Friday, June 19, 2026 | Muharram 3, 1448 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
26°C / 26°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Thousands march in Kyiv to show unity against Russian threat

Demonstrators shout slogans as they march behind a banner which reads "Ukrainians will resist" in the colours of the national flag during a rally in Kyiv on Saturday. — AFP
Demonstrators shout slogans as they march behind a banner which reads "Ukrainians will resist" in the colours of the national flag during a rally in Kyiv on Saturday. — AFP
minus
plus

KYIV: Several thousand Ukrainians rallied in Kyiv on Saturday to show unity amid fears of a Russian invasion, as Ukraine's leader told people not to panic and pushed back against what he said was a glut of bleak war predictions being reported in the media.


Tension has mounted as Russia has built up more than 100,000 troops near Ukraine and carried out large-scale exercises. The United States said on Friday an invasion could start at any moment. Russia denies planning to invade.


Ukrainians filed through the centre of Kyiv in a column, chanting "Glory to Ukraine" and carrying Ukrainian flags and banners that said "Ukrainians will resist" and "Invaders must die".


Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who attended police drills in southern Kherson region, said a Russian attack could happen at any time, but pushed back against what he called excessive amounts of information about a major looming war.


"The best friend of our enemies is panic in our country. And all this information is just provoking panic and can't help us," he said. "I can't agree or disagree with what hasn't happened yet. So far, there is no full-scale war in Ukraine."


The United States and numerous Western governments have urged their citizens to leave Ukraine, and Washington on Saturday said it was ordering most of its Kyiv embassy staff to leave.


"We have to be ready each day. It did not begin yesterday. It began in 2014, so, we are ready and this is why we are here," Zelenskiy said in a reference to Russia's annexation of Crimea and backing for an anti-Kyiv separatist insurgency in the east.


Zelenskiy voiced frustrations just last month with dire assessments of a war. Such warnings have taken their toll on the economic, piling pressure on the national currency. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
Most Read
No Image
CBO sets deadline for banknote replacement The Youngest Omani Pilot: A Life Shaped by Flight Rainfall forecast to cool heatwave conditions in al Hajar areas The question Oman has been asking for 40 years
FOLLOW US
arrow up
home icon