Russia attacks kyiv with ballistic missiles; 22 deceased

Russian attack with ballistic missiles leaves 22 dead in kyiv. Zelenskyy calls for more Patriot systems.

Russia launched waves of missiles and drones against Ukraine on Monday, causing at least 22 deaths. The capital, kyiv, was the main target, with 15 fatalities and 56 injured, according to administrative head Tymur Tkachenko. Another seven people died in the kyiv region and 29 were injured, the Ukrainian emergency service reported.

Shortage of Patriot interceptors aggravates defense

All 29 ballistic missiles launched by Russia reached their targets. The Ukrainian Air Force detailed that the enemy fired 351 drones and 68 missiles during the night. Spokesman Yurii Ihnat said on national television: “To intercept ballistic missiles, we need the means for interception. The Russians are using the fact that there is a serious deficit of interceptor missiles, in Ukraine and in the world.”

RelatedNATO intercepts Russian drones in Polish airspace

Ahead of the NATO summit in Türkiye, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged allies to strengthen air defense. “As long as Patriot missiles remain in our allies’ stockpiles, Russia is encouraged to continue razing residential buildings. The United States and Europe have enough strength to stop this terror,” he wrote in X.

Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov assured that Russia is intensifying ballistic missile attacks taking advantage of the global shortage of Patriot interceptors. “Fewer such missiles are produced each month than the enemy fires at Ukraine,” he said.

Impact on the civilian population

High-rise residential buildings suffered direct hits. In the Podilskyi district, a building partially collapsed. In Darnytsia, several buildings were damaged and people were searched under the rubble. In the suburb of Vyshneve, 600 residents were evacuated due to the risk of unexploded ordnance.

Khrystyna Piatetska, 20, said: “When we left the building, there were bodies lying around. Cars started exploding and we came out from under the rubble straight into the fire.” Halina Ivanivna, 61, said: “Everything was falling down.” Water poured out as smoke filled the air.

Moscow assured that its attacks targeted weapons factories in kyiv, although they hit civilian areas repeatedly. More than 16,000 Ukrainian civilians have died since the start of the invasion, according to the UN.

In response, Ukraine attacked the Omsk refinery, Russia’s largest, almost 2,500 kilometers from the border. Analyst Gary Peach warned that a sustained disruption would worsen Russia’s fuel crisis. In Crimea, a total blackout followed the Ukrainian attacks.

Bolivia keeps fuel prices frozen

Bolivia extends the fuel price freeze for six more months after the protests.

Bolivian President Rodrigo Paz decided to extend the fuel price freeze for six months. The measure responds to the prolonged protests and blockades in May and June that demanded his resignation.

Official measure

The decree was issued after a review of the subsidy scheme. Last December, the president withdrew almost all state support for fuel, as part of his anti-crisis plan, and established a mechanism for semiannual adjustments.

“We already had a previous decree that had frozen prices, what has been done is to modify it so that it is extended for another six months,” explained the presidential spokesperson, José Luis Gálvez.

A liter of gasoline remains at 6.96 bolivianos (0.71 dollars) and diesel at 9.80 bolivianos (more than a dollar). The price of gas also remains frozen.

Economic context

The government seeks to normalize supply after the blockades. The mobilizations aggravated the economic situation, with depleted international reserves. Bolivia depends on fuel imports, according to experts.

The country maintained a subsidy for about 20 years, which generated a strong outflow of foreign currency in a context of dollar illiquidity, according to the government.

Former Hydrocarbons Minister Álvaro Ríos criticized the decision as political: with it, the State would pay a higher price than what it sells to the final consumer.

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Women fishermen in Kenya: from the sea to ecotourism due to the climate crisis

Kenyan women transform their relationship with the sea in the face of the fishing crisis.

Women fishermen in Kenya: from the sea to ecotourism due to the climate crisis

Nuru Mohammed, 54, leads a group of women hanging fishing nets as decorations at her new restaurant in Malindi, northeast of Mombasa. In a few days it will open its doors. “For us women, this is hope,” she says. “It will help support many families who have depended on the ocean for decades.”

