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Russia launches deadliest aerial attack in months, killing 18 in Ukraine

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Russia launches deadliest aerial attack in months, killing 18 in Ukraine

Sarah Rainsford,Eastern Europe correspondent, Kyivand
Jaroslav Lukiv
Reuters Two rescuers are silhouetted against a backdrop of fire in KyivReuters

Russia launched more than 700 drones and missiles at Ukraine in multiple waves overnight, killing at least 18 people in what local officials said was the deadliest attack in months.

Officials said nine people had been killed in the southern port city of Odesa, five in the central city of Dnipro, and four – including a child – in the capital, Kyiv.

In Russia, two people – including a child – were killed in a Ukrainian drone attack in the southern Krasnodar region, Moscow said.

This comes after a brief ceasefire took place over Orthodox Easter last weekend – though both sides accused one another of hundreds of violations.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

In Kyiv, warning sirens jolted people awake at 02:30 local time on Thursday (23:30 GMT on Wednesday), followed soon after by the first explosions.

Images posted online by eyewitnesses show bright orange fires and huge plumes of black smoke in central areas of the city. In one video, a drone was filmed slamming straight into the side of an apartment block.

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko wrote on Telegram that a 12-year-old boy was among four people killed. Another 45 people were injured.

The mayor added that rescuers had pulled a mother and child from the ruins of a 16-storey residential building that collapsed in the city’s central Podil district.

Four emergency medical workers were among those injured in the north of the capital.

In Dnipro, regional head Oleksandr Ganzha said four people were killed and dozen had been injured in the Russian attack – before the city’s Mayor Borys Filatov said on Thursday that another body had been found.

In the north-eastern city of Kharkiv, a drone strike injured a 77-year-old woman and a 66-year-old man, an official said.

Two cities in the south, Mykolaiv and Kherson, have been left without power, according to local officials.

Ukraine’s air force said on Thursday morning that Russia had launched 659 drones and 44 cruise and ballistic missiles in the prior 24 hours.

It said that 636 drones and 31 missiles had been shot down – but there had been direct hits in 26 locations.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned the attack, writing on X that it proved that US and European sanctions against Russia should not be weakened.

“Russia is betting on war, and that is exactly how the response should be – we must protect lives with all our might and press for peace with all our might as well,” he said.

Reuters Two women look out of a window of an apartment block at the site of a Russian missile strike in Kyiv. Photo: 16 April 2026Reuters

Zelensky warned earlier this week that Ukraine was facing a critical shortage of Patriot air defence missiles, the only means it has of intercepting Russia’s ballistic missiles.

Global stocks of the US-made missiles are limited and many have been diverted to the Middle East since the US and Israel began attacking Iran in February.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha called the latest Russian attack a “war crime” and urged allies to increase pressure on Moscow and support for Kyiv.

“All decisions required to increase pressure on the aggressor must be unblocked now,” Sybiha wrote on X, referring to sanctions.

Ukraine is also anxious for a €90bn ($106bn; £78bn) EU loan to be released as soon as possible now that the chief opponent of that, Viktor Orbán, has been voted out of power in Hungary.

The money is to be split between Ukraine’s defence needs and support for its economy.

In Russia’s Krasnodar region, two people – including a 14-year-old girl – were killed in the city of Tuapse in a Ukrainian overnight drone attack, its Governor Veniamin Kondratyev said.

He added that a further five people had been injured.

The war in Ukraine is now in its fifth year and there have been several rounds of peace talks, with the US acting as a mediator.

However, the process has been stalled since US President Donald Trump shifted his focus to the war in the Middle East.

What Ukraine has repeatedly proposed is a full, stable ceasefire as a first step towards negotiating a lasting end to Russia’s invasion.

But Moscow insists on agreeing the peace deal first, prompting accusations from Kyiv that Russia is not serious about ending the fighting.

  

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BBC News World

Finance ministers and top bankers raise serious concerns about Mythos AI model

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Finance ministers and top bankers raise serious concerns about Mythos AI model

Faisal IslamEconomics editor
NurPhoto via Getty Images A smartphone screen displaying the name Claude and a drawing of an asterisk. Out of focus in the background the words Project Glasswing are legible.NurPhoto via Getty Images

Finance ministers, central bankers and financiers have expressed serious concerns about a powerful new artificial intelligence (AI) model that could undermine the security of financial systems.

The development of the Claude Mythos model by Anthropic has led to crisis meetings, after it found vulnerabilities in every major operating system and browser.

