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Reçu aujourd’hui — 19 septembre 2025
  • ✇Euromaidan Press
  • As Russia clamps down, Ukraine sells assets in wartime reform gamble
    Ukraine’s first year of large-scale electronic auctions raised over 8.9 billion hryvnias ($216 million) from just four major asset sales, marking long-awaited progress toward market reforms even as the state has expanded control over key economic sectors during wartime.Ukraine pulls off an economic contradiction: expanding state control while privatizing billions in assets. The country maintains profitable state-owned enterprises that generate billions for the war effort
     

As Russia clamps down, Ukraine sells assets in wartime reform gamble

19 septembre 2025 à 11:37

Hotel Ukraine

Ukraine’s first year of large-scale electronic auctions raised over 8.9 billion hryvnias ($216 million) from just four major asset sales, marking long-awaited progress toward market reforms even as the state has expanded control over key economic sectors during wartime.

Ukraine pulls off an economic contradiction: expanding state control while privatizing billions in assets. The country maintains profitable state-owned enterprises that generate billions for the war effort while selling large assets to prove its democratic market commitment to Western allies.

International investors watch wartime experiment

Ukraine’s privatization success during active warfare represents a crucial test case for Western allies. The transparent auctions demonstrate that democratic market mechanisms can function under extreme conditions. It is a model that could reshape post-war reconstruction planning worth hundreds of billions in international investment.

The paradox also reassures hesitant investors: Ukraine prioritizes long-term integration over short-term profits, even when state enterprises generate massive wartime revenues.

This signals institutional resilience that could survive the transition from wartime emergency measures to a peacetime market economy.

Market signals amid state expansion

The privatization achievements come as Ukraine’s public sector has expanded to its largest size since the 1990s. State-owned banks now control 53% of all banking assets and over 60% of retail deposits. State enterprises like PrivatBank generated 39% of all banking profits in 2024, contributing billions directly to war financing.

Yet Ukraine has simultaneously cleared the path to privatize profitable state banks, Sense Bank and Ukrgasbank, choosing long-term integration over immediate wartime revenue streams.

Whether these bank sales materialize during ongoing warfare remains uncertain, but the policy signals seem to satisfy Western allies demanding proof of genuine market commitment.

The tension reflects broader EU accession requirements that Ukraine become “a functioning market economy” capable of integrating into the single market.

While the European Commission imposes no direct privatization mandates, it has recommended that Ukraine “intensify its privatization efforts” and reduce the anticompetitive effects of state enterprises.

Flagship sales drive results

The reported results from the State Property Fund show that competitive bidding doubled or tripled initial prices for premium assets.

Hotel Ukraine in downtown Kyiv sold for 2.5 billion hryvnias ($61 million) after three bidders drove up the price from the 1 billion hryvnia starting point.

The United Mining and Chemical Company fetched over 3.9 billion hryvnias ($96 million), while sanctioned Russian assets, including the Aeroc gas concrete plant, brought 1.9 billion hryvnias ($46 million)—nearly double its reserve price as three participants competed for the facility.

The Vinnytsiapobuthim household chemical factory also doubled in value during bidding, reaching 608.1 million hryvnias ($14.8 million) with funds from sanctioned asset sales flowing to Ukraine’s Fund for Eliminating Consequences of Armed Aggression.

Transparent platform prevents oligarch capture

All sales used the Prozorro electronic platform, which was designed to ensure equal conditions for investors and prevent the oligarch capture that characterized corrupt 1990s privatizations.

“The launch of large privatization through electronic auctions opened opportunities for new investments necessary for the country’s reconstruction,” Deputy Economy Minister Dariia Marchak stated.

Prozorro CEO Serhiy But noted that the system works effectively even under complex wartime conditions. Online auctions provide equal opportunities for investors while ensuring state assets sell at market prices.

Reform commitment amid challenges

Acting State Property Fund head Ivanna Smachylo emphasized that large privatization represents an effective mechanism for transforming state assets into financial resources. This ensures significant budget revenues and promotes enterprise development that benefits the economy.

The success builds on earlier achievements, with small-scale privatization bringing over 5 billion hryvnias to the state budget since resuming in September 2022, confirming the effectiveness of this investment attraction mechanism.

Two new large privatization auctions, with a combined starting value of nearly 4.8 billion hryvnias ($116 million), have already been announced.

