BusinessMirror

Russian forces begin assault on two eastern Ukraine cities

- By Susie Blann

KYIV, Ukraine—russian forces began an assault Saturday on two key cities in the eastern Donetsk region and kept up rocket and shelling attacks on other Ukrainian cities, including one close to Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, Ukraine’s military and local officials said.

Both cities of Bakhmut and Avdiivka have been considered key targets of Russia’s ongoing offensive across Ukraine’s east, with analysts saying Moscow needs to take Bakhmut if it is to advance on the regional hubs of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk.

“In the Donetsk direction, the enemy is conducting an offensive operation, concentrat­ing its main efforts on the Bakhmut and Avdiivka directions. It uses ground attack and army aviation,” the Ukrainian General Staff said on Facebook.

The last Russian strike on Sloviansk was July 30, but Ukrainian forces are fortifying their positions around the city in expectatio­n of new fighting.

“I think it won’t be calm for long. Eventually, there will be an assault,” Col. Yurii Bereza, head of the volunteer national guard regiment, told The Associated Press.

Russian shelling killed five civilians and injured 14 others in the Donetsk region in the last day, Donetsk governor Pavlo Kyrylenko wrote Saturday on Telegram, saying two people were killed in Poprosny, and one each in Avdiivka, Soledar and Pervomaisk­iy.

The governor of the eastern Dnipropetr­ovsk region said three civilians were injured after Russian rockets fell on a residentia­l neighborho­od in Nikopol, a city across the Dnieper River from the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power station. The nuclear plant has been under Russian control since Moscow’s troops seized it early in the war.

“After midnight, the Russian army struck the Nikopol area with (Soviet-era) Grad rockets, and the Kryvyi Rih area from barrel artillery,” Valentyn Reznichenk­o wrote on Telegram.

Another Russian missile attack overnight damaged unspecifie­d infrastruc­ture in the regional capital of Zaporizhzh­ia. On Thursday, Russia fired 60 rockets at Nikopol, damaging 50 residentia­l buildings in the city of 107,000 and leaving residents without electricit­y.

Rafael Grossi, head of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, warned this week that the situation was becoming more perilous day by day at the Zaporizhzh­ia plant.

“Every principle of nuclear safety has been violated” at the plant, he said. “What is at stake is extremely serious.”

He expressed concern about the way the plant is being operated and the danger posed by the fighting going on around it. Experts at the Us-based Institute for the Study of War said Russia is shelling the area intentiona­lly, “putting Ukraine in a difficult position.”

The Ukrainian company operating the nuclear power station said Saturday that Russian troops are using the plant’s basement to hide from Ukrainian shelling and have barred its Ukrainian staff from going there.

“Ukrainian personnel do not yet have access to these premises, so in the event of new shelling, people have no shelter and are in danger,” Enerhoatom, a Ukrainian state enterprise, said on its Telegram channel.

Enerhoatom said Friday that Russian rockets had damaged the plant’s facilities, including a nitrogen-oxygen unit and a high-voltage power line. Local Russian appointed officials acknowledg­ed the damage, but blamed it on the Ukrainians.

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