Experts have warned that the model potentially has an unprecedented ability to identify and exploit cybersecurity weaknesses.

The Canadian finance minister François-Philippe Champagne told the BBC that Mythos had been discussed extensively by his peers at the key International Monetary Fund (IMF) meeting in Washington DC this week.

“Certainly it is serious enough to warrant the attention of all the finance ministers… The difference with the Strait of Hormuz is that we know where it is and we know how large it is. The issue that we’re facing with Anthropic is that it’s an unknown, unknown.

It requires a lot of attention so that we have safeguards, and we have processes in place to make sure that we ensure the resiliency of our financial system”.

Top bankers are to be given access to the model in advance to test out their systems.

The chief executive of Barclays CS Venkatakrishnan told the BBC: “it’s serious enough that people have to worry. We have to understand it better, and we have to understand the vulnerabilities that are being exposed and fix them quickly”.

He added that “this is what the new world is going to be” referencing a much more connected financial system, with both opportunities and vulnerabilities.

While developer Anthropic has said the model has already exposed multiple security vulnerabilities in some critical operating systems, financial systems and web browsers, governments and banks are being offered access in advance of its public release to help protect their own systems.

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey also told the BBC the development had to be taken very seriously: “we are having to look very carefully now what this latest AI development could mean for the risk of cyber crime.

There is a development of AI, of modelling, which makes it easier to detect existing vulnerabilities in, sort of core IT systems, and then obviously cyber criminals that the bad actors could seek to exploit them.”

The US Treasury confirmed it had raised the issue with its major banks encouraging them to test out their systems, before any public release of Mythos by Anthropic.

Financial industry sources indicated that another prominent US AI company could soon release a similarly powerful model but without the same safeguards.

  

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BBC News World

What we know about the ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel

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What we know about the ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel

Yang Tianand
Helen Sullivan
Getty Images Gunfire is fired into the sky from Beirut's southern suburbs in the early hours of April 17, 2026, as residents celebrate the start of a 10-day ceasefire that took effect at midnight.Getty Images

US President Donald Trump has announced that the leaders of Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire, which took effect from 17:00 EST (21:00 GMT; midnight local time) on 16 April.

There was no mention in Trump’s statement of Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon, with which Israel has been exchanging fire for the past six weeks. But in a later post on Truth Social, Trump urged the group to abide by the ceasefire, saying, “I hope Hezbollah acts nicely and well during this important period of time.”

Following the announcement, the US president also invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun to the White House for further talks.

Here is what we know about the truce.

What does the agreement say?

The terms of the deal specify that the ceasefire is set to last 10 days, with the possibility it being “extended by mutual agreement” if negotiations show signs of progress.

According to further details provided by the US State Department:

  • Israel retains its “right to take all necessary measures in self-defence, at any time, against planned, imminent, or ongoing attacks”
  • Lebanon must take “meaningful steps” to prevent Hezbollah and all other “rogue non-state armed groups” from carrying attacks against Israeli targets
  • Those involved recognise that Lebanon’s security forces have exclusive responsibility for Lebanon’s security
  • Israel and Lebanon requested that the US continues to facilitate further direct talks with the objective of “resolving all remaining issues”

The statement added that the truce was a “gesture of goodwill” by Israel intended to enable “good-faith negotiations towards a permanent security and peace agreement” between the two parties.

What have the various sides said about it?

Israel and Lebanon’s leaders have both welcomed the truce, with Netanyahu calling it an “opportunity to make a historic peace agreement”.

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said he hopes the agreement will allow those have been displaced by the conflict to return to their homes.

Hezbollah have also signalled a willingness to participate in the ceasefire, but said it must include “a comprehensive halt to attacks” across Lebanon and “no freedom of movement for Israeli forces”.

The Iran-backed group, while deeply embedded in Lebanon, is not part of the Lebanese government’s security apparatus.

Iran’s foreign ministry welcomed the ceasefire, with spokesperson Esmail Baghaei expressing his “solidarity” with Lebanon. Tehran had insisted that its own two-week ceasefire with the US should include Lebanon while the US and Israel said it did not.

UN Secretary General António Guterres commended the role of the US in facilitating the ceasefire, and urged all parties to “fully respect” and “comply with international law at all times”.

President of the European Commission Ursula von ​der Leyen called the deal a “relief”, saying Europe will continue to “call for the full respect of Lebanon’s sovereignty and territorial integrity”.

