Ukraine, Russia claim thousands of violations of Putin-imposed holiday ceasefire
A ceasefire declared by Russian President Vladimir Putin for the Orthodox Easter holiday was quickly undermined by both sides accusing each other of thousands of violations. The 32-hour truce, intended to halt fighting from Saturday afternoon through Sunday, saw Ukraine report 2,299 violations by Russia, while Russia claimed 1,971 violations by Ukraine.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA ceasefire declared by Russian President Vladimir Putin for the Orthodox Easter holiday was quickly undermined by both sides accusing each other of thousands of violations. The 32-hour truce, intended to halt fighting from Saturday afternoon through Sunday, saw Ukraine report 2,299 violations by Russia, while Russia claimed 1,971 violations by Ukraine. Ukraine reported assaults, shelling, and drone activity, while Russia cited drone strikes in border regions that allegedly injured civilians. The head of Russia's Belgorod region also reported the recovery of two civilian bodies following an alleged Ukrainian attack. Both sides agreed to the ceasefire but accused the other of violating it, highlighting the deep mistrust and difficulty in enforcing even temporary pauses in the conflict.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extracted"Every time a ceasefire is announced for a holiday, the shelling continues regardless."
Russia’s Defense Ministry accused Ukrainian forces of 1,971 violations.
Ukraine’s military said it had logged 2,299 ceasefire violations by early Sunday morning.
Russia and Ukraine traded accusations of hundreds of attacks Sunday, casting doubt on a Kremlin-declared Easter ceasefire.
The head of Russia's Belgorod region, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said the bodies of two civilians have been recovered following an alleged Ukrainian attack.