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2025 in Ukraine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Events in the year 2025 in Ukraine.
Incumbents
- President: Volodymyr Zelenskyy
- Prime Minister: Denys Shmyhal (until 16 July); Yulia Svyrydenko (since 17 July)
Ongoing
- Russo-Ukrainian War (2014–present)
- Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022–present)
Events
January
- 1 January –
- Ukraine halts the transportation of Russian gas supplies through the country, following the expiration of a five-year transit deal.[1]
- Ukraine becomes a state party in the International Criminal Court.[2]
- 11 January – Ukraine announces the capture of two North Korean soldiers during fighting in Russia's Kursk Oblast.[3]
- 16 January – Ukraine and the United Kingdom sign a 100-year partnership agreement.[4]
- 21 January – Ukraine and Albania sign a 10-year bilateral security agreement.[5]
February
- 12 February –
- The head of the Security Service of Ukraine's (SBU) counter-terrorism department is arrested on suspicion of working for Russia since 2018.[6]
- US president Donald Trump announces the beginning of negotiations with Russia to end the war in Ukraine following a phone call with Russian president Vladimir Putin.[7]
- 13 February – President Zelenskyy imposes sanctions on multiple oligarchs and individuals including former president Petro Poroshenko, Viktor Medvedchuk, Kostyantyn Zhevago, Ihor Kolomoisky and Hennadiy Boholyubov on suspicion of "high treason" and assisting a terrorist organization, particularly their role in compromising national security through unfavorable business agreements with Russia.[8]
- 28 February – A diplomatic row breaks out between President Zelenskyy and US President Donald Trump during their meeting at the White House, resulting in the failure to sign the Ukraine–United States Mineral Resources Agreement.[9][10]
March
- 3 March – The United States suspends all military aid to Ukraine.[11]
- 5 March – The United States suspends intelligence sharing with Ukraine.[12]
- 12 March – After talks between US and Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia, the United States resumes military aid and intelligence sharing with Ukraine as well as intelligence support.[13]
- 13 March –
- The European Court of Human Rights rules that the Ukrainian government failed to prevent and adequately investigate the 2014 Odesa clashes and orders it to pay compensation.[14]
- The former leader of the Right Sector's Odesa branch, Demyan Hanul, is shot dead in Odesa.[15]
- 16 March – The Ukrainian military confirms its withdrawal from Sudzha, Kursk Oblast.[16]
- 17 March – President Zelenskyy signs a law allowing the Armed Forces of Ukraine to operate overseas in times of martial law.[17]
- 28 March – Oleksandr Plakhotnik, the former deputy mayor of Kamianske, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast is found shot dead in the city.[18]
April
- 28 April – Former president Viktor Yanukovych is convicted and sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment in absentia by a Ukrainian court on charges of inciting the desertion of Ukrainian officials and organizing illegal border crossings to Russia during his escape in 2014.[19]
- 30 April – Ukraine signs the mineral resources agreement with the United States.[20]
May
- 1 May – The Supreme Court of Ukraine rules against religious exemptions from military service during wartime following a case involving a member of the Jehovah's Witnesses who refused to undergo mobilization.[21]
- 8 May – The Verkhovna Rada ratifies the mineral resources agreement with the United States.[22]
- 9 May – The Security Service of Ukraine announces the discovery and dismantling of a spy network operated by Hungarian intelligence in Zakarpattia Oblast, resulting in two arrests.[23]
- 12 May – The International Civil Aviation Organization finds Russia responsible for the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over Donetsk Oblast in 2014.[24]
- 16 May – Ukraine and Russia hold their first direct peace negotiations since 2022 in Turkey.[25]
- 17 May – Ukraine's Ziferblat finishes in ninth place at Eurovision 2025 in Switzerland with the single "Bird of Pray".[26]
- 23–25 May – Russia and Ukraine conduct the largest prisoner exchange during the Russo-Ukrainian war that had been agreed upon during the 16 May peace negotiations in Istanbul, resulting in the release of more than 1,000 prisoners on each side.[27]
June
- 10 June – The Desniansky District Court in Kyiv becomes the first court in Ukraine to recognize a same-sex couple as a family under Ukrainian law after it rules that the relationship between Zoryan Kis, first secretary of the Ukrainian Embassy in Israel, and his partner Tymur Levchuk, constituted a de facto marriage following their wedding in the United States and a case brought against the Ministry of Foreign Affairs over its refusal to recognize the couple's spousal rights.[28]
- 29 June – President Zelenskyy signs a decree withdrawing Ukraine from the Ottawa Treaty on Landmines.[29]
July
- 9 July –
- The SBU arrests two Chinese nationals in Kyiv on suspicion of gathering intelligence on the Neptune missile system.[30]
- The European Court of Human Rights finds Russia responsible for the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine in 2014.[31]
- 10 July – An SBU colonel is shot dead by an unidentified gunman in Holosiivskyi District, Kyiv.[32] Two suspected Russian FSB agents accused of carrying out the killing are in turn killed in an SBU raid on a safehouse in Kyiv Oblast on 13 July.[33][34]
- 14 July – President Zelenskyy announces a government reshuffle and nominates Yulia Svyrydenko as prime minister.[35] Following the announcement, outgoing prime minister Denys Shmyhal submits his resignation the next day,[36] which the Verkhovna Rada accepts on 16 July.[37]
- 16 July – A cadet opens fire on fellow soldiers at a Ukrainian Ground Forces training ground in Chernihiv Oblast, killing two instructors before being arrested.[38]
- 17 July –
- The Verkhovna Rada confirms Yulia Svyrydenko as prime minister.[39]
- Hungary imposes an entry ban on Ukrainian military officials amid a diplomatic dispute caused by the death of a dual Hungarian-Ukrainian citizen who died in disputed circumstances following his mobilization into the Ukrainian military.[40]
- 22 July –
- Protests break out nationwide after President Zelenskyy signs a bill allowing general control of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAP), in the biggest anti-government protest in Ukraine since the start of the Russian invasion.[41]
- The suspected administrator of the cybercrime platform xss.is is arrested in Kyiv.[42]
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Holidays
- 1 January – New Year's Day
- 8 March – International Women's Day
- 10 March – International Women's Day
- 20 April – Easter Sunday
- 21 April – Easter Monday
- 1 May – Labour Day
- 8 May – Day of Remembrance and Victory over Nazism in World War II 1939 – 1945
- 8 June – Whitsun
- 9 June – Whit Monday
- 28 June – Constitution Day
- 30 June – Constitution Day Holiday
- 15 July – Statehood Day
- 24 August – Independence Day
- 25 August – Independence Day Holiday
- 1 October – Defenders Day
- 25 December – Christmas Day
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Deaths
- 20 March – Vitold Fokin, 92, Prime Minister of Ukraine (1990–1992).[45]
- 21 April – Volodymyr Moroz, 57, People's Deputy of Ukraine (since 2019).[46]
- 21 May – Andriy Portnov, 51, presidential aide (Viktor Yanukovych), People's Deputy of Ukraine (2006–2010).[47]
- 28 May – Serhiy Shvets, 48, People's Deputy of Ukraine (since 2019).[48]
- 29 June – Maksym Ustymenko, 32, Ukrainian Air Force pilot.[49]
- 3 July – Manolis Pilavov, 61, pro-Russian separatist, mayor of Luhansk (2014–2023).[50]
- 24 July –
- Yaroslav Rushchyshyn, 57, People's Deputy of Ukraine (since 2019).[51]
- Viktor Burakov, 70, Olympic sprinter (1980).[52]
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References
External links
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