108,000 doses of MMR vaccine were delivered to Ukraine by UNICEF with the support of Japan and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to provide free vaccination of children against measles, mumps and rubella.
Self-service complexes at all Kyiv subway stations have resumed operation after a temporary shutdown due to technical problems.
A 17-year-old boy died after a part of the wall of an abandoned building in the Ternopil region collapsed on him.
Due to technical problems, self-service complexes at Kyiv subway stations are temporarily out of service, but passengers can pay for their fare with a transport card, a qr code generated in the Kyiv Digital app, a contactless bank card, or using the ApplePay and Google Pay mobile apps.
A power unit at Khmelnytsky NPP reached its maximum capacity after an early refurbishment, which was extremely important given the ongoing attacks on Ukraine's power grid.
Four people kidnapped a man, beat him and demanded $10,000, locking him in a garage in Kyiv region, but the victim managed to escape and report the incident to law enforcement, which resulted in the suspects being charged and facing 7 to 12 years in prison with confiscation of property.
A 79-year-old resident of Tokarivka village, Kherson region, died as a result of Russian shelling.
The SBU has served a notice of suspicion to Sergei Bogatikov, CEO of the Russian design bureau Raduga, which produces cruise missiles used by Russia to strike civilian infrastructure in Ukraine, including the April 2023 attack on a residential building in Uman that killed 23 people.
Kuleba emphasized Ukraine's tangible results in restoring justice: the launch of the Register of Damages for Compensation, the creation of the International Center for the Prosecution of the Crime of Aggression against Ukraine, the receipt of ICC arrest warrants, including for Putin, and the first decisions to use frozen Russian assets in the interests of Ukraine.
The leader of the CDU/CSU faction in the Bundestag says there is a possibility that Ukraine will be supplied with Taurus long-range missiles, and the German Foreign Minister warns against public discussions on the topic.
Officials of the State Service of Ukraine for Food Safety and Consumer Protection organized a corruption scheme that extorted millions of hryvnias from agricultural exporters every month for issuing export documents.
Since the beginning of the year, coal production at state-owned mines has increased by more than 24%, exceeding pre-war levels, despite Russian shelling and staff shortages.
Germany will provide Ukraine with 180,000 artillery shells worth €576 million as part of the Czech ammunition initiative.
In Kherson, the SBU detained Russian informants who were preparing missile attacks on Ukrainian forces.
Representatives from 57 countries will discuss "Restoring Justice for Ukraine" at a conference in The Hague today with the aim of ending impunity and providing compensation to victims of Russia's crimes.
Last week, the Russian army conducted more than 3,000 strikes in Zaporizhzhia region, mostly on critical infrastructure.
In the morning, the damage limited the power supply to all consumers in Kharkiv region, while restrictions on industry continued in Kryvyi Rih. No electricity exports are planned.
Estonia plans to purchase 18 French 155-mm Caesar self-propelled artillery pieces and build a new ship for its fleet at an estimated cost of 30-40 million euros.
An organized group headed by Artem Shilo, a former advisor to the Presidential Office and SBU officer, embezzled almost UAH 95 million by inflating prices for the purchase of transformers during martial law.
Russian troops shelled 10 settlements in Donetsk region, damaging 25 civilian objects, including residential buildings, an administrative building, a cultural center, an educational institution, and power lines.
Polish protesters have resumed blocking traffic for trucks at the Uhryniv-Dolhobyczów checkpoint on the Polish-Ukrainian border, potentially hampering traffic in both directions.
At night, two explosions occurred in occupied Sevastopol, causing a blackout in part of the city.
A large-scale fire raged in the Dnipro River floodplain in Zaporizhzhia, damaging 9. 2 hectares of the environment. Rescuers used motorboats and a snowmobile to reach the fire and extinguish the flames.
A 17-year-old boy who had lived under Russian occupation for two years and feared being forced to serve in the military against Ukraine returned from the temporarily occupied territories to his family's home in a safe place.
The enemy continues to systematically produce drones and will intensify UAV attacks on Ukraine, although drone strikes have been less massive recently due to the need to reorient and redistribute resources.
the Kremlin hired professional Russian actors to film a propaganda video about mobilization in Ukraine to undermine public confidence and mobilization efforts in the country.
Three drones attacked a factory in Yelabuga, Tatarstan, damaging buildings in the Alabuga special economic zone.
Russian troops fired mortars, artillery, and S-300 missile systems at about 15 settlements in Kharkiv region, damaging buildings and injuring two civilians in Vovchansk and Kupiansk.
A Russian court refuses to release Crimean political prisoner Amet Suleymanov, who needs urgent heart surgery and is being denied adequate medical care in violation of the Geneva Convention.
An explosion is reported in Kryvyi Rih after the Ukrainian Air Force warns of a missile fired in the direction of the city.