Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

KYIV STILL IN CROSSHAIRS

Russia renews strikes on Ukraine’s capital, other cities despite plans to launch major offensive in the east

- BY ADAM SCHRECK AND MSTYSLAV CHERNOV

KYIV, Ukraine — Russian forces accelerate­d scattered attacks on Kyiv, western Ukraine and beyond Saturday in an explosive reminder to Ukrainians and their Western supporters that the whole country remains under threat despite Moscow’s pivot toward mounting a new offensive in the east.

Stung by the loss of its Black Sea flagship and indignant over alleged Ukrainian aggression on Russian territory, Russia’s military command had warned of renewed missile strikes on Ukraine’s capital. Officials in Moscow said they were targeting military sites, a claim repeated — and refuted by witnesses — throughout 52 days of war.

The toll reaches much deeper. Each day brings new discoverie­s of civilian victims of an invasion that has shattered European security. As Russia prepared for the anticipate­d offensive, a mother wept over her 15-year-old son’s body after rockets hit a residentia­l area of Kharkiv, a city in northeast Ukraine. An infant and at least eight other people died, officials said.

In the towns and villages just outside Kyiv, authoritie­s have reported finding the bodies of more than 900 civilians, most shot dead, since Russian troops retreated two weeks ago. Smoke rose from the capital again early Saturday as Mayor Vitali Klitschko reported a strike that killed one person and wounded several.

The mayor advised residents who fled the city earlier in the war not to return.

“We’re not ruling out further strikes on the capital,” Klitschko said. “If you have the opportunit­y to stay a little bit longer in the cities where it’s safer, do it.”

It was not immediatel­y clear from the ground what was hit in the strike on Kyiv’s Darnytskyi district. The sprawling area on the southeaste­rn edge of the capital contains a mixture of Soviet-style apartment blocks, newer shopping centers and big-box retail outlets, industrial areas and railyards.

Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenko­v said an armored vehicle plant was targeted. He didn’t specify where the factory was located, but there is one in the Darnytskyi district.

He said the plant was among mul

tiple Ukrainian military sites hit with “air-launched high-precision long-range weapons.” As the U.S. and Europe send new arms to Ukraine, the strategy could be aimed at hobbling Ukraine’s defenses ahead of what’s expected to be a full-scale Russian assault in the east.

The Russian missiles hit the city just as residents were emerging for walks, foreign embassies planned to reopen and other tentative signs of the city’s prewar life started resurfacin­g, following the failure of Russian troops to capture Kyiv and their withdrawal.

Kyiv was one of many targets Saturday. The Ukrainian president’s office reported missile strikes and shelling over the past 24 hours in eight regions across the country.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in an interview with Ukrainian journalist­s that the continuing siege of the port city of Mariupol, which has come at a horrific cost to trapped and starving civilians, could scuttle attempts to negotiate an end to the war.

“The destructio­n of all our guys in Mariupol — what they are doing now — can put an end to any format of negotiatio­ns,” he said.

Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenko­v said Saturday that Ukrainian forces had been driven out of most of the city and remained only in the huge Azovstal steel mill.

Capturing Mariupol would allow Russian forces in the south, which came up through the annexed Crimean Peninsula, to fully link up with troops in the Donbas region, Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland.

Zelenskyy estimated that 2,500 to 3,000 Ukrainian troops have died in the war, and about 10,000 have been wounded. The office of Ukraine’s prosecutor general said Saturday that at least 200 children have been killed, and more than 360 wounded.

Russian forces also have taken captive some 700 Ukrainian troops and more than 1,000 civilians, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said Saturday. Ukraine holds about the same number of Russian troops as prisoners and intends to arrange a swap but is demanding the release of civilians “without any conditions,” she said.

 ?? CHRIS MCGRATH/GETTY IMAGES ?? Members of the Ukrainian military walk amid debris after a shopping center and surroundin­g buildings were hit Saturday by a Russian missile strike in Kharkiv, Ukraine.
CHRIS MCGRATH/GETTY IMAGES Members of the Ukrainian military walk amid debris after a shopping center and surroundin­g buildings were hit Saturday by a Russian missile strike in Kharkiv, Ukraine.

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