Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,339

On Saturday, October 25, 2025, how things are going:

Fighting

    A man reportedly exploded a grenade on a train station platform in Ovruch, in the Zhytomyr region of Ukraine, killing three people and himself, and injuring 12 others. All three of the victims were women. The attack, which took place close to Belarus’s border with Ukraine, was not connected to Russia’s conflict there, according to the police.

  • According to the Ukrinform news website, two people were killed and 23 apartment buildings were damaged by Russian shelling in the Kherson region of Ukraine’s Shumenskyi.
  • According to Russian media outlet TASS, two people were killed by Ukrainian shelling in Oleshky, in the region’s Kherson region, citing Volodymyr Saldo, the governor of the area’s newly installed governor, who was installed by Russia.
  • According to TASS, Russian forces seized the village of Dronivka in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, citing the Russian defense ministry.
  • 111 Ukrainian drones were shot down by Russian forces overnight and into the morning of Friday, according to TASS, citing the Ministry of Defense of Russia.
  • According to an “intelligence update” shared on social media, which includes Ukraine’s General Staff, North Korean “uncrewed aerial system]UAS] operators are allegedly assisting Russian forces in firing rockets at Ukrainian positions in Ukraine’s Sumy region.

military assistance

  • Russian President Donald Trump should provide Ukraine with weapons, including long-range Tomahawk missiles, according to Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo, who told the Politico news agency.

Politics and diplomacy

    Following the US’s new sanctions against Russian oil giants Lukoil and Rosneft, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy demanded that allies sanction all Russian oil companies.

  • At a press conference in London, Zelenskyy and other “coalition of the willing” members said, “Sanctions that hit Russian oil – Russian oil infrastructure, Russian oil companies – are a big step,” and that they are.
  • The Dutch prime minister, Dick Schoof, agreed with Zelenskyy, saying: “It would be good if the European Union [EU] were to copy the US-UK sanction against Lukoil and Rosneft.”
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy, Kirill Dmitriev, claimed that the sanctions “were not such a big deal” for Russia because they would likely also cause higher oil prices, which would mean that “Russia will simply be selling less oil at a higher price.”
  • Dmitriev added that a meeting between Trump and President Putin “will occur,” but “probably at a later time,” in an interview with CNN.
  • At Friday’s “coalition of the willing,” British Prime Minister Keir Starmer stated that progress on using frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine must be made “within a short timetable.”

Regional security

    After helium weather balloons blew into Lithuania’s two biggest airports, the NATO member shut them down and closed the border crossings with Belarus.

  • In response to global conflicts, including Russia’s war in Ukraine, Croatian lawmakers voted to reintroduce mandatory military service.

Thailand’s Queen Mother Sirikit dead at 93: Royal Palace

BREAKING,

Trump administration investigating China’s compliance with 2020 trade deal

Nearly two-thirds of South Sudanese children in child labour: Report

According to a government study released in conjunction with Save the Children, nearly two-thirds of South Sudanese children are engaged in the worst forms of child labor. Rates can reach as high as 90% in the hardest-hit regions, according to a report from the government.

More than 418 households in seven states were surveyed by the National Child Labour Study on Friday, and it revealed that 64 percent of children between the ages of five and seventeen were subject to forced labor, sexual exploitation, theft, and conflict.

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The findings reveal a crisis that is far more complicated than just poverty, which has been exacerbated by constant flooding, disease spread, and conflict that has displaced families and threatened to endanger millions of people.

Nine out of ten children in Kapoeta South, close to Uganda’s border, are instead taught to do so through farming, pastoralism, and gold mining, according to the report.

The southwest of the nation, Yambio, experienced similarly dire rates, with local conflict and child marriage causing children to become infertile.

According to the report, children typically begin with simple occupations before being drawn into increasingly dangerous and exploitative occupations. About 10% of those surveyed said they were involved with armed organizations, particularly in the counties of Akobo, Bentiu, and Kapoeta South.

By gender, children may encounter various forms of exploitation. Girls are disproportionately subject to forced marriage, domestic servitude, and sexual abuse, while boys are more likely to work in dangerous industries or join armed groups.

In Juba, South Sudan, children walk to the Malaika Primary School. According to Save the Children, “education continues to be the strongest protective factor.”

A A A Crise that transcends poverty

According to researchers, knowing the law does not stop child exploitation.

According to the surveys, 70% of children who were living in dangerous or illegal jobs were raised by adults who knew about legal protections. Children were not aware that there was assistance, in the third instance.

“When almost two-thirds of a country’s children are working, and almost every child in some places, almost every child,” said Chris Nyamandi, the country director for South Sudan for Save the Children.

Child labor is far more prevalent in South Sudan than regional patterns. South Sudan’s 64%, which is more than twice the continent’s worst at 30 percent, is comparable to that percentage, according to ILO-UNICEF data.

According to Nyamandi, “education is the strongest protective factor,” noting that students who study are far less likely to be exploited.

