Ukraine and Russia Trade Aerial Attacks Ahead of Parade, Putin's Truce Order
People walk past a giant banner of the 'Raising a Flag over the Reichstag', depicting a Red Army soldier erecting the Red Banner of the USSR atop the Reichstag building in Berlin, made with 4500 portraits of World War II veterans with a message reading "No one is forgotten, nothing is forgotten" on Dvortsovaya Square in Saint Petersburg on May 2, 2025, ahead of the 80th anniversary of Victory Day on May 9, marking the Soviet Union's victory over Nazi Germany in World War II. ©Olga MALTSEVA / AFP

Russia and Ukraine traded a barrage of drone strikes overnight on Wednesday, in attacks that killed two in Kyiv and forced Moscow to shut major airports hours before a swathe of foreign leaders was to arrive.

The Kremlin has announced a unilateral three-day truce -- set to start at 2100 GMT on Wednesday -- to coincide with its grand May 9 military parade on Red Square, marking 80 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany.

China's President Xi Jinping and Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva are among 29 foreign leaders expected in Moscow to mark the occasion, which has become Russia's most important public holiday under President Vladimir Putin.

Kyiv has dismissed Putin's order to his troops to halt their attacks as a "manipulation" and "game" designed to protect his parade rather than a genuine peace measure.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is calling for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire -- a proposal back by US President Donald Trump and previously rejected by Putin.

Hours before Putin's order was set to come into effect, Moscow unleashed a barrage of drone attacks across Ukraine.

"Two residents of the capital died as a result of the hostile attack," Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on social media.

The emergency services said falling debris from a drone attack on the central Shevchenkivsky district sparked a fire in an apartment block.

AFP journalists in the capital heard loud explosions over the city at around 1:00 am (2200 GMT).

In the morning, a first aid tent had been erected next to the charred facade of the building, blackened by the fire and with windows blown out on its top floors.

Men in camouflage were inspecting debris from a fallen drone part.

Moscow airports closed 

Attempted drone attacks by Ukraine across Russia triggered hours of travel chaos, as airports across the western part of the country were repeatedly closed on Tuesday and the early hours of Wednesday.

Arrivals and departures from Moscow's main Sheremetyevo international airport were suspended for hours overnight, aviation authorities said.

"The restrictions were imposed to ensure the safety of civil aircraft flights," Artyom Korenyako, press secretary for the Federal Aviation Transport Agency, wrote on Telegram.

Moscow regularly halts air traffic in areas where its air defence systems are operating, but the scale of the forced closures has escalated significantly in the run-up to the May 9 parade.

Russia's defence ministry reported downing dozens of Ukrainian drones targeting the country, including Moscow, on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Since Russia invaded in February 2022, Ukraine has on several occasions launched attacks at the Russian capital and other major cities and infrastructure sites hundreds of miles from its border.

Kyiv calls it fair retaliation for Moscow's daily missile and drone barrages on its own cities.

Tens of thousands have been killed since Russia invaded, with towns and cities across Ukraine's south and east levelled under intense Russian aerial attacks.

Moscow's army controls around 20 percent of the country, including the Crimean peninsula it annexed in 2014.

A wave of deadly Russian ballistic missile strikes on civilian areas in April triggered fresh outrage in Kyiv and saw Trump issue a rare rebuke to Putin.

Ukraine has said it cannot be held responsible for the safety of foreign leaders visiting Moscow for the parade, in an apparent rejection of Putin's truce proposal.

With AFP

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