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas added that the ceasefire must be used to “step back from the violence” and create space for talks for “a more lasting peace”.

What is Israel’s buffer zone?

Despite the agreement, Netanyahu said Israeli troops would maintain a 10km-deep (6.2 mile) “security zone” in southern Lebanon, saying: “We are there, and we are not leaving.”

He added that the buffer zone needed to remain to “block the danger of invasion”.

Israel re-entered southern Lebanon after strikes by Hezbollah in early March, creating a buffer zone it said was necessary to protect communities in northern Israel.

A previous ceasefire deal between Israel and Hezbollah – ending 13 months of conflict – still saw near-daily cross-border strikes.

How was it negotiated?

Israel and Lebanon held rare direct talks in Washington earlier this week week aimed at easing the war, which has seen deadly air strikes on part of the Lebanese capital of Beirut and fighting in the country’s south.

Trump’s announcement said the deal came about after “excellent conversations” with Aoun and Netanyahu, but did not mention whether Hezbollah was directly involved in the talks.

He later urged Hezbollah to “act nicely and well during this important period of time” on social media.

Netanyahu, while welcoming the truce, also made clear also made clear that he was making few concessions on the ground.

He said Hezbollah had insisted on two conditions: the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon, and a principle of “quiet for quiet”.

However, it appears ceasefire announcement has taken Israel by surprise – reportedly even within the government’s own security cabinet.

A widely respected Israeli news outlet tonight described Netanyahu convening a security cabinet meeting with just five minutes notice, shortly before the ceasefire announcement was made.

Leaks from that meeting say ministers were not given a vote on the ceasefire.

What does this have to do with the war in Iran?

When the ceasefire with Iran was announced, there were mixed messages on whether Lebanon was involved. Pakistani officials, who helped negotiate the deal, and Iranian officials, said it was, but Israel said it was not. US President Donald Trump’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt also later said Lebanon was not part of the deal.

Israel launched strikes on Lebanon on 2 March in response to strikes launched by Hezbollah. This was after the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran – prompting retaliation from Tehran against US allies in the Gulf, and from Iran’s proxies, which includes the Lebanese militant group.

Israel and Hezbollah have continued to exchange fire since then, despite pleas from Lebanon’s Prime Minister for both sides to stop doing so.

More than 2,100 people have been killed and 7,000 others wounded in Israel’s attacks on Lebanon since 2 March, according to the country’s health ministry, which does not distinguish between combatants and civilians. The number includes at least 260 women and 172 children. The ministry says 91 health professionals have been killed and 208 other wounded in the war, with more than 120 Israeli attacks recorded on ambulances and medical facilities. BBC Verify analysis found more than 1,400 buildings in Lebanon had also been destroyed.

Hezbollah attacks have killed two civilians in Israel over the same period, while 13 Israeli soldiers have been killed in combat in Lebanon, Israeli authorities say.

On Thursday, the Israeli military destroyed the last bridge linking the south to the rest of the country, further isolating the region and renewing fears among many Lebanese that this could lead to a long-term occupation of some areas.

  

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BBC News World

Singer D4vd arrested on suspicion of murdering teenage girl

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Singer D4vd arrested in connection with death of missing teen girl

Nardine SaadLos Angeles
Getty Images D4vd with mouth open, wearing chain necklaceGetty Images

US singer D4vd has been arrested on suspicion of murdering a teenage girl who went missing last year, police say.

The TikTok star, whose legal name is David Anthony Burke, was the target of a grand jury investigation into the apparent murder of Celeste Rivas Hernandez, whose remains were found in his Tesla in September.

The Los Angeles Police Department said on Thursday that the 21-year-old was being held without bail and the case will be presented to the District Attorney’s office on Monday.

The singer has been virtually silent on the case but his representatives previously said he was cooperating with authorities. The BBC has contacted his representatives about the arrest.

Police said on Thursday they had arrested Burke “for the murder of Celeste Rivas”.

Questions had been mounting since the 8 September discovery of the 14-year-old’s remains in a Hollywood tow yard after authorities received reports of a foul odour coming from the vehicle.

On 8 September 2025, investigators found her decomposed head and torso in a cadaver bag in the front boot of a Tesla car registered to D4vd’s address in Texas, court documents said.

The county’s medical examiner said the body was “severely decomposed” and deferred on making a ruling on how she died pending the death investigation. The girl might have been dead “for several weeks” before the discovery of her body, officials said.

No cause of death in the teen’s case has been announced, with authorities only saying for months that they were treating the case as a death investigation.

