Ukraine says casualty figures in war cannot be disclosed

Ursula von der Leyen said Moscow’s war on Ukraine brought death, devastation and suffering, and detailed a plan to confiscate frozen Russian state and private assets to compensate Ukraine.

The video, however, was soon removed and reposted with that sentence cut out.

Ukrainian authorities have declined to confirm the number mentioned by the EU official.

Bohdan Senyk, head of the Press Service of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, said: “We cannot confirm this figure, we emphasize that the casualties of the Ukrainian army are official information and are subject to broadcast restrictions.”

Meanwhile, Dana Spinant, deputy chief spokeswoman and director for political communication for the European Commission, thanked “those who pointed out the inaccuracy regarding the figures in a previous version of this video.”

“The estimation used, from external sources, should have referred to casualties, i.e. both killed and injured, and was meant to show Russia‘s brutality,” she said.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Eurozone manufacturing PMI up slightly in November

“However, by posting another sub-50.0 reading — the fifth in as many months — the headline index signaled a further deterioration in the health of the goods-producing sector,” it noted.

The press release pointed to further easing in inflationary pressures, adding that the level of incoming new orders also “fell sharply once again as client demand in markets across the eurozone and other parts of the globe deteriorated.”

Chris Williamson, a chief business economist at S&P Global, said the latest PMI data was a signal of moderation in the euro area manufacturing downturn.

Noting that supplier delivery times had lengthened over the last month, Williamson said: “Future output expectations have picked up slightly on improved supply chain and energy market signals, the latter buoyed by warmer than usual autumn weather, but confidence remains amongst the lowest seen over the past decade.”

Source: Anadolu Agency