Ukraine says Russia has violated an Easter ceasefire hundreds of times, including a drone strike on an ambulance that injured three paramedics. Russian president Vladimir Putin announced a 32-hour ceasefire beginning at 4pm on Saturday and ending at midnight on Sunday, after a similar proposal was offered by Ukraine. But both sides have accused each other of repeatedly breaching the truce, with Russian officials saying Ukrainian drone strikes have injured five people. The Ukrainian General Staff said in a late evening report on Saturday night that it had counted 469 Russian ceasefire infringements since the truce came into force.The ambulance was struck in Sumy Oblast, with the Ukrainian military claiming it was one of 275 drone strikes in total.Volodymyr Zelensky did not comment on the violations in his overnight video address, where he urged Putin to continue the ceasefire agreement after the end of Orthodox Easter. “We have made this proposal to Russia and if Russia once again chooses war instead of peace, it will show the world, and particularly the United States, who truly wants what,” he said.Ukraine says Russia has violated Easter ceasefire 469 timesThe Ukrainian General Staff said in a late evening report on Saturday night that it had counted 469 Russian ceasefire infringements since the truce came into force at 4pm Moscow time.“Specifically, 22 enemy assault actions, 153 shelling incidents, 19 strikes by attack drones ... and 275 strikes by (First-Person View) drones,” it said as part of an update on the frontline situation.According to the calendar of the Orthodox faith, which is dominant in both Russia and Ukraine, Easter is celebrated this year on Sunday 12 April.During a similar 30-hour Easter ceasefire agreed last year, each side accused the other of infringements.Adam Withnall12 April 2026 06:50Russian drone strikes ambulance in Sumy, injuring three paramedicsUkrainian officials say a Russian drone struck an ambulance in Sumy Oblast overnight, injuring three paramedics – one of hundreds of alleged ceasefire violations.Vladimir Putin said his forces would observe a truce for Orthodox Easter from 4pm on Saturday to the end of Sunday, but both sides have accused each other of breaching it.Sumy Oblast is in northeastern Ukraine, and is one of a number of border regions that have faced sustained ground and air attacks throughout the war, though Russia holds no significant territory there.The region’s military administration issued an update on the strike which read: “Three medics were injured. They were promptly provided with assistance,” according to the Kyiv Independent.“The enemy cynically continues to attack civilian infrastructure. Be as cautious as possible,” it warned.The Ukrainian military says Russia has already violated the Easter ceasefire 469 times since it began. Neither Volodymyr Zelensky nor the Kremlin have commented on the alleged violations.Adam Withnall12 April 2026 06:46Russia claims five injured by Ukrainian drone strikes during truceWith both sides accusing each other of violating the Easter truce, which began at 4pm Moscow time on Saturday, governors of two Russian regions said Ukrainian drone strikes had injured people.Alexander Khinshtein, governor of Russia's Kursk border region, wrote on the state-backed messenger service MAX that a Ukrainian drone had struck a petrol station in the town of Lgov, injuring three people, including a child.Khinshtein said the attack took place after the start of the truce.In the adjacent Belgorod region, Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said two people were injured in Ukrainian drone attacks.Gladkov, writing on Telegram, said a man and woman were injured in attacks in Shebekino and Grayvoron, two small towns just inside the border. He also said Ukrainian forces had shelled Shebekino, damaging homes and other buildings.A local Russia-installed official in a part of southern Kherson region held by Moscow also reported on social media that a Ukrainian drone attack had injured one person.Adam Withnall12 April 2026 05:57Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of violating Easter truceRussia and Ukraine on yesterday accused each other of violating a brief ceasefire in their four-year-old war hours into the truce put in place to mark Orthodox Easter.The General Staff of Ukraine's military said Russian forces had violated the terms of the 32-hour truce 469 times, including assault actions, shelling and drone strikes.Governors of two Russian border regions said Ukrainian drones had attacked targets in the Kursk and Belgorod regions, injuring five people.The ceasefire, announced by Russian president Vladimir Putin on Thursday, went into effect