A judge ordered that the teen’s death records be sealed in November to ensure officers received information from the medical examiner before the public.

Rivas Hernandez – who lived about 75 miles (120km) away from where her body was discovered – had last been reported missing by her family in April 2024, but it was not the first time she had run away from their Lake Elsinore home. A first-generation daughter of immigrant parents from El Salvador, neighbours recognised her as a girl who would visit the corner store almost daily to buy candy and soda, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The lack of information in the macabre death has fuelled intrigue and ignited an online following, with many hypothesising about the girl’s connection to the Romantic Homicide singer.

A grand jury began hearing evidence in the case in December, but D4vd’s arrest on Thursday marks the first significant development in the case in months.

Getty Images Photo of young woman with long wavy black hair surrounded by messages in Spanish and English written around it on a white board, and flowers pinned in placesGetty Images

More details about the case emerged in court filings after the singer’s family was summoned from Texas by a California court to testify before the grand jury.

When Dawud Burke, D4vd’s father, fought against the summons in a Texas court he included material from the California case that had not been previously available to the public.

The filings, obtained by the BBC, confirmed that D4vd had been identified as a “target” of a grand jury investigation in Los Angeles and that he may be subject to proceedings for one count of murder.

Few details shared with the public before included that Rivas Hernandez was wearing a tube top, size small black leggings and jewellery, including a yellow metal stud earring and a yellow metal chain bracelet, when her body was found.

She also had a tattoo that read “Shhh…” on her index finger – a marking nearly identical to that on the singer’s own index finger.

Shortly after the body was found, the Here With Me singer cancelled his world tour, signalling the beginning of the end of his pop career and his noticeable retreat from the spotlight.

Los Angeles police previously said they had raided the Hollywood Hills mansion where he was living, just blocks from where his Tesla had been towed. He was also dropped from marketing campaigns with US retailer Hollister and footwear giant Crocs.

Telepatía singer Kali Uchis also announced she was taking down their collaboration, Crashing.

  

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South Korea’s runaway wolf finally captured after nine-day search

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South Korea’s runaway wolf finally captured after nine-day search

Koh Eweand
Hosu Lee,Seoul

Neukgu, the two-year-old wolf who broke loose from a South Korean zoo and captured the nation’s attention, has finally been captured following a nine-day long search.

Neukgu was captured near an expressway on Friday at 00:44 local time (16:44 GMT), according to the government of Daejeon, the central city where his zoo was located.

Upon a medical examination, Neukgu’s pulse and body temperature were normal, authorities said.

Hundreds of rescue officials had been deployed to find the wolf, and there were a couple of times when authorities came close to getting him – but each time the net seemed to be closing in, Neukgu would slink away.

Daejeon City A wolf lying on an operating table, apparently sedated.Daejeon City

Authorities had nearly caught him earlier this week, when the local fire department received a report on Monday night that Neukgu had been spotted on a mountain about 2km (1.2 miles) away from O-World, the zoo and theme park from which he had broken loose.

A video of the wolf scampering on a road in the dark, illuminated by the headlights of a vehicle, was also uploaded on social media.

Authorities pounced on the lead, launching a search-and-rescue mission, but ultimately he escaped again.

The elusive Neukgu has inspired a meme coin, hailed by its creators as a the “wolf that wouldn’t stay caged” and a “symbol of independence”.

YONHAP/EPA/Shutterstock People in black police uniforms standing by a table set up with a monitor.YONHAP/EPA/Shutterstock

Born in 2024, Neukgu is part of a programme at O-World to restore the Korean wolf, which once roamed the Korean Peninsula but is now considered extinct in the wild.

But after a life in captivity, some worried that he wouldn’t be able to survive in the wild.

Animal rights groups were also concerned that Neukgu would be killed during the capture process – something that happened to Porongi, a puma that had escaped from the same zoo in 2018.

Even South Korea’s president Lee Jae Myung publicly prayed for Neukgu’s safe return home, in a post on social media.

Daejeon City People surrounding a sedated wolf lying on a table, in a medical facilityDaejeon City

Those fears have been put to rest now that Neukgu has been safely caught.

Authorities launched another search operation in the Anyeong-dong area on Thursday evening after receiving a tip-off. It was there that they finally caught him, shooting him with a tranquilliser gun before whisking him back to the zoo.

A video of the capture operation, posted by the Daejeon city government, showed a limp Neukgu being hauled by rescuers and placed in a carrier. Authorities later posted photos of a sedated Neukgu being attended to in a medical facility.

