Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of breaking proposed ceasefires ahead of Victory Day parade in Moscow – Europe live | World news


Morning opening: Ceasefire that wasn’t

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Russia and Ukraine are trading accusations of breaking their two very different versions of proposed ceasefire this morning as we get closer to the Victory Day parade in Moscow, with the Kremlin reportedly worrying about a potential Ukrainian strike.

A man in military uniform checks his mobile phone in Moscow, Russia.
A man in military uniform checks his mobile phone in Moscow, Russia. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Ukraine suggested an indefinite ceasefire earlier this week, which was repeatedly violated by Russia. After another round of attacks over night, president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said:

All of this clearly shows that, on the Russian side, there was not even a token attempt to cease fire on the front. As we did over the past 24 hours, Ukraine will respond in kind today as well. We will defend our positions and people’s lives.”

Russia, which wanted a shorter artificial ceasefire to protect the parade to which Kyiv never agreed, said it would be responding to any Ukrainian attacks “symmetrically.”

As my colleague Pjotr Sauer noted earlier this week, Victory Day has been central to Vladimir Putin’s vision of Russian identity throughout his more than 25 years in power. Since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has intensified its use of the annual celebration, with Putin deploying the occasion to frame and justify the current war.

Let’s see how the next few hours shape up as we get closer to the celebration. I will also bring you more on the (very short) guest list for the event.

Elsewhere, we will follow US secretary of state Marco Rubio’s meeting with Italy’s prime minister Giorgia Meloni, track the preparations for Péter Magyar’s inauguration in Hungary tomorrow, and see how are things on board of the hantavirus-hit cruise.

It’s Friday, 8 May 2026, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

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Key events

Rumen Radev confirmed as Bulgaria’s new prime minister

Meanwhile, former president Rumen Radev has just been confirmed as Bulgaria’s new prime minister.

During today’s vote in the Bulgarian parliament, all 124 MPs from his party voted in favour, while 70 MPs were against, and 36 abstained.

Bulgaria’s new prime minister and former president Rumen Radev (C) shakes hands with a member of his newly elected cabinet during the swearing-in of the new government in at the Bulgarian Parliament building in Sofia, Bulgaria. Photograph: Dimitar Kyosemarliev/AFP/Getty Images

In last month’s elections – Bulgaria’s eighth since 2021 – Radev’s Progressive Bulgaria won a majority of seats in the parliament, the first such case from 1997.

The former president rode a wave of voter anger at entrenched corruption and the veteran parties that have allowed it.

But there are some questions ofer the new prime minister’s stance on Russia. Radev, 62, who stepped down from the largely ceremonial role of president in January to campaign on an anti-graft ticket, has criticised a recent defence agreement signed between Bulgaria and Ukraine and opposed Sofia sending arms to Kyiv.

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AFP noted that Kyiv said Moscow ignored a Ukrainian call to halt fighting earlier this week that Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy cast as a test of whether the Kremlin was serious about providing a brief respite in the four-year war.

Russia has threatened a massive strike on the heart of Kyiv if Ukraine disrupts the Victory Day parade on Saturday, repeatedly urging foreign diplomats to evacuate the Ukrainian capital ahead of time.

Passersby walk against the backdrop of billboards commemorating Victory Day in Moscow, Russia. Photograph: Getty Images
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Morning opening: Ceasefire that wasn’t

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Russia and Ukraine are trading accusations of breaking their two very different versions of proposed ceasefire this morning as we get closer to the Victory Day parade in Moscow, with the Kremlin reportedly worrying about a potential Ukrainian strike.

A man in military uniform checks his mobile phone in Moscow, Russia. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Ukraine suggested an indefinite ceasefire earlier this week, which was repeatedly violated by Russia. After another round of attacks over night, president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said:

All of this clearly shows that, on the Russian side, there was not even a token attempt to cease fire on the front. As we did over the past 24 hours, Ukraine will respond in kind today as well. We will defend our positions and people’s lives.”

Russia, which wanted a shorter artificial ceasefire to protect the parade to which Kyiv never agreed, said it would be responding to any Ukrainian attacks “symmetrically.”

As my colleague Pjotr Sauer noted earlier this week, Victory Day has been central to Vladimir Putin’s vision of Russian identity throughout his more than 25 years in power. Since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has intensified its use of the annual celebration, with Putin deploying the occasion to frame and justify the current war.

Let’s see how the next few hours shape up as we get closer to the celebration. I will also bring you more on the (very short) guest list for the event.

Elsewhere, we will follow US secretary of state Marco Rubio’s meeting with Italy’s prime minister Giorgia Meloni, track the preparations for Péter Magyar’s inauguration in Hungary tomorrow, and see how are things on board of the hantavirus-hit cruise.

It’s Friday, 8 May 2026, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

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