at 4pm Moscow time (1300 GMT). Ukraine had initially proposed the truce and said it would observe it if Russia did so too.Adam Withnall12 April 2026 04:45Russia and Ukraine move towards potential peace deal, Bloomberg reportsUkraine and Russia are moving towards a potential deal to end the war, Bloomberg News reported on Friday, citing the top aide to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.Kyrylo Budanov, a former head of Ukraine's military intelligence, said that he saw progress towards a deal, but declined to say what a potential compromise on territory, a key stumbling block, would look like."No final decision has been made yet," he said, according to the report. "But, in principle, everyone now clearly understands the limits of what is acceptable. That’s enormous progress.""They all understand the war needs to end. That’s why they are negotiating,” Budanov said in an interview with Bloomberg on April 4. “I don’t think it will be long.”Alex Croft12 April 2026 03:00Alex Croft12 April 2026 02:00Estonia says it won't detain Russia's shadow fleet for fear of military responseNato member Estonia says it cannot afford to detain Russia's "shadow fleet" vessels in the Baltic Sea and risk the chance Moscow will respond with military force.Britain and other European nations, including France, Belgium and Sweden, have stepped up efforts to detain ageing oil tankers used by Moscow to evade sanctions and secure vital funding for its four-year war against Ukraine.But Estonia, the northernmost Baltic state located close to Russia's main oil and fuel export facilities in the Gulf of Finland, is practising restraint after an unsuccessful attempt to board a Russian vessel last year."The risk of military escalation is just too high," Estonia's Navy Commander Ivo Vark told Reuters.In May 2025 Estonia said Moscow sent a fighter jet into Nato airspace over the Baltic Sea during an Estonian attempt to stop an unflagged Russia-bound oil tanker it believed was defying Western sanctions.The jet eventually escorted the oil tanker into Russian waters.Alex Croft12 April 2026 01:01In pictures: Damage after Russian drone attack on OdesaA local resident walks past a destroyed house following an air attack in Odesa on Saturday (AFP via Getty Images)Communal workers clean debris next to a destroyed house following an air attack in Odesa (AFP via Getty Images)Alex Croft12 April 2026 00:01Russian investigative journalist placed in pre-trial detentionA Russian court has ordered the detention of Oleg Roldugin, an investigative journalist for independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta, following his arrest a day earlier.Roldugin was arrested on Thursday in a case involving alleged misuse of personal data following a search of his home and a raid by masked security agents on the offices of Novaya Gazeta, one of Russia's best-known investigative outlets.Russia has tightened its censorship laws and increased pressure on independent media since it launched its war in Ukraine in 2022. In another case this week, the FSB security service said it had detained a freelance journalist in Siberia on suspicion of treason.State media on Thursday published a brief video clip of Roldugin's arrest, showing him being bundled into a van by masked men. Under Russian criminal law, misuse of personal data carries a prison sentence of up to 10 years if it causes "grave consequences".Roldugin, standing in a glass box in the courtroom on Friday, told reporters he was innocent.Alex Croft11 April 2026 23:00Russia lists Stanford University as ‘undesirable’ organisationRussia has declared Stanford University an “undesirable organisation,” a designation that bars it from operating in the country and makes any association with it punishable under criminal law.The justice ministry announced the move on Friday, without providing a reason, according to The Kyiv Independent. The listing also covers Stanford’s Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies.Under the law, individuals linked to such organisations can face prison terms of up to four years, while those accused of organising related activity risk longer sentences.The step follows similar action against Tufts University and forms part of a broader campaign targeting foreign academic institutions and other groups viewed as hostile to the Kremlin.Alex Croft11 April 2026 22:01
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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Kyiv says Moscow has violated Easter ceasefire 469 times including ambulance strike
The Independent World April 12, 2026 at 06:01 AM

Original source
The Independent World

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