Russian strikes on Ukraine kill eight as Kyiv holds door open for Easter truce
Russian strikes killed at least eight people across Ukraine on Friday including in a “massive” missile and drone attack near the capital, local authorities reported.
Ukrainian officials claim the Kremlin is changing its tactics to increase civilian suffering, shifting to daytime barrages and preparing to target more key infrastructure.
President Volodymyr Zelensky has signalled Kyiv’s openness to a potential Easter truce.
The holiday is celebrated on April 12 in Ukraine and Russia.
Mr Zelensky also said that Ukraine is preparing for a shift in Russian aerial tactics, with intelligence indicating that future attacks will move beyond energy infrastructure.
Russia’s Defence Ministry said 192 Ukrainian drones were shot down overnight across Russia and occupied Crimea.
“The Kyiv region is once again under a massive Russian missile and drone attack,” said Mykola Kalashnyk, head of the regional military administration, in a Telegram post on Friday.
Mr Kalashnyk said one person died and at least eight others were wounded in strikes on three of Kyiv’s satellite towns — Bucha, Fastiv and Obukhiv.
Earlier in the week, residents of Bucha marked the fourth anniversary of atrocities committed in the town by Russia’s invading forces.
Obukhiv resident Lesia Podoriako, 37, told The Associated Press she was at work with her child when she learned her building had been struck.
She said: “I found out about it through Telegram channels. Then all my friends and acquaintances started calling me, telling me that our building was attacked. I have no words.
“The main thing is that everyone is alive and healthy.”
Another person was killed in Ukraine’s northern Sumy region after a Russian guided aerial bomb struck an apartment block, local governor Oleh Hryhorov reported.
Authorities in the Kherson, Zhytomyr, Kharkiv and Donetsk regions also reported casualties from Friday’s attacks.
Ukrainian officials highlighted what they said were increased daytime attacks by Russia, which they said could lead to more civilian deaths.
For months, Moscow pummelled Ukraine with night-time missile and drone strikes that could involve hundreds of drones at a time.
Ukraine’s foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, said in a post on X that “almost half a thousand drones and cruise missiles” attacked Ukraine overnight.
“This is how Moscow responds to Ukraine’s Easter ceasefire proposals — with brutal attacks,” Mr Sybiha said.
Mr Zelensky on Thursday signalled Kyiv’s continued openness to a potential truce on Easter, which falls next week according to the Julian calendar followed by Orthodox churches in Ukraine and Russia.
He told reporters that the proposal had been communicated to Moscow through US channels, adding that the Kremlin’s response remains unclear.
Mr Zelensky has previously offered a ceasefire for the Easter period — but Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said earlier this week that Moscow wants a lasting peace settlement, not a temporary truce.
Russian President Vladimir Putin unilaterally declared a 30-hour ceasefire last Easter, but each side accused the other of breaking it.
Meanwhile, Ukrainian officials said Russia was increasingly striking the country during the day, an apparent departure from months of night-time barrages.
Andrii Kovalenko, head of the Centre for Countering Disinformation within Ukraine’s defence ministry, said that the daytime strikes aimed to “increase civilian casualties”.
“That is why the combined attack is carried out on a working day, using a large number of drones and missiles,” Mr Kovalenko wrote on Friday in a Telegram post.
Mr Zelensky told reporters on Thursday that Ukraine is preparing for Russian aerial attacks that could target water systems, logistics and other critical networks.
After months of sustained strikes on power facilities, Kyiv now expects increased pressure elsewhere.
“According to intelligence documents we have received, the Russians will target logistics – railways and other infrastructure. They will also target the water supply,” Mr Zelensky said at a press briefing.
Around midday on Friday, Russian forces dropped five aerial bombs on the city of Kramatorsk, in eastern Ukraine.
At least two people were killed and three were injured, according to a Telegram update by Vadym Filashkin, who heads the regional military administration.
Elsewhere in Ukraine on Friday, a Russian drone strike damaged a bus in the southern city of Kherson, leaving the driver seriously wounded and at least eight passengers hurt, according to regional officials.
Separately, authorities reported sustained attacks on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, beginning on Thursday and continuing into early Friday.
Drone strikes near the city centre caused several injuries.
Two people later died in hospital, local governor Oleh Syniehubov wrote in separate Telegram updates.
Bohdan Hladykh, head of Kharkiv’s Department of Emergency Situations, said Russia struck the city at least 20 times during the day on Thursday with explosive drones.
Meanwhile, Mr Zelensky told reporters that the battlefield situation has stabilised, with recent intelligence assessments pointing to the most favourable conditions for Kyiv in months.
While fighting remains intense across eastern sectors, Ukrainian forces have disrupted Russian offensives in recent weeks and regained limited ground.
“On Wednesday I received a report from our intelligence and an analysis from British intelligence. I received MI6’s assessment of the situation at the front: right now, it is the best situation for Ukraine in the past 10 months,” the Ukrainian leader said at a press briefing on Thursday.
Mr Zelensky added that Ukraine has invited US negotiators to visit Kyiv, as part of ongoing discussions on security guarantees and a broader framework for ending the war.
Recent talks have involved senior American officials as well as Nato secretary general Mark Rutte, with Ukraine seeking clearer commitments on long-term defence support and responses to any future Russian aggression.
Two people were hospitalised on Friday following a Ukrainian drone strike on Russia’s Leningrad region, over 1,100 kilometres (684 miles) from the border, said regional governor Alexander Drozdenko reported, who added that the drones also set fire to an “unoccupied” building within the Morozov industrial zone.
The settlement of Morozov houses a state-owned plant that makes explosives and components for ammunition, including solid fuel used in Topol-M missile systems.
The plant was put under US, EU and other Western sanctions following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Twelve people, including at least three Russian soldiers, were injured in a Ukrainian drone strike late on Thursday on Russia’s Belgorod region, which borders Ukraine, local governor Vyacheslav Gladkov reported.
Four drones were downed during the night on the approach to Moscow, mayor Sergei Sobyanin reported on Friday.
He did not reference any casualties or damage.





