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Russia and Ukraine agree to two-day Orthodox Easter ceasefire

"People need an Easter without threats and a real move towards peace," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.

Russian troops strike Balabyne in Zaporizhzhia region with guided bombs

Ukraine has been defending itself against a Russian invasion with help from allies for more than four years. Source: AAP / Dmytro Smolienko

In brief

  • Russia and Ukraine have agreed to a two-day ceasefire during Orthodox Easter.
  • The two countries have also exchanged bodies of soldiers ahead of the ceasefire.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says his country will act in accordance with an Easter ceasefire announced by Russia.

The Kremlin said hostilities would be paused over a two-day ‌period for Orthodox Easter and that Russian leader Vladimir ‌Putin expected the Ukrainian side to ‌do the ‌same.

"In connection with the approaching holiday of Orthodox Easter, a ceasefire is ⁠declared ‌from 1600 on 11th April to the end ‌of the day of 12th April," the announcement said.

Zelenskyy said Ukraine had repeatedly stated it was ready ‌for reciprocal ‌steps. ⁠

"We proposed a ceasefire during the Easter holiday this year and will act accordingly," ⁠Zelenskyy said on Telegram.

"People need an Easter without threats and a real move towards peace, ‌and Russia has a chance not to return to attacks even after Easter."

Earlier on Thursday, Russia and Ukraine exchanged the bodies of soldiers, parliamentary deputy Shamsail Saraliev told the Russian news portal rbc.ru.

He said the Ukrainian side had received 1000 killed soldiers while Russia received 41 bodies.

The politician is responsible in the Russian parliament for matters relating to the "special military operation" as the war is officially called in Moscow.

The previous exchange of remains took place in February.

The office of prisoner-of-war affairs in Kyiv confirmed on Telegram that Ukraine had more than 1,000 bodies.

The authority thanked the International Committee of the Red Cross for its support.

Forensic experts would now examine the bodies, it said.

This is intended to rule out, among other things, that bodies of Russian soldiers were handed over by mistake.

The staff added that "after the identification of the deceased, the bodies will be handed over to the families for dignified burial".

Russia and Ukraine exchange soldiers' bodies on a regular basis.

Last year alone, Ukraine received back more than 15,000 bodies of fallen soldiers, according to official figures.

Russia received only a fraction of that.

Due to the slow but steady advance of Russian troops, the Ukrainian army is not always able to recover its own fallen soldiers.

Ukraine has been defending itself against a Russian invasion with help from allies for more than four years.

— With reporting by Reuters.


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3 min read

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Source: AAP




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