Some electronic payments systems in Ukraine disrupted


A screen shows the temporarily inoperable Diya application, which provides Ukrainian citizens with online access to state services, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine April 26, 2025. REUTERS/Alina Smutko

KYIV (Reuters) -Electronic payments systems in post offices, restaurants and the metro system were out of action in Ukraine early on Saturday, according to officials and Reuters witnesses.

Ukraine has in the past said it was the target of cyberattacks by Russia, but there was no immediate indication of any hostile action behind the disruptions on Saturday.

The Kyiv city authorities said outages with the payment system in the capital's metro transport system was the result of a technical fault with a bank that operates the system.

In a McDonald's restaurant in the centre of Kyiv, staff told customers electronic payment terminals were not working and they could only accept cash.

Oleksandr Fediyenko, a member of the Ukrainian parliament's National Security Committee, posted a video of himself in a post office being told their system was down nationwide.

"It's not a cyberattack, it's a technical issue," he wrote on his Telegram account.

Reuters reporters said some commercial banking apps were not working, and that the Diya application, which provides citizens with online access to state services, was also out of action.

(Reporting by Christian Lowe; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Spotify to let users buy physical books on app through Bookshop.org partnership
Thomson Reuters reports higher fourth-quarter revenue
Starlink fuels SpaceX growth with potential phone, more internet services
Apple Ads and Apple Maps should not be designated under Digital Markets Act, says EU
Coupang confirms personal data of 165,000 more South Korean users leaked
Bitcoin dip brings key $70,000 level into view
Britain to work with Microsoft to build deepfake detection system
Australia blasts Big Tech for child sexual abuse failings
Anthropic's AI push raises analyst concerns over Indian IT services revenues
Taiwan's Foxconn forecasts strong first-quarter performance

Others Also Read