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Ukraine calls for Trump-Zelensky meeting in US this week

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Ukraine calls for Trump-Zelensky meeting in US this week

Watch: Explosions rock Kyiv after overnight Russian strikes

Ukraine’s security chief says he is hoping to arrange for President Volodymyr Zelensky’s to visit to the US “at the earliest suitable date” this month, as diplomatic attempts to end the war continue.

Meanwhile, the US has confirmed its officials are set to meet Russian representatives in Abu Dhabi as part of efforts to end the Ukraine war.

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Overnight, Russia and Ukraine traded air attacks.

Officials in Kyiv said at least six people had been killed in Russian strikes on the city, while Russian officials said at least three had been killed in a Ukrainian strike in the Rostov region.

The latest diplomatic moves come afer Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed proposed changes to the controversial 28-point US peace plan.

On Sunday, US and Ukrainian officials met in Geneva to discuss the draft plan, which had been criticised by leaders in Kyiv and Europe as too favourable to Russia.

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It appears Ukraine’s European allies produced an amended version of the plan after rejecting parts which favoured Russia’s war aims.

“Now the list of necessary steps to end the war can become doable,” Zelensky said on Monday. “Many correct elements have been incorporated into this framework.”

Ukraine’s national security chief Rustem Umerov said Kyiv was “looking forward” to organising Zelensky’s visit to the US “at the earliest suitable date in November” to make a deal with US President Donald Trump.

A Kremlin official rejected the amendments as “completely unconstructive”. However, a US official on Tuesday told the BBC that its team would be meeting Russian representatives in Abu Dhabi to further discuss the plan.

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Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov – who is not attending the meeting – said the Kremlin has yet to receive the “interim” version of the revised plan, adding that Moscow’s view was that it should reflect the “spirit and letter” of the Alaska talks between Trump and President Vladimir Putin in August.

Separately, a virtual “coalition of the willing” meeting of Ukraine’s European allies will also be taking place on Tuesday to discuss developments, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said.

EPA Two men with their backs to the camera, looking at a residential building which stands in front of them. the top centre of it is blackened and damaged following a strikeEPA

Residents of apartment buildings were forced to evacuate in Kyiv after being hit by strikes

The latest round of talks come as Russia and Ukraine exchanged overnight strikes.

Kyiv’s military administration chief, Tymur Tkachenko, said a fire had broken out at a high-rise residential apartment building in the Dniprovskyi district, forcing the evacuation of its residents.

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Emergency services on the scene said 18 people had been rescued, including three children, and the search for victims was ongoing after the fire had been contained.

Residents of a high-rise apartment in the city’s central Pechersk district were also evacuated after it was set ablaze during the strikes according to Kyiv’s mayor Vitali Klitschko.

He added that the building suffered damage to the upper floors, but the fire had been extinguished.

Ukraine’s air defence units responded to the attack as explosions were heard across Kyiv and residents were urged to take shelter in underground car parks and bunkers.

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Ukraine’s Ministry of Energy also confirmed a “massive, combined enemy attack” on the country’s energy infrastructure facilities.

According to Zelensky, 22 missiles and more than 460 drones were launched at Ukraine overnight.

Nato scrambled four planes over Romania – the third time in four days its planes have been sent to intercept drones in Ukraine’s border region. Six Russian drones were also detected in Moldova.

Meanwhile, the Russian defence ministry said it had intercepted 249 Ukrainian drones overnight, including over the Black Sea and Kursk.

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In Russia’s Rostov region, the death toll from a Ukrainian strike had risen to three, after initial reports of one death, officials said.

According to Russia’s acting governor of the Rostov region Yuri Sliusar, two died in hospital.

One of the deaths was reported in the city of Taganrog, where mayor Svetlana Kambulova vowed “necessary response measures”.

Another 10 people were injured in the strikes.

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In the southern Krasnodar region, Governor Veniamin Kondratyev described Ukraine’s overnight bombardment “one of the Kyiv regime’s most sustained and massive attacks”.

Map showing the front lines in Ukraine

The proposed peace plan – drafted by US and Russian officials last month – had caused much consternation in Ukraine and among its European allies, who said it was too favourable to the Kremlin.

But White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt rejected the idea that the Trump administration was “not engaging with both sides equally in this war”.

After talks in Geneva between the US and Ukraine concluded, Trump suggested that “something good just may be happening” but added: “Don’t believe it until you see it.”

As he welcomed the proposed changes, Zelensky said the “main problem” was Putin’s demand for legal recognition of the territory Russia had taken.

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Counter-proposals – reportedly drafted by the UK, France and Germany – excluded any recognition of Russian-held regions, raised Ukraine’s permitted army size, and left the door open to Ukraine joining Nato.

Russia has consistently demanded full Ukrainian withdrawal from the whole of the eastern Donbas, made up of Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Moscow’ forces also control Crimea and large parts of two other regions, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the final peace plan should make it impossible for Moscow to invade again, and that Russia should “definitely not” rejoin the G8.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Tuesday, she said: “We can’t go back to business as usual… how could you imagine that?”

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Tens of thousands of soldiers and thousands of civilians have been killed or injured, and millions of people have fled their homes, since Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February 2022.

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