Zelenskiy accuses Russia of spurning ceasefire proposed by Kyiv


Rescuers work at the site of the private house hit by a Russian drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine May 6, 2026. REUTERS/Vyacheslav Madiyevskyy

KYIV, May 6 (Reuters) - Ukraine ⁠accused Russia of flouting a Kyiv-proposed ceasefire on Wednesday by carrying out dozens of battlefield assaults, air strikes and drone attacks in what ⁠President Volodymyr Zelenskiy described as Moscow's "obvious spurning" of peace.

Zelenskiy had floated the cessation, starting on May 6, in response to Russian leader ‌Vladimir Putin's own proposed ceasefire from May 8 to 9 to coincide with its World War Two victory commemorations.

In a statement, Zelenskiy said Russia - which did not confirm its adherence to Ukraine's proposal - had committed 1,820 violations by late morning on Wednesday.

"Russia's choice is an obvious spurning of a ceasefire and of saving lives," he said.

Speaking later in his nightly video address, Zelenskiy said Russia "has ​responded to the proposal only with new strikes and new attacks" and Ukraine would determine "our entirely ⁠justified responses".

He said Ukraine was ready to work for peace ⁠but that "if the one person in Moscow who cannot live without war is interested only in a parade and nothing else, that is another matter".

"Russia ⁠has ‌fought to the point where even their main parade now depends on us."

Russia, citing an increased threat of Ukrainian attacks, says it will hold a slimmed-down version of its annual Victory Day parade in Moscow this week without military hardware.

In Moscow, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Russia had warned ⁠diplomatic missions to evacuate staff promptly from Kyiv in the event of a mass strike ​by Moscow in response to any attempt by ‌Ukraine to disrupt Victory Day commemorations.

Zakharova, in a video posted on Telegram, said her ministry "strongly urges the authorities of your country ... to treat ⁠this statement with the utmost ​responsibility".

On Monday, Russia's defence ministry had warned that it would respond to Ukrainian attacks during victory celebrations with a "massive missile attack" on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Monday that a Ukrainian drone had struck a building in Russia's capital overnight, but had caused no casualties.

TWO KILLED IN DRONE STRIKES

Officials in the northeastern region of Sumy said ⁠four people had been killed, including two female workers at a kindergarten hit by ​a drone, though children were not present.

Another person was killed when a house was struck by a drone and a man was killed by a mine thought to have been dropped by Russian forces.

In major cities such as Kharkiv, Kryvyi Rih and Zaporizhzhia - where an attack on Tuesday killed 12 people - private buildings, infrastructure and ⁠industrial sites were damaged in air attacks after midnight, officials said.

"This shows that Russia rejects peace and its fake calls for a ceasefire on May 9th have nothing to do with diplomacy," said Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha on X.

"Putin only cares about military parades, not human lives."

The rival overtures come amid stalled U.S.-backed peace talks to end the more than four-year war, and as Russia presses an offensive to capture the rest of Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region.

In his remarks, Zelenskiy ​also said, citing Ukrainian intelligence, that Russia was concentrating its air defences around Moscow, a fact which "creates additional ⁠opportunities" for long-range attacks by Ukraine elsewhere.

Kyiv's forces have stepped up attacks in recent months on military-industrial and energy sites across Russia, particularly oil infrastructure, in a bid ​to weaken the Kremlin's war machine.

Some Ukrainians said any unilateral efforts by their military to maintain ‌a ceasefire with Russia would likely prove fruitless while cities and frontline troops ​remain under attack.

"Maybe we should act the same way Russia does. That is, not to stay silent, not to observe the truce," said 52-year-old Nataliia Fomenko in Kyiv. "We have no other choice."

(Additional reporting by Yurii Kovalenko; Editing by Alison Williams, Ron Popeski, Alistair Bell and Stephen Coates)

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