Ukraine-Russia war latest: Putin agrees to Black Sea truce but Zelensky accuses him of ‘manipulation’

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But the Kremlin appeared to contradict this, saying the deal would only come into force after a series of conditions were met – including the lifting of restrictions and sanctions on a major agricultural bank, exporters of food and fertiliser and on Russian vessels.

In his nightly address, Mr Zelensky later said: “Unfortunately, even now, even today, on the very day of negotiations, we see how the Russians have already begun to manipulate.

“They are already trying to distort agreements and, in fact, deceive both our intermediaries and the entire world.”

Russia open to Black Sea ceasefire but lists conditions – including removing sanctions

Moscow is now open to the revival of the Black Sea shipping deal but warned that its interests must be protected, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has said.

"We want the grain and fertiliser market to be predictable, so that no one tries to 'ward us off' from it," Mr Lavrov told the Russian state Channel One television.

"Not only because we want... to make a legitimate profit in fair competition, but also because we are concerned about the food security situation in Africa and other countries of the Global South,” he said.

But the Kremlin warned that the Black Sea deal could only be implemented after sanctions against the Russian Agricultural Bank and other financial organisations involved in food and fertiliser trade are lifted and their access to the SWIFT system of international payments is ensured.

The deal brokered by the US, which the Trump administration says has been agreed to in principle by both sides of the war, emphasises that inspections of commercial ships would be necessary to ensure they aren't used for military purposes.

The White House, in an apparent reference to Moscow’s demands, said that the US “will help restore Russia’s access to the world market for agricultural and fertiliser exports, lower maritime insurance costs and enhance access to ports and payment systems for such transactions”.

Two man stand look at the damaged 19-story hotel in the port city of Odesa on the Black Sea in southern Ukraine

Two man stand look at the damaged 19-story hotel in the port city of Odesa on the Black Sea in southern Ukraine (AFP/Getty Images)

Arpan Rai26 March 2025 03:35

ICYMI: Fears Putin will abuse human rights laws against British peacekeepers in Ukraine

British troops sent to Ukraine as part of a planned peacekeeping force could face “lawfare” under human rights legislation, Tory MPs have warned.

They called on the defence secretary to create an exemption from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) for any soldiers sent to the region.

Our Whitehall editor Kate Devlin reports:

Andy Gregory26 March 2025 03:01

Trump says Russia wants to end Ukraine war but 'dragging their feet'

Donald Trump has said he thought Russia wanted to end its war against Ukraine but acknowledged that Moscow was not offering swift progress on that front.

"I think that Russia wants to see an end to it, but it could be they're dragging their feet. I've done it over the years," he said in an interview with Newsmax last night.

Separately, he told reporters that “we are making a lot of progress” in peace talks while adding that there was “tremendous animosity” in the talks.

"There's a lot of hatred, as you can probably tell, and it allows for people to get together, mediated, arbitrated, and see if we can get it stopped. And I think it will work,” Mr Trump said.

Donald Trump listens to a reporter's question during an Ambassador Meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House

Donald Trump listens to a reporter's question during an Ambassador Meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House (Getty Images)

Arpan Rai26 March 2025 02:57

Inside Story | What it’s really like to be on Putin’s kill list and hunted down by his murderous thugs

In an Independent Premium piece, James Jones writes:

When you imagine receiving the news that you’re on the kill list of one of the world’s cruellest dictators, you perhaps don’t imagine it while holding a glass of champagne. But, in January 2023, that’s exactly – or, almost exactly – what happened to Christo Grozev, an internationally renowned investigative journalist whom I had been filming for a documentary about his work for months, and who told me at a glitzy awards ceremony in New York that Vladimir Putin wanted him dead.

The Bulgarian-born journalist had long been rustling feathers at the Kremlin – his exceptional work for Bellingcat (a Netherlands-based investigative journalism group that Grozev headed up from 2015) exposed Putin’s killing network of spies and assassins.

Known as a “modern-day Sherlock”, he also unmasked the perpetrators involved in poisoning opposition leader Alexei Navalny and the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury, winning him global accolades. Still, neither of us quite expected that, while the rest of the room waited for their wine to be topped up, the grim reality of the situation would be revealed. He simply said, “I can’t go home.” The message said that intelligence had revealed there could be a “red team” waiting for him at home in Vienna, Austria. Now, the hunter had become the hunted.

