In the Volyn region, three men aged 27, 35, and 38 died as a result of the detonation of a World War II-era shell.
According to the UN report, Ukrainian prisoners of war were subjected to months of torture in Russian captivity, including beatings and broken bones. All this was done with blatant disregard for human dignity and caused long-term physical and mental trauma
The Russian military leadership is allowing soldiers to vote for Putin in sham elections without physical presence or documents. The "voters" are planned to include those who have recently been killed, disappeared or captured.
A Russian military intelligence agent was detained in Zaporizhzhia, spying on the location and movement of Ukrainian warships near the port of Odesa.
A Finnish court dismissed complaints about the closure of the border with Russia, ruling that the border decisions did not directly affect the applicants.
In the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine, the Russian occupiers are planning terrorist attacks and provocations with civilian casualties at polling stations during the so-called "presidential elections" on March 15-17.
New rules for Ukrainian refugees in Ireland came into effect, according to which new arrivals are accommodated in public housing for only 90 days and receive reduced benefits, and the government has identified the first five reception centers to accommodate them.
The Moldovan government says that Russia is violating the law by printing ballots in the Transnistrian region ahead of its presidential "elections.
Ukrainian guerrillas discovered an enemy warehouse in occupied Sevastopol, where missiles and weapons used to strike at peaceful cities of Ukraine are stored.
Russians are changing the ethnic composition of the occupied territories by bringing in "guest workers" from all over Russia and announcing the appointment of members of the "svo" to senior positions.
According to the Federation of American Scientists, Russia has the world's largest stockpile of nuclear warheads - about 5,580, including 1,710 strategically deployed.
The EU insists on strengthening measures to return Ukrainian children forcibly deported to Russia or resettled in Belarus.
Denmark plans to expand conscription to include women and to extend the period of military service from approximately 4 months to 11 months, with the aim of increasing the annual number of recruits to 5,000.
Ukraine got rid of its dependence on Russian technology and nuclear fuel, replacing it with fuel from the American company Westinghouse.
The EU leaders will demand new sanctions against Belarus, North Korea and Iran for helping Russia wage war against Ukraine, further restrictions on Russia's access to military components, and condemn Israel's decision to allow the construction of new settlements in the West Bank.
A drunken man set fire to a house in Berezan, Kyiv region, killing a 42-year-old woman, and the perpetrator was served a notice of suspicion.
Due to the shelling, some consumers in Sumy and Kryvyi Rih were partially left without heat and gas supply, but there is no shortage of electricity.
European companies continue to supply equipment for the Arctic LNG 2 project, one of the largest shareholders of which is billionaire Gennady Timchenko, a close friend of Vladimir Putin.
Russians fired 18 times at the border areas and settlements of Sumy region, causing 64 explosions, damaging 30 apartments in a residential building, and injuring people.
The Ministry of Culture and Information Policy states that there are no legal obstacles to the restoration of St. Nicholas Church in Kyiv.
Two men from Ternopil and Ivano-Frankivsk regions were rescued by border guards in Zakarpattia after they got lost while trying to illegally cross the border with Romania through the mountains.
The head of the IAEA said that the ban on Ukrainian personnel access to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant seized by Russia does not pose a direct security threat.
Russia has banned 347 high-ranking officials from Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, including prime ministers and foreign ministers, from entering the country because of their "hostile policy" of lobbying for sanctions, interfering in Russia's internal affairs and demolishing Soviet monuments.
Three people were killed in a collision between a car and a bus near the village of Tyaziv in Ivano-Frankivsk region.
The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned Swiss Ambassador Christina Marti Lang and protested to her over the decision of the Swiss parliament on the mechanism of confiscation of Russian assets.
A Russian citizen, identified as a former Wagner mercenary, was denied entry to Moldova and returned to the country of origin.
The Security Service blocked new schemes to evade mobilization and illegally travel abroad by men of military age, detaining three officials of medical institutions, a lawyer and others involved in the sale of forged documents and certificates. The cost of forgery was up to USD 16 thousand.
The EU finance ministers unanimously supported the candidacy of Kristalina Georgieva for a second five-year term as head of the International Monetary Fund.
The Security Service of Ukraine detained an agent of the Russian Federal Security Service, a current Ukrainian serviceman, who tried to fatally poison commanders of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in Zaporizhzhia region by adding a poisonous substance to the water supply.
A record is set in Ukraine for the largest mass reading of Taras Shevchenko's poem Kateryna with 210 participants from 22 countries, organized by the Ministry of Culture and Information Policy.