Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

‘The fate of Donbas rests in battlegrou­nd city’

The battle for the city of Severodone­tsk rages as Russian troops try to capture the city that will give them access to the entirety of the east

- Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com Attack on Ukraine

LYSYCHANSK, UKRAINE: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the fate of the whole Donbas region hinges on the “very fierce” battle with Russian troops for the flashpoint eastern city of Severodone­tsk.

Moscow’s forces are concentrat­ing their firepower on the strategica­lly important industrial hub as part of efforts to capture a swathe of eastern Ukraine.

As shelling and airstrikes killed another 11 people around the country, Ukraine said on Thursday that the western longrange artillery it has been begging for would end the fight for Severodone­tsk in days.

In his evening address to the nation on Wednesday, Zelensky said the battle for the city was “very fierce... very difficult. Probably one of the most difficult throughout this war.

“In many ways, the fate of our Donbas is being decided there.”

Following days of raging street battles, Ukrainian officials conceded that Russian troops control a large part of Severodone­tsk and that their own forces might have to pull back due to constant shelling.

The cities of Severodone­tsk and Lysychansk, which are separated by a river, were the last areas still under Ukrainian control in Lugansk. Lysychansk is still in Ukrainian hands but under fierce Russian bombardmen­t.

After being repelled from Kyiv following their February 24 invasion, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s troops have refocused their offensive on the Donbas region, comprising Lugansk and Donetsk.

‘Very primitive’

Part of the Donbas had already been held by pro-Russian separatist­s since 2014.

At the United Nations, secretary-general Antonio Guterres added his voice to increasing­ly dire warnings about the war’s impact.

“For people around the world, the war is threatenin­g to unleash an unpreceden­ted wave of hunger and destitutio­n, leaving social and economic chaos in its wake,” he said.

Severodone­tsk appeared close to being captured just days ago but outgunned Ukrainian forces launched counteratt­acks and managed to hold out.

Lugansk regional governor Sergiy Gaiday said Western artillery would help secure a Ukrainian victory, echoing Kyiv’s repeated calls for more military aid.

“As soon as we have longrange artillery to be able to conduct duels with Russian artillery, our special forces can clean up the city in two to three days,” he said.

Gaiday added that Ukrainian forces in the city remained “highly motivated” and that “everyone is holding their positions”, while describing Russian tactics as “very primitive”.

The United States and Britain have announced they are providing Kyiv with long-range precision artillery batteries, defying warnings from Putin.

The Ukrainian presidency said four people were killed and five more wounded in a Russian air strike on Toshkivka, a village around 25 kilometres south of Severodone­tsk.

Four more people were killed in fighting in Donetsk, and two were killed by shelling in the north-eastern city of Kharkiv, it said. Another person was killed in the Mykolayiv region in the south.

Russia’s defence ministry meanwhile said it had targeted a Ukrainian training centre for “foreign mercenarie­s” in the Zhytomyr region.

Zhytomyr governor Vitaliy Bunechko confirmed a Russian strike overnight in the town of Novograd-Volynskyi but did not mention a training centre and said he had no informatio­n about victims.

Global food crisis

The shockwaves from the Ukraine conflict continue to reverberat­e, especially from a looming global food crisis.

Ukraine’s president warned that millions of people could starve because of a Russian blockade of its Black Sea ports which he said had left the world “on the brink of a terrible food crisis.”

Zelensky said Ukraine was now unable to export large amounts of wheat, corn, vegetable oil and other products that had played a “stabilisin­g role in the global market”.

Meanwhile, Russia and Turkey made little headway in striking a deal to secure safe passage for grain exports stuck in Ukraine.

At the request of the United Nations, Turkey has offered its services to escort maritime convoys from Ukrainian ports, despite the presence of mines.

“We are ready to do this in cooperatio­n with our Turkish colleagues,” Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters in Ankara.

Lavrov’s Turkish counterpar­t Mevlut Cavusoglu called Russian demands for an end to sanctions to help grain onto the world market “legitimate”.

 ?? AFP ?? A man walks past a burning college after a strike in Lysychansk, eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas.
AFP A man walks past a burning college after a strike in Lysychansk, eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas.

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