Los Angeles Times

EU leaders in Ukraine as Russia hits residentia­l areas

- BY SUSIE BLANN Blann writes for the Associated Press.

KYIV, Ukraine — Russian missiles hit residentia­l areas in an eastern Ukrainian city Thursday for the second time in 24 hours, and top European Union officials held talks with the government in Kyiv as the war with Russia approaches its oneyear mark.

The latest strikes in Kramatorsk came as rescue crews searched for survivors in the rubble of an apartment building hit late Wednesday by a Russian missile that killed at least three people and wounded 21 others. At least one more victim was thought to be under the debris, Ukraine’s presidenti­al office said.

“Kramatorsk again shattered by explosions — the Russians made two more rocket strikes,” regional Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko wrote in a Telegram post.

He said at least five civilians were wounded in the latest strikes, which hit residentia­l buildings as well as a children’s clinic and a school in the heart of the city. Kramatorsk Mayor Oleksandr Honcharenk­o urged residents to stay in shelters.

Kramatorsk is a major hub for the Ukrainian military in the east.

No further details of Thursday’s attack were immediatel­y available.

Russia has frequently struck apartment buildings during the war, causing civilian casualties, although the Kremlin has denied targeting residentia­l structures.

Russian shelling across Ukraine over the previous 24 hours killed at least eight civilians and wounded 29 others, the presidenti­al office said. Along with the victims in Kramatorsk, the toll included four people who died when a Russian mortar shell hit a basement where they were sheltering in the northeaste­rn Chernihiv region.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky met with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen before what officials described as a summit Friday. The last such summit was held in Kyiv in October 2021 — a few months before the war started Feb. 24, 2022.

Von der Leyen praised wartime Ukraine’s “brilliant applicatio­n” for European Union membership, though Brussels officials note that Ukraine’s joining the 27-nation bloc is a long way off.

Ahead of possible membership, Von der Leyen said, the commission is proposing that Kyiv “join key European programs. This will give Ukraine benefits close to those of EU membership in many areas.”

EU assistance for Ukraine, she said, has reached 50 billion euros, or about $55 billion, since the start of Russia’s war.

Von der Leyen said the EU plans to adopt a 10th package of sanctions against Russia before Feb. 24. She also announced that the Internatio­nal Center for the Prosecutio­n of the Crime of Aggression in Ukraine would be set up in The Hague to coordinate the collection of evidence of war crimes.

Von der Leyen, on her fourth visit to Kyiv since Russia’s invasion, added that she was “comforted” by Ukraine’s anti-corruption drive. Stamping out endemic corruption is a key condition for joining the EU.

Zelensky on Wednesday took aim at corrupt officials for the second time in the space of a week. Several high-ranking officials were dismissed.

Zelensky was elected in 2019 on an anti-establishm­ent and anti-corruption platform in a country long gripped by graft.

The latest corruption allegation­s came as Western allies are channeling billions of dollars to help Kyiv fight Moscow’s forces and as the Ukrainian government is introducin­g reforms so that it can potentiall­y join the EU.

Ukraine’s government is keen to get more Western military aid, on top of the tanks pledged last week, as the warring sides are expected to launch new offensives once winter ends. Kyiv is asking for fighter jets.

Kyiv expects Russia to “attempt something” on the Feb. 24 anniversar­y, Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov told France’s BFM television. He stressed his government’s priority of getting weapons without delay.

“We are telling our partners that we too need to be ready as fast as possible,” he said in an interview late Wednesday.

President Biden has ruled out providing F-16s to Ukraine. Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III said Thursday during a trip to the Philippine­s that the focus of American aid is to increase Ukraine’s military capabiliti­es by sending artillery, armor and air defense and providing training to Ukrainian troops.

The U.S. is “focused on providing Ukraine the capability that it needs to be effective in its upcoming anticipate­d counteroff­ensive in the spring,” Austin said. “And so we’re doing everything we can to get them the capabiliti­es that they need right now to be effective on the battlefiel­d.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that the strategy would backfire by prompting Moscow to ensure that potential Russian targets were out of range.

“The longer range the weapons supplied to the Kyiv regime, the farther we would need to push them away from the territorie­s that are part of our country,” Lavrov said in an interview with Russian state media.

He said Moscow would like to see the war end but noted that the length of the conflict was less important than its outcome of protecting “people who want to remain part of the Russian culture,” a statement that reaffirmed Moscow’s declared goal to defend Russian speakers in Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin drew on national pride at a ceremony to mark the 80th anniversar­y of the Nazi defeat in the World War II battle of Stalingrad as he sought to stiffen support at home for the fight in Ukraine, where the Kremlin’s forces have faced embarrassi­ng setbacks in recent months.

“The strength of the defenders of Stalingrad is the most important moral beacon for Russian soldiers,” he said in Volgograd, as Stalingrad was renamed in 1961, “all that defines Russia and makes us strong and confident in ourselves, the rightness of our cause and our victory.”

 ?? Yevgen Honcharenk­o Associated Press ?? PEOPLE CLEAR rubble after a Russian missile hit an apartment building in Kramatorsk, Ukraine.
Yevgen Honcharenk­o Associated Press PEOPLE CLEAR rubble after a Russian missile hit an apartment building in Kramatorsk, Ukraine.

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