Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of hundreds of ceasefire violations
Ukraine and Russia have each accused one another of hundreds of ceasefire violations coinciding with Orthodox Easter celebrations. The Ukrainian military said on Sunday morning that Russian forces had committed 2,299 violations since the truce began at 16:00 local time (13:00 GMT) on Saturday. The Russian defence ministry, in turn, said Ukrainian forces had committed 1,971 violations, including three attempted counter-attacks in Dnipropetrovsk region.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said his nation's forces would respond "symmetrically" to Russian attacks during the ceasefire, calling Easter "a time of peace". He added that he hoped the truce could be extended beyond Easter to facilitate peace negotiations. Russia rejected the idea, saying its attacks would resume on Monday. Russian troops mounted 28 attacks and carried out nearly 2,000 drone strikes, Ukraine's military said, but did not use bombs or missiles. In Ukraine's northern Sumy region, local authorities said a Russian drone hit an ambulance overnight, injuring three medics. Russia's defence ministry said Ukraine had launched three overnight attacks on positions in the Pokrovsk area and Otradne in Dnipropetrovsk region. It also said four attempts by Ukrainian troops to advance in Sumy and Donetsk were "thwarted".
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the Easter ceasefire earlier this week. Both Ukrainian and Russian sources accused each other of limited violations in the first few hours of the truce on Saturday, before making the much larger claims. Ukrainian and Russian authorities also announced they had each swapped 175 prisoners of war on Saturday, including seven civilians a piece.
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Ukraine and Russia are trading accusations - each blaming the other for violating a ceasefire meant to observe Orthodox Easter. The claims and counter-claims raise questions about the already-fragile state of peace talks.
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