صدى البلد البلد سبورت قناة صدى البلد صدى البلد جامعات صدى البلد عقارات
Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie
ads

Putin, Zelensky proclaim rival ceasefires around Russia's Victory day commemorations


Tue 05 May 2026 | 02:54 PM
Russian President Vladimir Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin
Nada Mustafa

President Vladimir Putin on Monday declared a ​two-day ceasefire in the conflict with Ukraine on May 8-9 to mark Russia’s World War Two victory, but Ukrainian President ‌Volodymyr Zelensky countered with his own proposed pause in fighting starting earlier, on the night of May 5‑6, according to Reuters.

Putin had first spoken of a possible ceasefire coinciding with commemorations of the 81st anniversary of the victory in a phone conversation last week with U.S. President Donald Trump.

Ukraine had been wary of the notion of a brief ceasefire ​rather than moves towards a prolonged end to fighting.

Russia’s Defence Ministry, in a post on Telegram, announced the two-day May 8‑9 truce ​and said it expected Ukraine to follow suit. It said Moscow's forces would take all measures to ensure ⁠the safety of commemorations marking the defeat of Nazi Germany in what Russians call the Great Patriotic War.

It warned, however, that any attempt by ​Ukraine to disrupt the celebrations would prompt retaliation.

"In the event of attempts by the Kyiv regime to implement its criminal plans to disrupt the celebration ​of the 81st anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War, the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation will launch a retaliatory, massive missile attack on the centre of Kyiv," it said.

Russia, it said, had been in a position to launch such an attack before but had "previously refrained from such actions on humanitarian grounds."

"We are warning ​the civilian population of Kyiv and staff at foreign diplomatic missions of the need to leave the city in a timely manner," it said.

Zelensky, ​writing on Telegram after attending a European Political Community summit in Armenia, said Ukraine would observe its own ceasefire beginning at midnight on the night of Tuesday, ‌May 5.

He ⁠said Russia had failed to respond to Kyiv's longstanding calls for a lasting ceasefire, adding that Ukraine was acting because "human life is incomparably more valuable than the 'celebration' of any anniversary."