team who were dominant in most matches.
Arsenal ran riot at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (Picture: Getty)
‘In the end it was really important what happened today. It’s too early to feel the real title pressure, we’re not quite in the home straight, but this is going to get really hot when we get into April. Games really do count now and Arsenal have been in a difficult run.
‘I was thinking about it before the game and I singled out David Raya because I think he’s been absolutely incredible, what a goalkeeper he’s been this season and since he joined Arsenal.
‘But he had all of Thursday and Friday to think long and hard about that Wolves game and listen to the noise. How is he going to respond? Is he going to be a bit more tentative and wobbly and shaky?
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‘Absolutely not, absolutely not. Look at his body language, he had authority and dominated his area and caught every single cross that came in. It was really important for him today to get back to his mistake-free best and he made a special save as well.
‘Arsenal had a job to do today and they’ve done it and it was a good day for Raya, who has been brilliant all season.’
Arsenal’s convincing derby win puts them five points clear of second-placed Manchester City, who have a game in hand.
Discussing the title race, Neville added: ‘Man City are dangerous with the fact they’ve got [Omar] Marmoush, [Erling] Haaland, [Rayan] Cherki, [Antoine] Semenyo, [Phil] Foden.
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‘If they can keep the centre-backs fit, they’ve got a chance. The goalkeeper’s good, the manager is exceptional.
‘The celebrations at the end [after Newcastle] from Haaland and Pep Guardiola were meaningful. They were sending a message – that was mind games at play. Pep will say it’s not, but it is.
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‘Every time you speak now for the next two months, every time you do something on the pitch, it’s going to be transmitting to the opposition team – that’s vulnerabilities, strength, celebrations, whatever it is.
‘So what Arsenal had to cope with and the questions that they’ve had to answer, I missed one of them out and that was the fact that Man City have sent a message that we’re coming for you and we’re going to be breathing down your neck.
‘Arsenal have withstood that, and they’re going to have to withstand that for another six to eight weeks. They were never going to get this Premier League title handed to them on a plate. It doesn’t work like that.
‘It’s a struggle, it’s a battle, it’s a fight and this City team aren’t quite the team that were going through those fights with Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool, but there’s still some characters in that dressing room who understand it and know it – and particularly the manager, so they’re going to be so dangerous.
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‘I think Arsenal will get there, but it doesn’t surprise me that they are making mistakes and that City are coming back at them. They’ll almost crawl over the line in the end.
‘It’s going to be a massive struggle. I don’t think it’s going to be easy and that game is going to be monumental at the Etihad [in the Premier League on April 18].’
Tiger Woods hosted the PGA Tour’s second Signature Event of the season at Riviera Country Club in California, with one of the biggest prize purses of the year on offer
Rory McIlroy is only interested in winning golf tournaments – but a cheque for over £1.3million for finishing in a tie for second sure softens the blow when you come up short.
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Breakthrough American star Jacob Bridgeman was a cut above at Riviera Country Club this week, taking a six stroke lead into the final round and seeing that out on Sunday evening to win by a single shot.
Tiger Woods hosted the PGA Tour’s second Signature Event of the season at Riviera Country Club in California, and there was one of the biggest prize purses of the year on offer.
Although the Genesis Invitational is a Signature Event with a limited field compared to a regular PGA Tour tournament, the 36-hole cut in operation ensured not every player earned a paycheck on Sunday night. However, just making the cut banked players over $50,000.
McIlroy finished one shot behind the winner in a tie for second with Kurt Kitayama, who had shot a seven-under par final round 64.
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Meanwhile, the world number two had a final round 67, which included five birdies and one bogey. He took home a cheque for over £1,330,000 for his efforts, while the winner pocketed £2,950,000.
A final round 67 – his lowest score of the tournament – saw Shane Lowry finish in a four-way tie for 24th place, for which he earned just under £132,000.
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Lviv attack: Bomb explosions kill police officer and injure 24
One police officer was killed and 24 people were wounded after several explosive devices detonated at midnight in Lviv, in western Ukraine, the National Police said on Sunday, in an attack president Volodymyr Zelensky blamed on Russia.
“It has been preliminarily established that homemade explosive devices detonated,” the police officials said.
Lviv mayor Andriy Sadovyi described the incident as a terrorist act and said a 23-year-old policewoman had died. Twelve people remained in hospital, two in serious condition, he said.
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Interior minister Ihor Klymenko said a woman had been detained in connection with the investigation.
The police said that the first explosion occurred after a patrol crew arrived at the suspected scene of a shop break-in, while the second explosion occurred a little later.
A local resident walks at the site of an explosion that rocked a shop in Lviv amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP via Getty Images)
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 06:56
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Russian attack on Odesa region kills two people
A Russian attack on Ukraine’s southern Odesa region has killed at least two people and injured three overnight, Ukraine’s emergency service said this morning.
People died when a Russian drone fell on a truck stop causing a fire, the service said on its Telegram channel.