The Odesa Port Plant and sanctioned asset Motordetal-Konotop are open to any interested parties except those connected to the aggressor country.

Balancing act continues

The privatization effort continues Ukraine’s broader economic reform strategy aimed at EU integration. Its success demonstrates that transparent market mechanisms can function even during warfare.

Ukraine has managed to maintain reform momentum throughout 2024, with state bank privatizations and other strategic asset sales proceeding alongside the large-scale program.

The results contrast sharply with Russia’s command economy approach, yet also highlight Ukraine’s complex wartime balancing act—the country simultaneously expands state control in critical sectors while privatizing others to signal democratic market commitment.

The success of transparent auctions offers hope that Ukraine can balance immediate wartime needs with building an economy that benefits all participants, not just political and business insiders.

Reçu hier — 18 septembre 2025
  • ✇Euromaidan Press
  • Ireland sends 34-vehicle non-lethal military aid package to Ukraine: ambulances, pickups, and demining tech
    Ireland has delivered 34 military vehicles and three demining robots for Ukraine as part of its non-lethal military aid. The announcement was made on 18 September by the Irish Defense Minister. Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Ireland—a neutral country—has been supporting Ukraine solely with humanitarian and non-lethal military aid. Ireland delivers 34-vehicle non-lethal military aid convoy to Ukraine According to the Irish Government’
     

Ireland sends 34-vehicle non-lethal military aid package to Ukraine: ambulances, pickups, and demining tech

18 septembre 2025 à 15:24

ireland sends 34-vehicle non-lethal military aid package ukraine ambulances pickups demining tech reacher robot reamda united24 d8be0d589178b764f6a658f94217a818 news ukrainian reports

Ireland has delivered 34 military vehicles and three demining robots for Ukraine as part of its non-lethal military aid. The announcement was made on 18 September by the Irish Defense Minister.

Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Ireland—a neutral country—has been supporting Ukraine solely with humanitarian and non-lethal military aid.

Ireland delivers 34-vehicle non-lethal military aid convoy to Ukraine

According to the Irish Government’s press release, two convoys organized by the Irish Defense Forces have arrived in Poland carrying 34 military vehicles destined for the Ukrainian Armed Forces. The shipments were carried out under Operation Carousel 3, led by the Defense Forces Transport Corps.

The equipment was delivered to the International Donor Coordination Cell in Rzeszów and will be officially handed over in coordination with the Ukrainian military.

The Tánaiste (Ireland’s second-ranking government official) and Minister for Defense Simon Harris said,

“This important donation is a further indication of Ireland’s steadfast support for Ukraine in the face of Russia’s brutal invasion.

He stressed the need to continue backing Ukraine in the face of ongoing Russian aggression, calling the delivery a “practical example” of non-lethal aid provided since the 2022 full-scale invasion. 

What’s inside the aid shipment

The convoy included two Ford Transit vans, three Mercedes ambulances, five Scania 8×8 DROPS trucks, eight 15-seater Ford Transit minibuses, and sixteen double cab Ford Rangers. In addition, three Reacher Robots were delivered to support demining operations as part of a multinational coalition.

The donation supports the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a coalition of 57 countries and the European Union that delivers military equipment and assistance to Ukraine. Ireland contributes to two non-lethal sub-coalitions under this group: a demining capability coalition co-led by Lithuania and Iceland, and an IT coalition co-led by Estonia and Luxembourg.

Reçu avant avant-hier

U.S. Government to Invest $75 Million in Ukraine’s Minerals

17 septembre 2025 à 08:32
The investment will ease fears in Kyiv that Washington is pulling back from Ukraine’s war effort. It also underscores the mercantile nature of the U.S.-Ukrainian alliance under President Trump.

© Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times

A uranium mine in Pervozvanivka, Ukraine. The investment announcement could help attract badly needed capital to sustain the country’s war economy.
  • ✇Euromaidan Press
  • AI sees, diesel drives, armor protects—Ukraine’s 4-ton ground drone Bufalo is designed to endure war
    A new Ukrainian military robot is rolling out. Oboronka news site reports that the 4-ton ground drone named “Bufalo” is diesel-powered, armored, and built for AI-assisted frontline logistics and demining. Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, dominated by aerial drones, robotic ground platforms are becoming more common on the battlefield. Used for demining, cargo delivery, evacuation, and engineering, they now range from light electric types to new heavy diesel models. Bu
     

AI sees, diesel drives, armor protects—Ukraine’s 4-ton ground drone Bufalo is designed to endure war

15 septembre 2025 à 14:01

ai sees diesel drives armor protects—ukraine’s 4-ton ground drone bufalo designed endure war equipped demining mulcher attachment photographed during field testing grassy terrain mezhamedia land new ukrainian military robot rolling

A new Ukrainian military robot is rolling out. Oboronka news site reports that the 4-ton ground drone named “Bufalo” is diesel-powered, armored, and built for AI-assisted frontline logistics and demining.

Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, dominated by aerial drones, robotic ground platforms are becoming more common on the battlefield. Used for demining, cargo delivery, evacuation, and engineering, they now range from light electric types to new heavy diesel models. Bufalo, developed by an undisclosed Ukrainian company, enters this heavier category.

Bufalo: Ukraine’s new diesel-driven ground drone for war

Bufalo’s key advantage is its diesel engine. Fuel tanks can be scaled by mission, giving it a range of 100–200 km without battery swaps. Developers say electric drones can’t meet today’s longer frontlines.

“Electric drones cannot cover the distance to deliver provisions and ammunition to the front,” said company head Vladyslav.

Built for real combat conditions

Bufalo’s chassis is armored with European steel. It withstands any bullet and indirect 152 mm artillery if shells land beyond 100 meters. Even if damaged, its wheels remain operational.

The drone uses Starlink with GPS or a radio link for communications. A CRPA antenna protects satellite signal from jamming. If Starlink fails or is disabled, a relay-equipped drone can take over the signal.

It weighs about 4 tons, moves up to 20 km/h, and stays low to the ground for stealth. Its engine is powerful enough to haul cargo or tow stuck vehicles—cutting time and risk for troops.

AI-driven navigation, but no killer robot

Bufalo uses onboard cameras to detect obstacles up to 15 meters away, suggest safe routes, and stop if needed. Navigation is assisted by AI, but decisions stay human-controlled.

The robot can lock onto and follow a target, but it will not make decisions to destroy equipment or people. I will never allow it to make decisions in place of a human…” said Vladyslav.

From failure to battlefield resilience

The idea for Bufalo came after a drone prototype failed a demo—losing a wheel and flipping. A soldier dismissed the tech, pushing Vladyslav to start from scratch. His new team asked the General Staff for requirements and collected feedback from frontline units.

Requests included smoke grenades, armored wheels, a shielded bottom to resist mines, and Starlink integration. All were implemented.

Bufalo 4-ton ground drone deploying smoke during trials in open terrain. The armored chassis and low profile are clearly visible. Photo via mezha.media
Bufalo 4-ton ground drone deploying smoke during trials in open terrain. The armored chassis and low profile are clearly visible. Photo via mezha.media

 

Timeline and domestic focus

The Bufalo project launched in January 2025. From March to August, the team built and tested the demining version. That kit includes the drone, a hydraulic system, mulcher, control panel, and trailer.

Developers say Bufalo is 70% Ukrainian-made, using domestic electronics and optics. The rest comes from EU suppliers. Price details remain undisclosed.

What’s next for Bufalo?

Bufalo is modular and may get combat features soon. The team is exploring weapon modules and engineering tools like remote trenching scoops. An 11-channel radio jamming system has passed tests and is ready for integration.

We’re building an infrastructurally simple drone, so one control system can be removed and another installed. We’ve made understandable communication interfaces. The EW manufacturer just needs to provide a connector—we’ll plug it in and it’ll work automatically,” said Vladyslav.

The team plans an official presentation, followed by codification and production. Initial output will be 10 drones per month, with plans to scale.

 

  • ✇Euromaidan Press
  • Russian missile strikes Danish humanitarian mission in Chernihiv Oblast, killing two – updated
    Russian forces on Thursday targeted a humanitarian mission from the Danish Refugee Council. The team was clearing mines near Novoselivka in Ukraine’s Chernihiv Oblast. The strike killed 2 humanitarian workers and injured 5. “This is yet another cynical crime. Attacking people carrying out humanitarian work means deliberately putting humanitarian efforts at risk,” said Dmytro Lubinets, Ukrainian Parliamentary Commissioner for Human Rights. The missile strike hit the team a
     

Russian missile strikes Danish humanitarian mission in Chernihiv Oblast, killing two – updated

4 septembre 2025 à 10:02

Rescue workers on scene after a Russian missile strike on a humanitarian demining mission in Chernihiv Oblast, Ukraine.

