- Olmo's Barcelona registration battle puts Laporta under pressure
- Taste of 2034 World Cup as Saudi Asian Cup stadiums named
- Eurozone inflation picks up in December
- France flanker Ollivon out for season, to miss Six Nations
- Tottenham trigger Son contract extension
- China's most successful team kicked out of professional football
- Eyeing green legacy, Biden declares new national monuments
- Georgians hold anti-government protest on Orthodox Christmas
- Japan actor fired from beer ad after drunken escapade
- Nvidia ramps up AI tech for games, robots and autos
- Blinken says US-Japan ties solid despite rift over steel deal
- Taiwan says Chinese-owned ship suspected of damaging sea cable goes dark
- Sinner turns focus to Australian Open defence after 'amazing' year
- Ostapenko begins Adelaide title defence with comeback win
- Pace of German emissions cuts slows in 2024: study
- McDonald's rolls back some of its diversity practices
- Giannis triple-double propels Bucks over Raptors
- S. Korea rival parties form plane crash task force despite political turmoil
- Olmo situation overshadowing Barca bid for Spanish Super Cup
- Hewitt's son Cruz out of Australian Open qualifying at first hurdle
- Quake in China's Tibet kills 32 with tremors felt in Nepal, India
- Osaka splits with rapper Cordae ahead of Australian Open
- Sabalenka to Andreeva: Five women to watch at the Australian Open
- Sabalenka eyes Australian Open hat-trick but Swiatek, Gauff lurk
- Asian markets mostly rise after tech-fuelled Wall St rally
- Blinken in Japan after rift on steel deal
- Ex-England skipper Vaughan backs shake-up 'to keep Test cricket relevant'
- S. Korea investigators seek new warrant to arrest President Yoon
- North Korea's Kim says new missile will deter 'rivals'
- France to remember Charlie Hebdo attacks 10 years on
- 'Comeback' queen Demi Moore 'has always been here,' says director
- Homes talk and tables walk at AI dominated CES
- Kyrgios set for Davis Cup return after five years
- Golden Globes ratings edge up past 10 million
- USA striker Vazquez joins Austin in club record deal
- Meta Names UFC boss Dana White, a Trump ally, to board
- Forest tame Wolves to maintain unlikely Premier League title challenge
- Mavs' Irving out with back sprain, could reportedly miss two weeks
- Scheffler to skip La Quinta as hand heals
- Late Abraham winner gives Milan Italian SuperCup win over Inter
- US Steel and Nippon Steel sue over Biden's decision to block merger
- Packers receiver Watson ruled out of playoffs
- Harris gracious in defeat as Congress certifies Trump's election
- Canada's Trudeau: Liberal star who dazzled then fizzled
- 'Dozens' of Ukraine soldiers deserted while training in France
- Dakar Rally champion Sainz pulls out after Baciuska wins marathon stage
- Zendaya and Tom Holland engaged: US media
- US envoy says Israeli forces begin pullout from 2nd south Lebanon town
- Tschofenig snatches Four Hills title in Austrian sweep
- Irish legend Robbie Keane appointed new boss of Hungarian champions Ferencvaros
Russia says Ukraine launches 'counterattack' in Kursk region
Russia said Sunday that Ukraine had launched a "counterattack" in the western border region of Kursk, where Kyiv's forces began a shock ground offensive last August.
It was not immediately clear how much Ukraine had advanced in the region, but pro-Kremlin military bloggers reported earlier that a powerful new offensive was under way.
The assault comes at a critical juncture in the nearly three-year conflict, with both sides seeking to strengthen their negotiating hand ahead of US President-elect Donald Trump's return to the White House on January 20.
"At about 9:00 am Moscow time (0600 GMT), in order to halt the advance of Russian troops in the Kursk direction, the enemy launched a counterattack," the Russian defence ministry said.
The Ukrainian army, meanwhile, did not comment on the operation, and simply said in its daily report that fighting was under way in the Kursk region, without giving further details.
Ukraine used two tanks, a dozen armoured vehicles and a demolition unit in the assault, which was headed towards the village of Berdin -- about 15 kilometres (nine miles) northeast of Sudzha, it added.
"The operation to destroy the Ukrainian army formations continues," it said.
Pro-Kremlin military bloggers admitted the Russian army had come under pressure but said Moscow was fighting back.
"The main events of the next attempted offensive by the Ukrainian army are clearly still ahead of us," influential pro-Russian Telegram channel Rybar said.
Images purportedly showing a column of Ukrainian armoured vehicles driving through the snow were shared by pro-Russia military blogger Dva Mayora on Telegram.
Elsewhere on the front line, Ukrainian authorities in the eastern Donetsk region reported Sunday that five people had been wounded in Russian shelling.
- Attck 'from several directions' -
Ukrainian officials gave little detail on the new offensive, with a prominent lawmaker urging silence.
"I can't understand why it is necessary to officially report on the Kursk region. Maybe better to do it afterwards when the operation is over?" Ukrainian MP Oleksiy Goncharenko said.
Other officials expressed their glee at the fightback, which comes almost three years since Moscow launched its full-scale military assault on Ukraine.
"Russia is getting what it deserves," Ukrainian presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak said.
The head of Ukraine's Center for Countering Disinformation, Andriy Kovalenko, said on Telegram that defence forces were "working" in the area, without elaborating.
"In the Kursk region, the Russians are very worried because they were attacked from several directions, and it was a surprise for them," he said.
Kyiv seized dozens of villages in the Kursk region shortly after its incursion started on August 6, 2024, but its advances stalled after Moscow rushed reinforcements to the area, including thousands of troops from its ally North Korea.
A Ukrainian army source told AFP last November that Kyiv still controlled 800 square kilometres (around 300 square miles) of the Russian border region, down from previous claims it controlled almost 1,400 square kilometres.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said last year the Kursk operation has boosted Kyiv's "exchange fund" -- its negotiating position on swapping prisoners of war -- and diverted tens of thousands of Russian troops away from the eastern front.
He said Saturday evening that "up to a battalion of North Korean infantry soldiers and Russian airborne troops" had been lost in battles in the Kursk region on that day and the day before.
But Kyiv has so far been unable to halt Moscow's advances in Ukraine, which were seven times higher in 2024 than the year prior, according to an AFP analysis of data from the Institute for the Study of War.
- Airports shut -
Both Russia and Ukraine have exchanged regular attacks since the year began.
Russia said Sunday it downed dozens of Ukrainian drones overnight in a barrage that damaged homes and triggered air alerts, while Kyiv said Moscow fired 103 drones into its territory.
Four Russian airports briefly suspended traffic early Sunday for "safety" reasons, forcing at least eight planes to divert course, a spokesperson for Russia's civil aviation authority Rosaviatsia said.
A.Magalhes--PC