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 06:36
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Watch: Zelensky warns Putin has started WW III
Zelensky warns Putin has started WW III
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 06:01
Russia-controlled Zaporizhzhia reports power outage after Ukrainian attack
The Russian-controlled part of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region was facing an electricity outage after a major Ukrainian attack on energy infrastructure, a Russian-installed official said yesterday.
Yevgeny Balitsky, Moscow-installed governor of the Russian-controlled parts of Zaporizhzhia region, said a second power outage occurred this morning. Maintenance services had earlier managed to resume electricity supply to around 50 per cent of the region.
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“Socially significant facilities are connected to backup power sources. Generators are running, providing water and supporting critical infrastructure,” Balitsky said on his Telegram.
In Russian-controlled Luhansk a fuel reservoir caught fire after a Ukrainian drone attack on an oil depot, Leonid Pasechnik, the Moscow-installed leader, said.
The Russian defence ministry said air defence systems had intercepted and destroyed 86 Ukrainian drones over Russian region and the Crimean Peninsula overnight.
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 05:45
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Hungary threatens block EU sanctions on Russia over Ukraine pipeline dispute
Hungary has threatened to block a new package of European Union sanctions against Russia and stall efforts to help Ukraine, demanding the immediate resumption of Russian oil deliveries.
This ultimatum precedes a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels on Monday to discuss the bloc’s 20th round of sanctions, hoping for approval by the fourth anniversary of Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine on Tuesday.
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó announced his intention to block the sanctions in a social media video on Sunday, accusing Ukraine of deliberately withholding Russian oil shipments via the Druzhba pipeline.
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He stated: “We will not consent to the adoption of the 20th package of sanctions, because we have previously made it clear that until the Ukrainians resume oil shipments to Hungary, we will not allow decisions that are important to them to be approved.”
Russian oil shipments to Hungary and Slovakia have been interrupted since 27 January.
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 05:32
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Zelensky hints ‘real compromise’ could be made with Russia
Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Ukraine is prepared for “real compromises” to end the war, but not at the expense of its independence or sovereignty.
He expressed willingness to discuss compromises with the United States, while rejecting repeated “ultimatums” from Russia.
Zelensky reiterated that Ukraine would consider peace based on current battlelines, accusing Russia of “terrorism” through its demands.
“Stay where we stay – this is a big compromise,” Zelensky said, confirming reports that Ukraine is agreeing to freeze the current lines of conflict as part of any deal.
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“They took almost 20 per cent of our territory and we are ready to speak about peace at this moment, on the basis of ‘stay where we stay’.
“This is a big compromise. What does Russia offer us as a compromise? What are they ready to do?
“We are ready for real compromises. But not compromises at the cost of our independence and sovereignty. We are ready to speak about compromises with the United States. But not to get ultimatums from the Russians again and again. They are the aggressor. Everybody has recognised it,” he said.
“They said, ‘We are ready not to occupy your other regions’. But it is terrorism. Even that language, it is terrorism. ‘I’m ready not to kill you – give us everything’,” the Ukrainian leader said, calling it an “ultimatum” and “not a compromise.
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“That’s why I said: We are ready for compromises that respect Ukrainian sovereignty and territorial integrity, our army, our people, and our children. But we are not ready for ultimatums,” he said.
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 05:06
South Korea urges Russian embassy to remove ‘victory’ banner as Ukraine war anniversary nears
South Korea has asked the Russian embassy in Seoul to take down a large banner reading “Victory will be ours”, its foreign ministry said, just ahead of this week’s fourth anniversary of the start of the war in Ukraine.
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The ministry said in a statement on Sunday that it had conveyed its concerns to the embassy without clarifying whether it had received a response.
The roughly 15-metre (49.21 ft) banner, in the colours of the Russian flag and written in Russian, was hung on the embassy’s outer wall in central Seoul ahead of the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Tuesday.
The banner remained in place on Monday.
In its statement, the ministry reiterated South Korea’s position that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is illegal.
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The ministry also said that military cooperation between Russia and North Korea should stop, describing it as a grave threat to South Korea’s security and a violation of the UN Charter and UN Security Council resolutions.
Earlier this month, Russian ambassador to South Korea Georgy Zinoviev praised what he described as North Korean troops’ role in fighting in Russia’s Kursk region, according to media reports.
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 04:12
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Lviv attack: Bomb explosions kill police officer and injure 24
One police officer was killed and 24 people were wounded after several explosive devices detonated at midnight in Lviv, in western Ukraine, the National Police said on Sunday, in an attack president Volodymyr Zelensky blamed on Russia.
“It has been preliminarily established that homemade explosive devices detonated,” the police officials said.
Lviv mayor Andriy Sadovyi described the incident as a terrorist act and said a 23-year-old policewoman had died. Twelve people remained in hospital, two in serious condition, he said.
Interior minister Ihor Klymenko said a woman had been detained in connection with the investigation.
