Trump administration reverses efforts to hold Russia accountable for Ukraine war crimes
The Trump administration has been actively dismantling a series of measures designed to hold Russia and its allies responsible for alleged war crimes committed during the invasion of Ukraine.
One of the most significant steps taken by the administration was its decision to pull out of an international task force led by the European Union, established to respond to Russia’s breaches of international law, reported the Washington Post.
This group had been formed to coordinate accountability for crimes linked to Moscow’s military actions in Ukraine.
In addition to the withdrawal, the White House has scaled back the role of the US Justice Department’s War Crimes Accountability Team. The team, which had focused on investigating and building cases against individuals involved in war crimes, has seen its operations significantly reduced.

Further, the administration has dismantled a programme that was designed to seize the assets of Russian oligarchs who were sanctioned in response to the war.
This initiative had aimed to target the financial networks of individuals close to the Kremlin.Congressman Jason Crow criticised the administration’s actions, stressing the importance of a robust approach to accountability.
“The atrocities coordinator position is … tasked with holding Putin responsible for the crimes he’s committed against the Ukrainian people,” Mr Crow told The Post.
“This position was created by Congress on a bipartisan basis, and the administration must empower whoever serves in this position to carry out their duties as required by law.”
The dismantling of these mechanisms has raised concern among lawmakers and human rights advocates who view the moves as undermining international efforts to seek justice for victims of the conflict in Ukraine.
Namita Singh23 April 2025 07:34
Russian drone kills 9 in Marhanets
A Russian drone hit a bus carrying workers in the Ukrainian city of Marhanets early on Wednesday, killing nine people in a wave of attacks that targeted civilian infrastructure in east, south and central Ukraine, officials said.
The full scale of the attacks, which kept Kyiv and the eastern half of Ukraine awake for several hours overnight, was not immediately known.
Serhiy Lysak, governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region, which includes Marhanets, in central-southern Ukraine, said nine people were killed in the attack, with at least 30 injured.

The strikes came as both Russia’s president Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky have signalled that they would be willing to negotiate a pact that would ban striking civilian infrastructure.
If bilateral talks occur, it would be the first time the two sides had held direct negotiations since the early days of the war, which Russia began with a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Namita Singh23 April 2025 07:30
London peace talks suddenly downgraded after Trump’s envoy drops out
David Lammy will no longer host a crucial peace summit in London today after the US secretary of state Marco Rubio pulled out, it has been reported, while their counterparts from France, Germany and Ukraine are now also not expected to attend.
The downgraded meeting will now take place among senior officials of the five nations, while David Lammy will hold bilateral talks instead.
Mr Rubio said he had told Mr Lammy he was dropping out of the meeting late on Tuesday and offered to travel to the UK at a later date instead.

The breakdown of the ministerial summit came after Volodymyr Zelensky sharply pushed back against a US proposal for a peace deal that would see Ukraine effectively give up large swathes of its territory.
Namita Singh23 April 2025 06:58
Russian drone attack on Ukraine’s Marhanets kills 7 people, governor says
Russia’s drone attack on the city of Marhanets in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region killed seven people and injured six others, the regional governor said on social media this morning.
Namita Singh23 April 2025 06:37
Ukraine ceasefire offer still stands
Volodymyr Zelensky said in a Telegram post that his earlier offer of a ceasefire covering civilian sites still stands.
“Russia needs to be seriously prepared to talk about this,” Mr Zelensky said.
“There are no obstacles on the Ukrainian side, and there will be none.”

Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesperson, said there are no plans for talks on the proposal. He said Moscow is prepared to consider such a step, but noted that reaching an agreement could take time.
“While talking about civilian infrastructure, it’s necessary to clearly define when such facilities can be a military target and when they can’t,” he said.
“If a military meeting is held there, is it a civilian facility? It is. But is it a military target? Yes, it is. There are some nuances here that need to be discussed.”
Namita Singh23 April 2025 06:30
Russia kills three in strikes on Odesa, one in Zaporizhzhia
Odesa came under a “massive attack” by Russian drones overnight, wounding at least three people, the head of the regional administration Oleh Kiper wrote on his Telegram page.
A residential building in a densely populated urban area, civilian infrastructure and an educational facility were among the targets hit, he said.

Later on Tuesday, Russia hit the southern city of Zaporizhzhia with two aerial glide bombs – a retrofitted Soviet weapon that for months has been used to lay waste to eastern Ukraine.
The attack killed a 69-year-old woman and wounded 24 people, including four children, according to regional governor Ivan Fedorov.
Namita Singh23 April 2025 06:13
UK hosting latest round of peace talks with Ukraine’s allies
US and European allies will join their UK and Ukraine counterparts in London for the latest peace talks on the war-torn nation’s conflict with Russia.
Wednesday’s gathering comes as Donald Trump’s administration continues to drive efforts to find peace between Russia and Ukraine.
The US president has suggested he is hopeful the warring parties “will make a deal this week”.
But Kyiv could be forced to swallow a bitter pill under terms being ironed out between the US and Russia, according to the Financial Times.
Vladimir Putin has offered to halt his invasion of Ukraine across its current front lines, the newspaper reported.
What are the ideas floated by the US to end the war? Read here:
Namita Singh23 April 2025 05:45