“Thank you to everyone who worked hard to bring Neukgu home,” the city government wrote on social media.

“To everyone who worried about Neukgu’s safety and cheered us on, thank you all so much.”

  

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Trump’s Lebanon ceasefire takes Israel by surprise

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Trump’s Lebanon ceasefire takes Israel by surprise

Lucy WilliamsonMiddle East correspondent, in Nahariya
Reuters U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the media next to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.Reuters

As news of the ceasefire spread through Israel’s northern communities, sirens blared three times this evening warning of incoming rockets from Lebanon.

In the sky above the northern city of Nahariya, Israel’s air defence interceptors shot up to block them, triggering loud explosions. Ambulance crews said at least three people were wounded by shrapnel in the hours before the ceasefire took effect, including two seriously.

On the ground here – and across the country – there’s scepticism about why Israel’s leader has signed up to the truce.

“I feel like the government lied to us,” said Gal, a student in Nahariya. “They promised that this time it would end differently, but it seems like we’re once again heading toward a ceasefire agreement that solves nothing.”

“We gave the Lebanese government a chance and they failed to uphold the agreement; they didn’t disarm Hezbollah,” said Maor, a 32-year-old truck driver whose house was hit by a rocket last year.

“If we don’t do it, no one will. It’s a shame they stopped. It seemed like there were significant achievements this time.”

Israel has five army divisions in southern Lebanon, and only yesterday its chief army spokesman said they would continue advancing.

This ceasefire announcement has taken Israel by surprise – reportedly even within the government’s own security cabinet.

A widely respected Israeli news outlet tonight described Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convening a security cabinet meeting with just five minutes notice, shortly before the ceasefire announcement was made.

Leaks from that meeting say ministers were not given a vote on the ceasefire.

To many, this is another example of Netanyahu bowing to US President Donald Trump’s demands to halt fighting, even when the terms or the timing are not what Israel wants.

Reuters Vehicles crowd a road as displaced people return to their homes after a 10-day ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel.Reuters

“A ceasefire must come from a position of strength in order to service the national interests of Israel,” said the former IDF Chief of staff and Yashar party chief, Gadi Eisenkot.

“A pattern has developed in which ceasefires are imposed upon us – in Gaza, in Iran, and now in Lebanon. Netanyahu does not know how to convert military achievements into diplomatic gains.”

Netanyahu – while framing the ceasefire as “an opportunity to make a historic peace agreement with Lebanon” – also made clear that he was making few concessions on the ground.

He said Hezbollah had insisted on two conditions: the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon, and a principle of “quiet for quiet”.

“I agreed to neither the former, nor the latter,” he said. “These two conditions are not being met. We are remaining in Lebanon in a thickened security zone […] We are there, and we are not leaving.”

Reuters U.S. President Donald Trump's tie is blown by the wind as he walks to board Air Force One for his trip to Las Vegas, Nevada, as he departs Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.Reuters

Iran has been demanding an end to Israeli operations against its proxy group Hezbollah in Lebanon since agreeing to a two-week ceasefire with the US earlier this month.

And after initially saying Israel’s military campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon was “a separate skirmish”, Trump said this week he was trying to create what he called “a little breathing room between Israel and Lebanon”, as US negotiations with Iran falter, and the end of the truce period approaches next week.

Both Netanyahu and Israel’s military leaders have been keen to emphasise in recent days that the ceasefire Trump agreed with Tehran did not mean a ceasefire in Lebanon.

A poll by Israel’s Channel 12 news network last week found that almost 80% of respondents supported continued strikes on Hezbollah.

And three separate surveys suggested a majority of Israelis also opposed to two-week ceasefire Trump agreed with Iran.

“Agreements may be signed with a tie in Washington, but the price is paid in blood and destroyed homes” in northern Israel, the head of the Mateh Asher Regional council, Moshe Davidovich, told Israeli media.

“Residents of the north are not extras in an international public relations show,” he added.

The truce Israel has agreed to in Lebanon states clearly that Israel “preserves its right to take all necessary measures in self-defence, at any time, against planned, imminent or ongoing attacks” – much as it did during the last ceasefire agreed in November 2024, when Israel continued regular strikes against targets it deemed a threat.

Few Israelis see this truce as a way out of the conflict with Hezbollah.

But many see it as further proof that their leader is again under pressure to align with Washington’s interests – and that the war goals of their key US ally are not always the same as their own.

  

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