At the launch of the report in Juba, the government acknowledged the situation. Officials will use the evidence as a “critical foundation for action,” according to Deng Tong, undersecretary of the Ministry of Labour.

Nearly one million people have been affected by severe flooding in South Sudan, with 335, 000 of them displaced and more than 140 of their medical facilities having been submerged or damaged.

7.7 million people are currently experiencing acute hunger, according to the United Nations, and the country is currently experiencing a related malaria outbreak, with more than 104, 000 cases reported in the past week.

Concerns about a new civil war grip South Sudan. According to UN investigators, armed clashes have started on a scale not seen since 2017 and President Salva Kiir and First Vice President Riek Machar’s peace agreement, which is reportedly getting closer to breaking point.

In September, Machar was detained and charged with treason, murder, and crimes against humanity. He has thrown out any allegations.

Lithuania shuts airports, Belarus border crossings after balloon sightings

Helium weather balloons descended into Lithuania’s two biggest airports and closed crossings with Belarus, marking the third such incident to occur in the Baltic nation this month.

In recent weeks, drone sightings and other airborne incursions have caused chaos in European aviation, including at airports in Copenhagen, Munich, and the Baltic region.

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Authorities said the airports in Vilnius and Kaunas were closed until 2 a.m. (23:00 GMT), while the border crossings in Belarus will remain closed until Sunday, midday, for safety reasons.

Lithuania has claimed that balloons are being sent by smugglers to transport illegal cigarettes, but it also points fingers at Belarus’ Alexander Lukashenko, a close ally of Vladimir Putin, for failing to stop the practice.

According to Lithuania’s Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene, “The National Security Commission will meet next week to assess what can be done in the short-term that would hurt the smugglers and Lukashenko’s regime, which allows them to thrive.”

“Twounds of balloons” were discovered by radar on Friday, according to Lithuania’s National Crisis Management Centre.

Authorities reported that the Vilnius airport was closed on Tuesday of this week and on October 5 when smuggler balloons entered the city’s airspace.

Two Russian military aircraft briefly entered Lithuania’s airspace in what appeared to be a new incident coming from Moscow.

When the two aircraft flew 700 meters (0.43 miles) into Lithuania on Thursday at 6pm local time (15:00 GMT), the Lithuanian military said in a statement that they may have been carrying out refueling exercises in the nearby Russian exclave of Kaliningrad.

In response to that incursion, Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda stated on X that his nation would immediately summon Russian ambassador representatives in protest of reckless and dangerous behavior. “This is a blatant violation of international law and territorial integrity of…

The Russian government’s Ministry of Defense, however, refuted the claim that an incursion had occurred.

According to the statement, the flights were carried out “in strict compliance” with regulations and “did not deviate from their route and did not infringe on the borders of other states.”

In recent weeks, Russian aircraft and drones have reportedly stricken Estonia and Poland’s airspace.

Four African countries taken off global money-laundering ‘grey list’

South Africa, Nigeria, Mozambique, and Burkinabe are all now included on the “grey list” of nations that are being monitored more closely, according to a global watchdog for money-laundering.

Following “successful on-site visits” that demonstrated “positive progress” in addressing shortcomings within agreed timeframes, the Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF), a financial crimes watchdog based in France, announced on Friday that it would remove the four nations.

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Countries that the FATF has identified as not meeting its standards are listed on “grey” and “black” lists. It views grey list nations as those whose anti-money laundering policies have “strategic deficiencies,” but which are still working with the organization to address them.

Elisa de Anda Madrazo, president of FATF, described the removal of the four as “a positive story for Africa’s continent.”

She said that South Africa improved its methods for identifying money laundering and terrorist financing, Nigeria improved coordination between organizations, Mozambique increased sharing financial intelligence, and Burkinabe strengthened its oversight of financial institutions.

In 2023, Nigeria and South Africa were added, followed by Burkinabe in 2021, Mozambique in 2022, and Burkinabe in 2021.

Officials from the four nations welcomed the decision, which means the organization will no longer have to monitor them more closely.

The country’s Financial Intelligence Unit, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, added that the delisting represented a “major milestone in Nigeria’s journey toward economic reform, institutional integrity, and global credibility,” and that it had “worked resolutely through a 19-point action plan” to demonstrate its commitment to improvement.

The South African Revenue Service’s commissioner, Edward Kieswetter, praised the update, saying that “removing the designation of grey listing is not a finish line but a milestone on a long-term journey toward building a robust and resilient financial ecosystem.”

Although Mozambican officials had been expressing for several months that they were optimistic about being removed, the leaders of Mozambique and Burkinabe refused to comment right away.

When the FATF’s assessment in 2030 is done, Mozambique will find a completely different situation from the one found in 2021, according to Finance Minister Carla Louveira in July.

More than 200 nations around the world have pledged to uphold the FATF’s standards when it evaluates their efforts to stop money laundering, as well as terrorist and weapons financing.