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The police said that the first explosion occurred after a patrol crew arrived at the suspected scene of a shop break-in, while the second explosion occurred a little later.
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 03:52
Power restored to most households in Ukraine’s Russia-controlled Zaporizhzhia
Emergency crews have restored power to most areas hit by cuts after a major Ukrainian attack on energy infrastructure, the Russia-installed governor of the part of Zaporizhzhia region controlled by Moscow said.
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Yevgeny Balitsky said power supplies had been restored to all but 12,000 households in a single district. Emergency crews were working to complete the job, he said.
Balitsky had earlier said two power outages had occurred in the region in southeastern Ukraine. Workers had already restored power to 50 per cent of the region and generators were supporting critical infrastructure.
In Russian-controlled Luhansk in Ukraine’s northeast, a fuel reservoir caught fire after a Ukrainian drone attack on an oil depot, Leonid Pasechnik, the Moscow-installed leader, said.
Arpan Rai23 February 2026 03:41
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Pope says peace in Ukraine ‘cannot be postponed’
Pope Leo made an impassioned appeal on Sunday for peace in Ukraine, saying an end to the four-year-old conflict “cannot be postponed” as the United States tries to broker an elusive accord between Moscow and Kyiv.
Russia, which launched a full-scale invasion of its neighbour on February 24, 2022, used drones and ballistic and cruise missiles in its latest attacks overnight, the Ukrainian military and local officials said on Sunday.
“My heart goes out again to the dramatic situation that everyone can see,” the pope said during his weekly address to pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square after a Sunday prayer.
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“So many victims, so many broken lives and families, so much destruction, so much unspeakable suffering.”
The US has been seeking to mediate between the two sides, but progress has been halting, with Russia demanding Ukraine withdraw from parts of the eastern Donbas region it still controls, an idea Kyiv has rejected.
“Peace cannot be postponed,” the pope said. “It is an urgent necessity that must find space in hearts and be translated into responsible decisions.”
He said war was a “wound inflicted on the entire human family”, which leaves behind “death, devastation, and a trail of pain that marks generations.”
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Pope Leo XIV arrives in St Peter’s Square at the Vatican for his open-air weekly general audience (AP)
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — An uproar continued Sunday after the U.S. ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, said Israel has a right to much of the Middle East, as more Arab and Muslim countries objected and the U.S. said his comments were taken out of context.
Huckabee spoke in an interview with conservative commentator Tucker Carlson that aired Friday. Carlson said that according to the Bible, the descendants of Abraham would receive land that today would include much of the Middle East, including parts of modern-day Jordan, Syria, Iraq and Lebanon. He quoted from Genesis Chapter 15 and asked Huckabee if Israel had a right to that land.
Huckabee responded: “It would be fine if they took it all.”
A spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy said Sunday that Huckabee’s comments were taken out of context and that there is no change to U.S. policies on Israel.
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In the interview, Huckabee added: “They’re not asking to go back and take all of that, but they are asking to at least take the land that they now occupy, they now live in, they now own legitimately, and it is a safe haven for them.” He added that Israel isn’t trying to take over Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, or Iraq but is trying to protect its own people.
FILE – U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee is seen during an interview in Jerusalem on Aug. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)
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FILE – U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee is seen during an interview in Jerusalem on Aug. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)
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Condemnation by Arab countries
A joint statement Sunday by Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Indonesia, Pakistan, Turkey, Syria, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, the Palestinian Authority and several Arab governing bodies called Huckabee’s remarks “dangerous and inflammatory” and ones that endanger the region’s stability.
“These statements directly contradict the vision put forward by U.S. President Donald J. Trump … based on containing escalation and creating a political horizon for a comprehensive settlement that ensures the Palestinian people have their own independent state,” the statement said.
Huckabee, an evangelical Christian and strong supporter of Israel and the West Bank settlement movement, has long opposed the idea of a two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinian people.
FILE – Tucker Carlson speaks at a memorial for Charlie Kirk on Sept. 21, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
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FILE – Tucker Carlson speaks at a memorial for Charlie Kirk on Sept. 21, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
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Israeli concerns about Iran
Meanwhile, tensions are high in Israel as the country prepares for a possible attack from Iran. Iran previously said it will attack both Israel and U.S. bases in the Middle East if the United States attacks it.
The movements of additional U.S. warships and airplanes to the region, with the USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier near the mouth of the Mediterranean Sea, don’t guarantee a U.S. strike on Iran, but they bolster Trump’s ability to carry out one if he chooses.
Netanyahu warned last week that if Iran attacks Israel, they will risk a “response that they cannot even imagine.”
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Israel attacked Iran last year during indirect U.S.-Iran talks, sparking a 12-day war. The United States inserted itself in the war by bombing Iranian nuclear sites.
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Magdy reported from Cairo. Associated Press writer Sam Mednick contributed from Tel Aviv, Israel.