Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Ukraine warns only talks can end war

Russia claims seizure of Mariupol steel plant as fighting in Donbas rages, stops gas supply to Finland over payment dispute

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

KYIV: Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky warned on Saturday that only a diplomatic breakthrou­gh rather than an outright military victory could end Russia’s war on his country, as Moscow cut gas supplies to Finland.

“There are things that can only be reached at the negotiatin­g table,” Zelensky said, just as Russia claimed its long-range missiles had destroyed a shipment of Western arms destined for Ukraine’s troops.

After just over 12 weeks of fierce fighting, Ukrainian forces have halted Russian attempts to seize Kyiv and the northern city of Kharkiv, but are under renewed and intense pressure in the eastern Donbas region.

Moscow’s army have flattened and seized the southeaste­rn port city of Mariupol and subjected Ukrainian troops and towns in the east to a remorseles­s ground and artillery attack.

Zelensky’s Western allies have shipped modern weaponry to his forces and imposed sweeping sanctions on the Russian economy and President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle.

But the Kremlin has responded by disrupting European energy supplies, and on Saturday cut off gas shipments to Finland, which angered Moscow by applying to join the Nato alliance.

Against this backdrop, Zelensky told Ukrainian television the war would end “through diplomacy”.

The conflict, he warned, “will be bloody, there will be fighting but will only definitive­ly end through diplomacy” -- promising only that the result would be “fair” for Ukraine.

“Discussion­s between Ukraine and Russia will decidedly take place. Under what format I don’t know - with intermedia­ries, without them, in a broader group, at presidenti­al level,” he said.

In order to sidestep financial sanctions and force European energy clients to prop up his central bank, Putin has demanded that importers from “unfriendly countries” pay for gas in Russian roubles.

Russian energy giant Gazprom said it had halted supplies to neighbouri­ng Finland as it had not received ruble payments from Finland’s state-owned energy company Gasum by the end of Friday.

Gazprom supplied 1.49 billion cubic metres of natural gas to Finland in 2021, about two thirds of the country’s gas consumptio­n but only eight percent of its total energy use.

Gasum said it would make up for the shortfall from other sources, through the Balticconn­ector pipeline, which links Finland to Estonia, a fellow European Union member.

Moscow cut off gas to Poland and Bulgaria last month in a move the European Union described as “blackmail”, but importers in some other EU countries more dependent on Russian gas plan to open ruble accounts with Gazprom’s bank.

Finland and neighbouri­ng Sweden this week broke their historical military non-alignment and applied to join Nato, after public support for the alliance soared following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

On the ground in Ukraine, the fighting is fiercest in the eastern region of Donbas, a Russianspe­aking area that has been partially controlled by pro-Kremlin separatist­s since 2014.

“They completely ruined Rubizhne, Vonokvakha, just as they did Mariupol,” Zelensky said Friday, adding that the Russians were “trying to do the same with Severodone­tsk and many other cities”.

In Severodone­tsk, a frontline city now at risk of encircleme­nt, 12 people were killed and another 40 wounded by Russian shelling, the regional governor said.

Zelensky described the bombardmen­t of Severodone­tsk as “brutal and absolutely pointless”, as residents cowering in basements described an unending ordeal of terror.

The city forms part of the last pocket of Ukrainian resistance in Luhansk, which along with the neighbouri­ng region of Donetsk comprises the Donbas war zone.

The Russian defence ministry, meanwhile, claimed it had destroyed a large shipment of US and European weapons in a long-range missile strike targeting the Malin railway station west of Kyiv in the Zhytomyr region.

There was no Ukrainian or independen­t confirmati­on of the success of the strike.

On Friday, Moscow said the battle for the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol - a symbol of Ukraine’s dogged resistance since Putin launched the invasion on February 24 - was now over.

Russian defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenko said 2,439 Ukrainian personnel had surrendere­d at the steelworks since May 16, the final 500 on Friday.

Ukraine hopes to exchange the surrenderi­ng Azovstal soldiers for Russian prisoners. But in Donetsk, pro-Kremlin authoritie­s are threatenin­g to put some of them on trial.

Biden has cast the Ukraine war as part of a US-led struggle pitting democracy against authoritar­ianism.

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