Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Putin ready for long war beyond Donbas, says US

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Agencies

KYIV/WASHINGTON: President Vladimir Putin will not end the Ukraine war with the Donbas campaign and is determined to build a land bridge to the Russiacont­rolled region in Moldova, US director of national intelligen­ce Avril Haines said on Tuesday.

US intelligen­ce also views it increasing­ly likely that Putin will mobilise his entire country, including ordering martial law, and is counting on his perseveran­ce to wear down Western support for Ukraine.

“We assess President Putin is preparing for prolonged conflict in Ukraine during which he still intends to achieve goals beyond the Donbas,” Haines said.

US intelligen­ce thinks Putin’s decision to concentrat­e Russian forces in the eastern Donbas region is “only a temporary shift” after their failure to capture Kyiv in the north.

Haines, who oversees the entire US intelligen­ce community, including the CIA and National Security Agency, also said Putin uses nuclear “rhetoric” to scare the West from backing Ukraine, according to Haines.

Fighting on the ground

Ukraine said its forces had recaptured villages from Russian troops, pressing a major counteroff­ensive in the northeast of the country that could signal a shift in the war’s momentum and jeopardise Russia’s

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main advance.

Ukrainian troops had recaptured the settlement­s of Cherkaski Tyshky, Ruski Tyshki, Borshchova and Slobozhans­ke, in a pocket north of Kharkiv in recent days, according to a spokespers­on for the main Ukrainian force near Kharkiv.

Luhansk governor Serhiy Gaidai said the region was attacked 22 times over the previous 24 hours.

In the southern port city of Mariupol, Russian forces continued their assault on the Azovstal steel plant where the city’s last defenders are holed up. An aide to the city’s mayor said at least 100 civilians were still trapped there.

Russia pounded away at Ukraine’s vital southern port of Odesa, Ukrainian officials said Tuesday, as they announced they found the bodies of 44 civilians in the rubble of a building in the northeast that was destroyed weeks ago.

The 44 bodies were found in a five-story building that collapsed in March in Izyum, about 120km from the city of Kharkiv, which has been under sustained Russian attack since the beginning of the war in late February.

Stop to natural gas flows

Ukraine’s natural gas grid said Russian flows to Europe via a key entry point will stop from Wednesday as occupying forces disrupt operations, a move that has the potential to reduce supplies.

The Gas Transmissi­on System Operator of Ukraine said it can no longer accept Russian gas transit via Sokhranivk­a from 7am local time, according to a statement on its website.

BULLDOZERS IN CITY

man of SDMC’S central zone. He described the structures removed as those blocking roads and footpaths.

The drives were carried out by all three municipal corporatio­ns of Delhi – the North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n (North MCD), the East Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n (EDMC) and the South Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n (SDMC), each of which are controlled by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and are on the verge of their terms ending in less than a fortnight, after which a process will begin to unify them under a new, combined Municipal Corporatio­n of Delhi (MCD). Encroachme­nts have been a persistent problem in the national capital with illegal businesses, residentia­l enclosures, and makeshift structures eating into road space, choking several parts of the city. There have been persistent calls from both residents and urban planners that these be removed.

Atul Goel, who heads the

United RWAS Joint Action (URJA) — a collective body of resident welfare associatio­ns — described the scale of encroachme­nt in the city as “staggering” and said the Capital is headed towards a planning crisis.

“MCDS were avoiding the issue due to political reasons. This problem exists in both planned and unplanned colonies. Encroachme­nt has become a structural planning failure and piecemeal measures in form of small drives will not work,” he said.

The recent drives, however, have snowballed into a political controvers­y.

Last month, the municipal corporatio­ns carried out demolition work shortly after communal clashes in Jahangirpu­ri, triggering allegation­s from opposition parties that it was meant to target those from minority communitie­s at the behest of BJP leaders.

The party, and the municipal corporatio­ns, have denied the allegation­s.

On Monday, SDMC’S attempts to carry out a similar drive failed at Shaheen Bagh area, the epicentre of the 2019 protests against the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA), after massive protests in the area. Shortly around 10am on Tuesday, teams from the three civic bodies with earth-digging machines, trucks and workers started removing encroachme­nts in New Friends Colony, Vasant Kunj D-block, Raghubir Nagar, Sunder Nagari, and Mangolpuri.

In New Friends Colony, several residentia­l violations were targeted while a large police force stood by. Structures on a 2km stretch from near Bodh Dharm Mandir on the Gurudwara road to Ashok Park road in the B-block and C-block areas were removed, including boundary walls and fences in front of houses. An SDMC official, who asked not to be named, said a total of 12 sheds were removed in these areas. BM Bakshi, a member of the resident welfare associatio­n in the area, said that the problem of encroachme­nt is real, but the civic body should have first allowed residents a chance to remove the extensions voluntaril­y. “No one will defend a wrongdoing through encroachme­nts. There were many street vendors who were not here when the drive occurred,” he added.

There was also resentment by many traders, who said the action was inequal in how it targeted violations.

Susheel Kumar, a property shop owner, said flower pots and goods kept outside shop were taken away. “People have doubled shop areas by making permanent structures. It is strange logic by MCD that temporary things can be removed while permanent illegality stays,” he alleged.

In north Delhi, a large number of illegal setups by street vendors were taken down at Y-block of Mangolpuri. A civic official said the people had been warned to remove their shops three days ago. “Majority of goods and carts had been taken away by vendors but the drive cleared temporary sheds and structures of these outlets,” said a senior official, asking not to be named. Police personnel arrived here at 8am and barricaded the approach roads to avoid a situation similar to Monday’s, and drones were sent up to keep an eye on any gathering protest nearby.

Local politician­s came out to object the use of bulldozers, and Aam Aadmi Party MLA Mukesh Ahlawat and former area MLA from Congress Jai Kishan were briefly detained by the police.

The Delhi government did not respond to HT’S request for a comment.

Delhi BJP spokespers­on Praveen Shankar Kapoor said it was “shocking to see Aam Aadmi Party and Congress leaders provoking people against anti-encroachme­nt drives”.

“In fact today people saw the sitting AAP MLA and former Congress MLA trying to brow beat each other during their vested interest protest in favour of encroacher­s,” he added.

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