Ukraine and Russia accused each other of thousands of ceasefire violations during a 32-hour Orthodox Easter truce that began Saturday evening, with both militaries documenting extensive drone attacks and artillery strikes across the 1,200-kilometer front line.

Ukraine's General Staff reported 2,299 violations by Sunday morning, including 28 Russian assault operations, 479 shelling incidents, and more than 1,700 drone strikes. Russia's Defense Ministry countered with claims of 1,971 Ukrainian breaches over the same period, citing artillery fire, tank shelling, and FPV drone attacks.

The truce, which ran from 4 p.m. Saturday until midnight Sunday, marked the second consecutive year that an Orthodox Easter ceasefire collapsed within hours. Russian President Vladimir Putin had agreed to the pause after initially rejecting a similar proposal from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

"2,299 violations recorded in just 15 hours of supposed ceasefire"
Scale of Easter truce breakdown

We understand who we're dealing with. Ukraine will maintain the cease-fire and respond in kind

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukrainian President — Radio Free Europe

Despite the widespread violations, both sides noted some restraint in their most destructive weapons. Ukraine reported no missile strikes, guided aerial bombs, or long-range Shahed drone attacks during the truce period. Russian forces had launched 160 drones at Ukraine in the hours before the ceasefire began.

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RFE/RL frames the story as evidence of Russian bad faith, emphasizing Moscow's pattern of targeting civilians and first responders while highlighting Ukraine's defensive posture. The outlet contextualizes the failed truce within broader stalled peace negotiations and presents Ukraine as the more credible party seeking genuine ceasefire.