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Russian drone strikes killed five people and wounded 19 in Ukraine after forces targeted a street market in the Dnipropetrovsk region.
Firefighters worked to extinguish a blaze caused by the attack, which damaged market stalls and a shop in the city of Nikopol on Saturday.
Another attack, in the city of Sumy, targeted houses, cars, and utility networks, and wounded 11 people, the National Police said.
It comes after Volodymyr Zelensky accused Russia of an “Easter escalation”, with Russian forces firing 286 drones at Ukraine overnight.
Ukrainian air defence forces destroyed or jammed 260 drones in the country's north, south, east and centre, with hits recorded in 10 locations.
The Ukrainian president had proposed a halt in strikes for Easter, telling Russia it would reciprocate if it stopped attacks on the energy sector.
In a post on social media, Zelensky said: “Not a single hour of peace for our people, and this is Russia’s response to our proposal for an Easter ceasefire. Essentially, the Russians have only intensified their strikes, turning what should have been silence in the skies into an Easter escalation.”
Ukraine drone strikes set Russia's fourth-largest oil refinery on fire and hit Primorsk fuel reservoir
Ukraine's drone campaign against Russian energy infrastructure struck Russia's NORSI oil refinery on Sunday, setting it ablaze, while a fuel reservoir leaked at the Baltic Sea port of Primorsk after being hit by shrapnel, Russian authorities said.
The governor of Nizhny Novgorod region, Gleb Nikitin, said two facilities at NORSI were hit in the attack, with a power station and several nearby houses also damaged. No injuries were reported. NORSI is Russia's fourth-largest oil refinery and its second-largest producer of gasoline, with a processing capacity of around 320,000 barrels per day.
At Primorsk, the governor of Leningrad region Alexander Drozdenko corrected an earlier statement, clarifying the port's pipeline had not been damaged but that a fuel reservoir had leaked after being struck by shrapnel. Primorsk, one of Russia's largest oil export gateways with a capacity of one million barrels per day, has already lost at least 40 per cent of its storage facilities in Ukrainian drone attacks last month, according to US commercial satellite images seen by Reuters. At some point last month, around 40 per cent of Russia's total oil exporting capacity was shut due to a combination of the attacks, the closure of the Druzhba pipeline in Ukraine and the seizure of Russia-linked tankers.
Air raid alerts were also declared in Novorossiysk, Russia's largest Black Sea port, due to incoming drone threats. Oil loadings there, including from the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal which handles Kazakh oil exports, are typically suspended during such alerts.
Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russian energy infrastructure over the past month in an effort to cut into Russia's key source of war revenue.
Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 12:15
Egypt will no longer accept Ukrainian grain exported by Russia, Zelenskyy says
Egypt will refuse to buy grain that Russia has exported from occupied Ukrainian territories, president Volodymyr Zelensky announced on Friday following a call with Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
"Egypt will no longer accept grain exported by Russia from our temporarily occupied territories," Zelensky wrote on Telegram, adding that Cairo had expressed interest in increasing direct grain imports from Ukraine.
The move marks a significant shift in Egyptian policy. Egypt is the world's largest wheat importer and purchased more than 8 million tons of Russian grain in 2025, according to Russia's ambassador to Egypt. Zelensky said the two leaders also discussed the Iran war and its impact on global oil markets, and that Kyiv had offered Cairo military-technical cooperation.
Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 11:15
European ministers call for profit caps on energy companies as Iran war drives price surge
The finance ministers of Spain and four other European countries are urging the European Union to impose a bloc-wide windfall tax on energy companies, concerned that surging oil and gas prices driven by the war in Iran will fuel inflation and strain households.
Spanish Economy Minister Carlos Cuerpo said Saturday that his counterparts from Germany, Italy, Portugal and Austria had signed a letter to the European Commission citing “market distortions” caused by the price spike.
“The conflict in the Middle East has caused oil prices to rise, placing a significant burden on the European economy and on European citizens,” the letter, dated Friday and made public by Cuerpo in an online post, said.
“It is important to ensure that this burden is distributed fairly,” it added.
