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PepsiCo continued operations in Russia amid the invasion of Ukraine [278] March 8, 2022, company announced suspension of the sale of Pepsi-Cola, and our global beverage brands in Russia [ 279 ] "continue to offer our other products in Russia, including daily essentials such as milk and other dairy offerings, baby formula and baby food" [ 279 ]
During the morning of 17 November 2024, Russia launched a massive air attack on cities across Ukraine, killing two people in Mykolaiv, two in Nikopol, two in Odesa and one person in Lviv. [1] [2] [3] According to the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, about 120 missiles and 90 drones were fired overnight and in the early morning.
The Pepsi workers also have the benefit of a “huge” strike fund backing them up, the product of the Teamsters coming to terms with UPS prior to a strike being called against that company, said ...
Let Ukraine use Western weapons to strike targets inside Russia.. That message, long a priority for Kyiv and its fiercest backers, is now being voiced by a growing number of Western leaders. The ...
Just two days after the decision, images showed Russia’s prized S-300/400 surface-to-air launcher exploding in flames in Russia, about 35 miles from Ukraine’s northern border.
Nationwide air raid sirens began to sound just prior to 6 a.m. local time. Reports from the Ukrainian Air Force stated that multiple Russian MiG-31 aircraft capable of deploying Kinzhal ballistic missiles in addition to at least eleven Tu-95 bombers, multiple kamikaze drones, and multiple missiles were detected in and around Ukrainian airspace targeting numerous Ukrainian cities across the nation.
Russian President Vladimir Putin formally lowered the threshold for his country's use of nuclear weapons Tuesday, after the U.S. allowed Ukraine to strike inside Russia using American missiles.
The attack targeted cities across Ukraine, including Dnipro, Kharkiv, Konotop, Kyiv, Lviv, Odesa, and Zaporizhzhia, in what was possibly the largest aerial attack of the Russian invasion thus far. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Ukrainian Air Force spokesperson Yurii Ihnat said that [ 11 ] "we have never seen so many targets on our monitors at once."