British cost of 245 million pounds to supply ammunition to Ukraine
The British defense minister announced that the country will spend 245 million pounds on the production of ammunition, especially Ukrainian artillery shells. |
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According to Yahoo News, artillery has been a key factor in Ukraine’s resistance to the invasion, and the £245m package announced on Saturday is intended to replenish Kyiv’s artillery stockpiles.
Hours ago, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wang announced the imposition of new financial sanctions and entry bans against 55 citizens and 37 Russian organizations.
The reason for Australia’s new sanctions is “the expulsion of Ukrainian children from areas temporarily under Russian control”, which Canberra attributed to Moscow.
Wang pointed out that the full names of the sanctioned individuals and organizations have not yet been determined, and said: “We also have targets in the defense, energy, media and mining sectors.” We have sanctioned Russia.
Reiterating the West’s unfounded claim about Iran’s arms assistance to Russia, he claimed: Also, targets related to Russia’s procurement and procurement networks based in Belarus, Iran and North Korea are on the sanctions list.
Recently, the Reuters news agency, citing 6 sources, claimed that Iran had sent a large number of surface-to-surface missiles to Russia. Regarding this claim, Iran’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations stated: Despite there being no legal restrictions on the sale of ballistic missiles, Iran is morally obliged to refrain from arms deals during the Russia-Ukraine conflict to avoid fueling the war. This is rooted in Iran’s adherence to international laws and the UN Charter.
Tas wrote that Australia’s sanctions list includes more than 1,100 people and more than 300 Russian and Belarusian companies. Canberra authorities have completely cut off business relations with Moscow and, while freezing the assets of blacklisted individuals, have prohibited Australian entities from trading with sanctioned companies.