By the time Grozev became one of Putin’s most wanted, I’d been following him around with a camera for more than a year. We were working on a documentary – Kill List: Hunted by Putin’s Spies – which started out as a story about Bellingcat.

They were unparalleled in their work using open source investigation to identify, track and expose assassins and spies working for the dictator across Europe. Over the three years we were filming, the doc went far beyond that brief. Rather than explaining the poison programme itself, the narrative changed. What we answered was what you risk when you speak out against the regime – the threats, the fear and the very human cost of putting yourself on the line to expose the truth.

We’d taken pretty extreme security measures from the very beginning ... I half convinced myself that we were being over the top; that no one really cared about what we were doing. You feel like you’re acting in a spy movie. And then police arrested part of a Bulgarian spy ring living in the UK. And then it all became real.

What it’s really like to be on Putin’s kill list

As the investigative journalist who exposed the perpetrators involved in the poisoning of Alexei Navalny and Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury, Christo Grozev won international plaudits. And then the Kremlin started to focus its sights on him, explains James Jones, whose new documentary exposes the full horror of what that feels like

Andy Gregory26 March 2025 02:00

Watch: Russia doesn't want to occupy Ukraine, US special envoy tells Tucker Carlson

Russia doesn't want to occupy Ukraine, US special envoy tells Tucker Carlson

Andy Gregory26 March 2025 01:00

US making a lot of progress, Trump claims

“We are making a lot of progress,” Donald Trump told reporters on Tuesday, as talks concluded in Saudi Arabia.

“There's a lot of hatred, as you can probably tell, and it allows for people to get together, mediated, arbitrated, and see if we can get it stopped. And I think it will work.”

Andy Gregory26 March 2025 00:01

Former Russian minister ‘shocked’ to learn he was subject to sanctions in UK

A former Russian minister told police he was shocked to learn he was subject to sanctions in the UK, a court has heard.

Dmitrii Ovsiannikov, 48, the former mayor of Sevastopol in illegally annexed Crimea, is facing seven counts of circumventing sanctions between February 2023 and January 2024.

He is said to have deliberately avoided sanctions by opening a Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) account on or before February 2023 and having tens of thousands of pounds transferred to it by his wife, Ekaterina Ovsiannikova, 47.

Body-worn footage played to the jury showed National Crime Agency (NCA) officers arresting Ovsiannikov in a residential street on January 22 2024 on suspicion of breaching UK financial sanctions.

During an interview he answered no comment, before telling officers that he “hoped no one knew that he had left Russia and he had spent a number of years” making it possible to leave, prosecutor Lyndon Harris summarised at Southwark Crown Court on Tuesday.

Pol Allingham has more details in this report:

Andy Gregory25 March 2025 23:04

Trump administration ‘appears to view Europe fundamentally as an adversary’

There is a real sense that the Trump administration “views Europe fundamentally as an adversary”, a former State Department official has said, after top officials close to the US president were revealed to have publicly lambasted European allies.

“There's a real sense of divorce, that America is not just disinterested in the trans-Atlantic alliance but views Europe fundamentally as an adversary,” Max Bergmann, who now works at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the Associated Press.

His remarks came in the wake of an extraordinary security breach, in which the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic was inadvertently added to a chat on messaging app Signal which showed US vice president JD Vance privately complaining about “bailing out” Europe – while Donald Trump’s defence Secretary Pete Hegseth slammed “pathetic” European “freeloading” – as they discussed top-secret plans to bomb Yemen.

Andy Gregory25 March 2025 22:11

Zelensky condemns weakening of sanctions against Russia

While the White House said in a joint statement with Russia that it would help Moscow restore its access to the world market for agricultural and fertiliser exports, Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv had not agreed to put that in its statement with Washington.

“We believe that this is a weakening of position and sanctions,” he said.

Andy Gregory25 March 2025 21:26

No concrete plans for further contacts between US and Moscow, Kremlin says

A Kremlin official has said that the talks between US and Russian officials in Riyadh the previous day would likely lead to further contacts between Washington and Moscow, but that no concrete plans have yet been made.

Andy Gregory25 March 2025 20:44

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