Foreign Minister
Takeshi Iwaya will meet his Ukrainian counterpart, Andrii Sybiha, to reaffirm
Japan’s “strong support” for Ukraine against Russia’s invasion and to discuss
further sanctions against Moscow, Japan’s Foreign Ministry said.
High on the agenda was Tokyo’s “grave
concern” over growing military cooperation between North Korea and Russia, the
ministry said.
According to US,
South Korean and Ukrainian intelligence assessments, up to 12,000 North Korean
troops have been sent to Russia as part of a major defence treaty between the
countries.
Last week, Ukrainian officials said
Ukraine and North Korean troops engaged in small-scale fighting while Ukraine’s
army fired artillery at North Korean soldiers in Russia’s Kursk border region,
where Ukraine launched a surprise push on August 6. The agreement requires both countries to use all available means to
provide immediate military assistance if either is attacked.
Iwaya’s visit comes after the Ukrainian
capital was attacked overnight by Russian drones, damaging residential
buildings and infrastructure in Kyiv’s Obolon district. No casualties were
reported. Ukrainian air defences neutralised up to a dozen drones, said the
head of Kyiv’s military administration, Serhii Popko. Russia attacked Ukraine with 83 Shahed drones in the early hours of
Saturday morning, the Ukrainian air force reported. Of those, 55 were shot
down, while another 30 veered off course or were lost after electronic jamming,
it said. Meanwhile, Russia’s Ministry of Defense said that it had destroyed
35 Ukrainian drones, including 20 over the western Kursk region and 11 over the
Bryansk region.