Over in Kyiv, a funeral ceremony has been held for a Ukrainian serviceman this morning.
People could be seen kneeling down either side of Artem Antonenko's coffin as it passed by, draped in a Ukrainian flag.
Russia is threatening a European neighbour in a way that mirrors how it targeted Ukraine before invading, leading analysts have warned. Elsewhere, MI6's chief has given his verdict on Vladimir Putin. Follow the latest below.
Friday 19 September 2025 12:35, UK
Over in Kyiv, a funeral ceremony has been held for a Ukrainian serviceman this morning.
People could be seen kneeling down either side of Artem Antonenko's coffin as it passed by, draped in a Ukrainian flag.
The European Commission has said that it has proposed the European Union's 19th sanctions package targeting Russia since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
The commission's president Ursula von der Leyen and the EU's top diplomat Kaja Kallas are expected to present details of the package later today.
The plan will then need to be approved by all 27 EU member states.
EU sources have told Reuters that the commission will propose banning Russian liquefied natural gas imports by 1 January 2027, a year earlier than planned, as part of its latest package.
It comes after recent comments from Donald Trump, urging NATO countries to stop buying oil from Russia to help end the war in Ukraine.
Yesterday, the US president told our political editor Beth Rigby that if the oil price drops, "Putin's going to drop out, he's going to have no choice, he's going to drop out of that war".
Watch Rigby's question and Trump's full answer in the video below.
The head of MI6 has said Russian forces are grinding forward on the battlefield but "at a snail's pace and a horrendous cost".
Sir Richard Moore said Vladimir Putin "seeks to impose his imperial will by all means at his disposal but he cannot succeed".
"Russia simply does not have the wherewithal to fully subjugate Ukraine by force," he added.
"The issue has, and has always been, sovereignty. Putin denies Ukraine's sovereignty and its very existence as a country and a nation," he warned.
Watch his comments and analysis from our special correspondent Alex Crawford in the video below.
Russia's defence ministry has said that its forces have taken control of two villages in eastern Ukraine.
State news agency TASS reported that Russia has taken control of Muravka, a village in the Donetsk region, and the village of Novoivanivka in the neighbouring Zaporizhzhia area.
Paste BN could not independently verify the report.
Russia is developing a $5bn alternative to the Starlink satellite internet service, according to a draft seen by the Russian state-controlled news agency RBC.
The project aims to challenge Elon Musk's SpaceX company, whose Starlink devices have been playing a "crucial role" in securing Ukraine's communications during the war, as the Kyiv Independent reports.
"Several test satellites in orbit have already been inspected, and the serial models have been modified accordingly," Dmitry Bakanov, head of Russia's space agency Roscosmos said in an interview.
It is reported that the project will be carried out by a private space company called Bureau 1440.
The company is expected to launch 383 satellites by 2030.
Earlier, we told you about Russia's overnight strikes on six regions across Ukraine (see 8.10 post).
It came the day after Ukraine struck a Gazprom refinery in Russia's Bashkortostan Republic, according to a source from Ukraine's security service.
Gazprom Neftekhim Salavat is one of Russia's largest oil refining and petrochemical plants and is situated some 1,300km from the front line.
"Russia could lose $600m in just one month in just one month after Ukrainian drones struck Gazprom Neftekhim Salavat," a former chief of the National Bank of Ukraine has said.
"The refinery risks forfeiting 9-10 million barrels of processing capacity - a single strike echoing deep into the Kremlin's coffers," Kyrylo Shevchenko said.
By Alex Crawford, special correspondent, in Istanbul
The outgoing MI6 chief has said - in his final speech as head of the UK's foreign intelligence agency - that he sees "no evidence" Russian leader Vladimir Putin has "any interest in a negotiated peace short of Ukrainian capitulation".
In a speech sometimes tinged with emotion and packed with pride about his years leading the agency, Sir Richard Moore told a small group of invited guests in Istanbul where he once served as ambassador and where one of his children was born, how he believes Putin is "stringing us along".
His successor, Blaise Metreweli - the first woman appointed to the position as 'C' (as the agency's leader is nicknamed) - was in the audience to hear him appeal to Russian citizens to help the British spy on the Kremlin.
"To those men and women in Russia who have truths to share and the courage to share them, I invite you to contact M16," Sir Richard implored. "You will be working to bring peace to our continent; to protect the long-term interests and redeem the honour of your country".
Sir Richard went on to assure the Russian citizens who might be tempted that "we will do everything to keep you safe".
The decision to move into the dark web to encourage the sharing of information comes as peace in Ukraine seems as far away as ever.
The spy chief - who has been at the helm for five years - identified Russia alongside China and Iran as the countries threatening UK security the most.
But he also added Gaza needs peace too, "for a reset to take hold in the region and to prevent further appalling suffering of innocent Palestinians," and warned the Israeli bombardment there was "fuelling radicalisation globally".
An airport in Russia's St Petersburg has said that its website has been hacked.
Pulkovo airport, which is located in Russia's second-largest city, has not yet revealed the cause of the hack.
The airport is Russia's second-largest by passenger traffic.
While the focus remains on Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine, a group of leading analysts suggests the Kremlin has launched a "coordinated information" campaign targeting another of its neighbouring countries that has echoes of the rhetoric employed before the full-scale invasion in 2022.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) says senior figures in Moscow, including members of Vladimir Putin's inner circle, have been making a series of statements designed to threaten Finland.
Finland, which has an 833-mile border with Russia, abandoned its longstanding policy of neutrality in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and joined NATO in 2023.
The US thinktank quotes Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov as saying yesterday that the Finnish government's "neutral veneer peeled off" and that revanchism (a policy of seeking to retaliate, especially to recover lost territory) is "literally on the rise" in Finland.
Another senior figure, Sergei Ivanov, said yesterday that Russian-Finnish relations "practically do not exist" and will not improve in the near future as Finland is a NATO member and is "actively calling for strengthening [its] eastern border".
He also claimed the Finnish population was unsatisfied with the Finnish government and alleged that the lack of Russian tourists has led to "depopulation" and a weakening economy in southeastern Finland.
Alexei Chepa, deputy head of the Russian state duma's international affairs committee, is also cited as making similar remarks yesterday.
The ISW reports Russian state media outlets "notably amplified" Lavrov's, Ivanov's, and Chepa's statements, and said this along with the similar wording in the claims "suggests that this is a concerted top-down Kremlin informational effort targeting Finland".
The thinktank's analysts continue: "High-ranking Kremlin officials have increased threats against Finland in recent weeks, including by using language that mirrors the Kremlin's false justifications for its invasions of Ukraine.
"ISW continues to assess that the playbook Russia is currently using to threaten NATO mirrors the playbook Russia previously used to set informational conditions justifying its aggression against Ukraine."
The head of MI6 has said that he sees "no evidence" that Vladimir Putin has any interest in a negotiated peace with Ukraine.
Sir Richard Moore has been speaking in Istanbul as he announces plans to use the dark web to recruit informants and receive secret information from agents in Russia and worldwide (see previous post).
He added that Putin has "bitten off more than he can chew" and underestimated Ukrainians in the war.
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