President Volodymyr Zelensky said he had asked Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday to step up advocacy among Ukraine's Western partners to allow strikes on military targets deep inside Russia.
Zelensky urged Trudeau to lobby allies to grant, "Ukraine permission and the necessary means to strike military targets on the territory of the aggressor country," he said in an English-language post on X after the two leaders spoke by phone.
NATO member Canada, which has one of the world's largest Ukrainian diasporas, has supplied military and financial assistance to Kyiv since Russia invaded in February 2022.
Trudeau's office said in a statement that he told Zelensky that Russia's attacks "further strengthen global unity and resolve in support of Ukraine at upcoming international engagements."
Zelensky said on Telegram that the two leaders also discussed a conference that Canada is due to host on the topic of prisoners. The conference is a follow-up to a peace summit that Kyiv convened in June.
Trudeau's office said Canada would host the meeting at the level of foreign ministers.
In Ottawa, a source directly familiar with the matter said the meeting would most likely take place in October.
President Donald Trump said the US was considering "winding down" its military operation against Iran, as Iran and Israel traded attacks on Saturday and Iranian media said the nuclear enrichment facility in Natanz had been attacked.
Robert Mueller, the no-nonsense former FBI chief who documented Russia's interference in the 2016 US election and its contacts with Donald Trump's campaign but opted not to bring criminal charges against a sitting president, has died at age 81.
Fourteen people died and 25 were seriously injured in a fire at a car parts factory in the South Korean city of Daejeon, fire authorities said on Saturday.
Russian attacks on Ukraine killed two people in Zaporizhzhia and left most of the northern region of Chernihiv without power on Saturday, Ukrainian officials said.