The Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine has approved the Strategy for the Development of Border Infrastructure with the EU and Moldova until 2030 and the Strategy for Reforming Psychoneurological and Other Residential Care Facilities until 2034.
Ukraine's progress toward European Union membership is impressive, but difficult work is yet to come. — Ukrinform.
"Out of the total 4% growth, the implementation of the Made in Ukraine policy for the development of Ukrainian producers this year provided 0.64%, or more than 88 billion hryvnias ($2.1 billion)," she said.
Back then, in the first weeks of the war, Russia and Ukraine conducted several rounds of talks in person and online aimed at ending the conflict; although a framework for peace called the Istanbul Communiqué was drawn up,
Ukraine seeks to return up to 10 million refugees and migrants who left the country due to the war with russia.This is reported by El Pais.The publication
European Union leaders insist no decisions can be taken about the future of Ukraine without its consent or behind their backs
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Slovakian prime minister Robert Fico of helping Vladimir Putin finance his war in Ukraine. The Slovak leader met with the Russian president in Moscow on Sunday as part of his country’s bid to ensure their access to Russia supplied energy, of which Slovakia is one of the biggest importers in the EU.
European Union leaders reaffirmed on Thursday that no decisions regarding Ukraine's future can be made without its direct involvement. The declaration came during a summit in Brussels with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, emphasizing solidarity with the war-torn nation.
There are risks of North Korea sending additional troops and military equipment to the Russian army,” Zelensky said. “We will have tangible responses to this.”
Moldova has been allowed to increase its quota for electricity imports from the EU amid a possible shortage that will arise if Russian gas supplies to Transnistria, a Russian-backed breakaway region,
Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo (NCP) said on Thursday that it was too early to conclude that Moscow is behind the latest undersea cable disruptions in the Baltic Sea.