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Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,296 

Here is how things stand on Friday, September 12:

Fighting

  • Anti-aircraft units downed seven Ukrainian drones headed for Moscow early on Friday, according to the Russian capital’s mayor Sergei Sobyanin.
  • Russian forces have taken control of the settlement of Sosnivka in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region, Russia’s Defence Ministry said on Thursday.
  • A “massive” Ukrainian drone attack forced authorities in Russia’s Belgorod region to order children to stay at home while closing its schools and shopping centres, the regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said.
  • The Moscow-installed administration of the Russia-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station accused Ukraine of attacking a training centre at the plant with drones.
A resident looks at his destroyed home following Russian air strike in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Kateryna Klochko)
A resident looks at his destroyed home following a Russian air strike in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, on August 30, 2025 [Kateryna Klochko/AP Photo]

Regional security

  • The UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting to address Russia’s violation of Polish airspace earlier this week, Poland’s Foreign Ministry said.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pushed for a tougher response to the suspected Russian drone incursion into Poland from Kyiv’s allies, saying the move by Moscow was likely aimed at slowing supplies of air defences to Ukraine before winter.
  • Polish President Karol Nawrocki claimed the Russian drone incursion was an attempt to test Poland’s and NATO’s capability to react militarily.
  • The Russian drone incursion was a “kind of a prelude” to Russia’s upcoming “Zapad” military exercises in Belarus, Poland’s National Security Bureau chief said.
  • Russia will not make any further comments on the shooting down by Poland of what Warsaw said were Russian drones in its airspace, the Kremlin said.
  • Polish military representatives plan to visit Ukraine for training on shooting down drones, a source familiar with the matter said.
  • France will deploy three Rafale fighter jets to help Poland protect its airspace after this week’s drone incursions, French President Emmanuel Macron said on Thursday on X.
  • NATO’s allied air command will provide Lithuania with better early warnings of aerial launches against Ukraine that could cross into Lithuania, NATO’s top military commander Alexus Grynkewich said.
  • Germany will strengthen its commitment to NATO’s eastern border, including expanding “air policing over Poland” in response to the incursion of Russian drones, a government spokesperson said.
  • German Chancellor Friedrich Merz emphasised the need for Germany’s BND foreign intelligence service to heighten its operational levels in the wake of increased threats of hybrid attacks by Russia.

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Military aid

  • German arms giant Rheinmetall plans to manufacture artillery shells for Ukrainian forces at a future production plant in Ukraine, Kyiv’s defence minister said.
  • Sweden’s Defence Ministry announced plans for 70 billion Swedish krona ($7.5bn) in military support for Ukraine over the next two years.

Politics and diplomacy

  • President Zelenskyy said he had discussed joint weapons production with Washington and imposing further sanctions on Russia during talks with US envoy Keith Kellogg in Kyiv on Thursday.
  • A representative of United States President Donald Trump told Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko that the US wanted to reopen its embassy in Minsk and normalise ties between the two countries, after Washington closed the embassy in 2022, the State-run Belta news agency reported.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin has still not decided on attending the APEC summit in South Korea next month, the Kremlin said.

Sanctions

  • Several European Union members including the Netherlands, Czech Republic and Spain summoned their respective Russian ambassadors and charge d’affaires to express official condemnation of Russia violating Polish airspace earlier this week.
  • A timeline for the imposition of the EU’s 19th package of sanctions against Russia is still undetermined, after an EU delegation returned from Washington, according to a European Commission spokesperson.
  • The US will pressure G7 countries to impose higher tariffs on India and China for buying Russian oil, the Financial Times reported, as the US looks to ramp up sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine.

 

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PSC, WAPA Spar Over Fuel Procurement

Leadership from the V.I. Water and Power Authority Tuesday bristled at questions from the V.I. Public Services Commission after providing an update on the authority’s ongoing solicitation for a long-term supplier of liquefied petroleum gas.
The authority came under scrutiny last summer when its board approved a two-year fuel supply contract with the Puerto Rico-based Empire Gas outside of the normal solicitation process. The board voted to rescind the contract in August and a second request for proposals was issued in September. On Tuesday, WAPA contract administration manager Nicole Aubain said the authority received proposals from five companies and that an evaluation committee’s recommendation will be submitted for board approval in December.
The meeting came one month after PSC Vice Chair David Hughes, who was absent from Tuesday’s meeting, grilled WAPA leadership over the reissued RFP, citing concerns from a rejected vendor who reportedly thought some provisions in the original solicitation “indicated a substantial misunderstanding — by WAPA — on how fuel moves.” Responding to questions from PSC Chair Pedro Williams about that vendor, WAPA general counsel Dionne Sinclair said that “the vendor that’s been advocated for has submitted a proposal.”
Williams disputed the use of the word “advocated.” He later asked the utility to confidentially share the names of its evaluation committee members, prompting several minutes of back-and-forth before WAPA Chief Executive Karl Knight cut in.
“We are in the midst of a procurement process,” he said. “They’re trying to preserve the integrity of the procurement process. Your request is an unprecedented request of the authority in the midst of a procurement process. I do not reveal the identity of the evaluation committee until they submit their report, because I do not want individuals to compromise or attempt to compromise the folks who are doing this work.”
Knight added that the names of evaluators and their scores would be made available after the solicitation was complete and continued to question the commission’s intentions, asking if they intended to investigate evaluators for potential conflicts of interest. Sen. Carla Joseph, who sits on the PSC as an ex officio member, noted that conflicts of interest have happened before and said the commission’s request came from “a sense of transparency and a sense of building trust.”
“And when you’re building trust and you want to have that art — that fine art of transparency — you provide the information,” she said. “The back-and-forth is leading even to other persons, who are hearing this, to have a question about the trust … in confidentiality.”
Knight responded by asking commissioners if they were “aware that one of your members was openly advocating for one of the active participants in this RFP,” referencing Hughes. Williams said it depended on the definition of “advocating.”
“I think we’re all completely aware of the discussions with the vice chair and members of your team relative to a particular entity,” he said. “If you consider that ‘advocating for’ — again, that’s your definition of ‘advocating for,’ I don’t necessarily characterize it as such — if that is your concern, I hear the concern. And one of the things I ask is that you just submit the information to me alone, and I will handle it and maintain the confidentiality.”
The meeting moved on to hear testimony related to WAPA’s billing practices. The commission’s assistant executive director, Tisean Hendricks, shared a report outlining a “surge” in complaints tied to issues with electrical meters and the utility’s reliance on estimated billing.
“Some customers have reported that immediately following the installation of the new meter, inflated bills were received and, further, disputed,” she said, adding that the PSC received 35 complaints in the last year, which resulted in replaced meters. Since then, she said, 17 of those customers have complained about inflated bills.
WAPA Chief Financial Officer Lorraine Kelly and customer service director Marlene Francis acknowledged that the authority has had to estimate bills because of the territory’s failing advanced metering infrastructure. Francis explained that, where necessary, bills are estimated by taking the average of three months’ energy consumption. Kelly said that when a meter is replaced, “there’s one of two outcomes.”
“The bill is higher or the bill is lower,” she said. In the latter case, Kelly said WAPA credits the customer’s account. “However, on the flip side, if the estimate was lower than it should be, i.e., the actual read now says we underestimated the customer … by its nature, that does not mean it is wrong. It means that the estimate was lower, and now the actual read is indicating that we underbilled the customer.”

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