Malvern Daily Record

Ukraine: 100-200 soldiers die daily, new plea for heavy guns

- By Associated Press

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Up to 200 Ukrainian soldiers are being killed every day in Russia’s military onslaught, according to an adviser to Ukraine’s president — and only more and more advanced Western weaponry will turn back the Russian offensive, reduce the casualties and force Moscow to the negotiatin­g table.

Mykhailo Podolyak told the BBC in an interview aired Thursday that the daily loss of between 100 and 200 Ukrainian soldiers is the result of a “complete lack of parity” between Ukraine and Russia, which has “thrown pretty much everything non-nuclear at the front” in its bid to advance in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region and beyond.

Recently Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy put the daily death toll at up to 100, but Podolyak said it had grown. Ukrainian officials have pointed at the mounting losses to emphasize their demand for more Western weapons, which have been critical to the country’s unexpected success in holding off the larger and better equipped Russian forces.

After a bungled attempt to overrun Kyiv in the early days of the war, Russia shifted its focus to the Donbas region of coal mines and factories. But its progress there has been plodding.

Podolyak renewed his government’s appeal for the West to supply Ukraine with many more multiple-rocket launcher systems. He addressed Western fears of rocket launchers being used to strike targets inside Russia and potentiall­y escalating the conflict to a wider conflagrat­ion, saying that “it won’t happen.”

STREET BATTLES

The slog in the Donbas continued Friday, with a Ukrainian governor saying forces are fighting “for every house and every street” in Sievierodo­netsk, the recent focus of clashes.

Sievierodo­netsk is in the last pocket of the Luhansk region that has not yet been claimed by Russia.

Luhansk Gov. Serhiy Haidai told The Associated Press that Ukrainian forces retain control of the industrial zone on the edge of the city and some other sections.

He said Russian artillery barrages have pummeled a part of the city that has now been turned into a “scorched Earth” landscape. He added, however, that Ukrainian forces rolled back a Russian attempt to send infantry into the city. BRITAIN CALLS TRIAL OF ITS CITIZENS A ‘SHAM’ The British government said Russia must take responsibi­lity for the “sham trial” of two Britons and a Moroccan who were sentenced to death for fighting against Russian forces in Ukraine.

Britons Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner and Moroccan Brahim Saadoun were convicted by a court run by pro-moscow separatist authoritie­s in the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, which is not recognized internatio­nally.

Separatist authoritie­s argued that the men were “mercenarie­s” not entitled to the usual protection­s accorded prisoners of war.

Aslin’s and Pinner’s families have said that the two men were long-serving members of the Ukrainian military. Saadoun’s father told a Moroccan online newspaper that his son is not a mercenary and that he holds Ukrainian citizenshi­p.

Government minister Robin Walker said Friday that it was “an illegal court in a sham government” but that the U.K. would use “all diplomatic channels to make the case that these are prisoners of war who should be treated accordingl­y.”

British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss is due to speak to her Ukrainian counterpar­t Dmytro Kuleba later Friday about the case. The U.K. has not announced any plans to speak to Russian officials — and it does not recognize the self-proclaimed Donetsk republic and will not officially contact the authoritie­s there.

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