Along the East African coast, fishermen are reinventing themselves. Climate change, overfishing and ocean deterioration threaten their livelihoods. In Kenya, women transform restored mangroves into sources of income through beekeeping and ecotourism. In Zanzibar, communities protect reefs with locally managed closures. In Mozambique, seagrass restoration creates jobs.

“Communities that depend on the ocean are also its best guardians,” says Andréanne Martel, project director of the ReSea conservation program. “When local people, especially women, lead in conservation, they protect biodiversity and create more resilient livelihoods.”

Mohammed says that his boats have been stolen and that it is difficult for him to compete with industrial trawlers. A nearby Chinese processing plant reflects the changes. “I can’t compete with that power,” he says. “It’s been hard. I fought to stay a fisherman, but I think it’s a battle I can’t win anymore.”

10 kilometers away, Beatrice Mwanyiro oversees a mangrove nursery and restaurant for Samahco, a self-help group of 30 women supported by the Canadian government. “We have to adapt. The number of fish decreases every year. Without another source of income we will not be able to feed our families,” he explains.

Mohamed Somo, a fishing leader in Lamu, says that they used to catch up to 100 kilos of fish per boat; now less than 30. Kenyan law prohibits trawling within 9 kilometers of the coast, but some vessels operate closer. Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing costs $23 billion annually, according to the FAO.

“The trawlers fish on the high seas during the day, but at night they enter the shallow waters where we artisanal workers work. There is very little left in the morning,” adds Somo.

Jerry Mang’ena of Action for Ocean in Tanzania says: “Coastal communities are on the front lines of climate change, but they are also drivers of resilience. If we want to protect the ocean, we must invest in those who have cared for it.”

At the recent Our Ocean Conference in Mombasa, organizations called for ratifying the BBNJ (high seas) treaty, which came into force in January and has been signed by 145 countries and ratified by 81. Aliou Ba of Greenpeace Africa says: “The agreement offers a historic opportunity to protect the high seas and tackle illegal fishing that deprives communities of food and income. Governments cannot delay.”

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Fujimori announces intention to resume ties with Mexico

The elected president of Peru seeks to reestablish dialogue with Mexico after statements by Sheinbaum.

The elected president of Peru, Keiko Fujimori, stated on Thursday that she has “every intention” of resuming diplomatic relations with Mexico. The statement came a day after the Mexican president, Claudia Sheinbaum, indicated that she had not yet contacted Fujimori to congratulate her on her electoral victory.

“On my side there will be every intention to be able to resume relations between Peru and Mexico,” Fujimori briefly told the press during a public event in Lima.

Background of distancing

Sheinbaum had declared in his morning conference: “We are going to wait, remember that they broke off relations with us.” The break occurred in 2025, when Peru decided to break ties after the diplomatic asylum granted by Mexico to former Prime Minister Betssy Chávez, who took refuge in the Mexican embassy in Lima. Chávez is still waiting for safe passage to travel to Mexico, which Peru has not granted.

The conflict originated in December 2022, when the Peruvian Congress dismissed then-president Pedro Castillo, who was imprisoned after trying to dissolve the Legislature. In this context, Castillo’s wife and two minor children received asylum at the Mexican embassy and then moved to Mexico. Since then, both Andrés Manuel López Obrador and Sheinbaum requested Castillo’s release.

Castillo’s arrest sparked protests that left 50 dead during the repression by security forces under the government of Dina Boluarte. Later, Castillo and Chávez were sentenced to 11 years in prison for conspiracy to rebel. Castillo has appealed the sentence and faces other corruption investigations.

Asked if she considers Castillo’s detention illegal, as Sheinbaum claims, Fujimori responded: “I am very respectful of the institutions of my country.” However, before being proclaimed the winner, she had already pointed out that Peru and Mexico share the Pacific Alliance bloc and that there are “ties of friendship that must be prioritized beyond differences.”

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