Read here:
Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 10:15
Russia suffers record losses in March, Zelensky claims
Nearly 34,000 Russian soldiers have been killed or seriously wounded in March, the highest level since the start of the war, according to Volodymyr Zelensky.
Another 1,363 Russians were “eliminated” in artillery and other strikes over the month, bringing Russian losses to more than 35,000 in March.
“Importantly, the results in the destruction of Russia’s air defence systems have also significantly increased, with 274 such systems hit in March alone,” Ukraine’s leader wrote on social media.
“There have also been tangible results in the destruction of Russian depots and military logistics. The Ministry of Defence, together with the Armed Forces, will present a detailed report to the public for March – data that may be made public.”
Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 09:15
Witkoff and Kushner could visit Kyiv in April as Ukraine peace talks stall over Iran war
US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner could travel to Kyiv later this month, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky's top aide Kyrylo Budanov said on Saturday, as Washington attempts to revive peace talks that stalled after the outbreak of the US-Iran war.
"Kushner, Witkoff, Lindsey Graham — those are the ones expected to come," Budanov told Bloomberg, adding the visit could take place shortly after Orthodox Easter on 12 April.
It would be the first official visit to Kyiv for both men, who have previously met Ukrainian representatives in the US but have travelled to Moscow for talks with Russia.
Peace negotiations brokered by Washington between Ukraine and Russia stalled after the US and Israel bombed Iran in late February, triggering retaliatory strikes across the Middle East.
Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 08:15
Slovak PM calls on EU to lift Russian oil and gas sanctions to tackle Iran war energy crisis
Slovak prime minister Robert Fico has called on the European Union to end sanctions on Russian oil and gas imports and restore flows through the Druzhba pipeline, arguing the bloc needs to draw on all available energy sources to address the supply crisis triggered by the US-Iran war.
Fico made the call in a statement after a call with Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán on Saturday, saying the EU should renew dialogue with Russia and ensure member states could access gas and oil from all sources, including Russian ones. "It is not enough to deal with the energy crisis only at the national level," he said.
Hungary and Slovakia are outliers in the EU for maintaining relations with Moscow, and were the only two member states still importing Russian oil when a Russian drone strike hit pipeline equipment in Ukraine in January, disrupting Druzhba flows. Budapest and Bratislava have accused Ukraine of deliberately delaying repairs to resume the pipeline, triggering a political dispute that has seen Hungary block an EU loan to Kyiv. Ukraine says it is fixing the damage as quickly as possible.
Oil prices have surged since US and Israeli strikes on Iran began on 28 February, creating what the International Energy Agency called the biggest oil supply disruption in history. The EU had cut Russian oil imports to just one per cent of its total supply by the final quarter of 2025 following Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 07:15
Oil pipeline at Russia's Primorsk port damaged in Ukrainian drone attack
A Ukrainian drone strike has damaged an oil pipeline at Russia's Baltic Sea port of Primorsk, local governor Alexander Drozdenko said on Sunday.
No injuries were reported.
The pipeline was shut down and a fire was safely burning out, Drozdenko said on Telegram. Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russia's Baltic Sea ports over the past month.
Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 06:12
Ukraine deploys firefighting robot to extinguish blaze
Ukrainian soldiers deployed a firefighting robot to extinguish a blaze in the Kramatorsk region following a Russian strike on a house.
After discovering that gas canisters were stored at the scene of the fire, the fire brigade decided to use the robot to prevent putting soldiers at further risk.
“With its help, the fire was extinguished and prevented from spreading to neighbouring homes,” the brigade said.
“Ukrainian [ground robots] prove their uniqueness and effectiveness not only on the battlefield, but also in civilian life.”
The “Zmiy Firefighting” ground robotic systems are created by Ukrainian defence tech company RoverTech and are designed to operate in high-risk environments.
The system can be remotely controlled at distances of up to 3,000 meters, according to the company.

Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 04:00
Seven injured in Russian drone strike on Sumy as Zelensky warns of ‘Easter escalation’
Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 03:00
Russia warns citizens against travelling to dozens of countries
Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 02:00


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