Russian forces on Thursday targeted a humanitarian mission from the Danish Refugee Council. The team was clearing mines near Novoselivka in Ukraine’s Chernihiv Oblast.

The strike killed 2 humanitarian workers and injured 5.

“This is yet another cynical crime. Attacking people carrying out humanitarian work means deliberately putting humanitarian efforts at risk,” said Dmytro Lubinets, Ukrainian Parliamentary Commissioner for Human Rights.

The missile strike hit the team as they worked near a checkpoint outside the village, as reported by Dmytro Bryzhynskyi, the head of the Chernihiv City Military Administration.

The victims were employees of a Danish demining team carrying out humanitarian work to make the area safe for civilians.

Chernihiv Oblast lies on Ukraine’s northern border with Russia and Belarus, making it a frequent target for cross-border shelling and strikes.

Russian forces have repeatedly attacked humanitarian missions across Ukraine. These strikes target the people trying to restore normal life in liberated regions, where explosive remnants of past Russian occupation remain a major danger to residents.

  • ✇The Kyiv Independent
  • Italy commits $1.6 million to boost Ukraine’s battle against landmines
    Italy has pledged 1.5 million euros (approximately $1.6 million) to support humanitarian demining efforts in Ukraine, deepening its partnership with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Ukrainian government. The agreement was formalized during a high-level ceremony in Kyiv on June 23 attended by Italian Ambassador Carlo Formosa, UN Assistant Secretary-General and new UNDP Administrator Haoliang Xu, Jaco Cilliers, Resident Representative of the UNDP in Ukraine, and Ukraine’s Fi
     

Italy commits $1.6 million to boost Ukraine’s battle against landmines

24 juin 2025 à 20:22
Italy commits $1.6 million to boost Ukraine’s battle against landmines

Italy has pledged 1.5 million euros (approximately $1.6 million) to support humanitarian demining efforts in Ukraine, deepening its partnership with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Ukrainian government.

The agreement was formalized during a high-level ceremony in Kyiv on June 23 attended by Italian Ambassador Carlo Formosa, UN Assistant Secretary-General and new UNDP Administrator Haoliang Xu, Jaco Cilliers, Resident Representative of the UNDP in Ukraine, and Ukraine’s First Deputy Prime Minister and Economy Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko.

"Demining is not just a technical operation; it is a deeply humanitarian act that combines cooperation and innovation to restore hope in Ukraine," Ambassador Formosa said. "This project is not only a response to the emergency — it’s a step toward recovery. It’s about returning land to farmers, playgrounds to children, and safe roads to families."

The funding will support UNDP’s mine action program, which focuses on clearing land contaminated by mines and explosive remnants of war, ensuring the safe return of land to Ukrainian communities.

The initiative comes as Ukraine continues to grapple with one of the world’s largest demining challenges. According to the State Emergency Service, the total area of potentially mined land has been reduced by over 20% since late 2022. However, approximately 137,000 square kilometers (52,900 square miles) — much of it farmland — remain contaminated. Demining operations are carried out by the emergency service personnel, National Police, Ministry of Defense, and non-governmental organizations.

Currently, 112 certified demining operators, including eight international groups, are active in Ukraine, the State Emergency Service reported on June 24. Their combined capacity includes more than 9,000 personnel, 278 specialized vehicles, and over 13,000 metal detectors.

While significant progress has been made, Ukrainian officials stress that continued international support and funding are critical to accelerating clearance efforts.

Investigation: How Russia prepares its strategic missile plant for ‘eternal war’
Key findings: * Despite international sanctions, Russia’s strategic missile plant was able to import complex machinery to dramatically increase missile production. * The Kyiv Independent has identified the equipment supplied to the plant, as well as the supply chains, mostly from China. * We located the plant’s new premises, built to house the
Italy commits $1.6 million to boost Ukraine’s battle against landminesThe Kyiv IndependentAlisa Yurchenko
Italy commits $1.6 million to boost Ukraine’s battle against landmines

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