Miami Herald

Russia claims ‘97% control’ of eastern Ukrainian province amid fierce battles

- BY NABIH BULOS AND LAURA KING

Russia claimed nearvictor­y Tuesday in its fight for part of an eastern Ukrainian industrial region whose capture is one of Moscow’s main stated war aims, as Ukraine acknowledg­ed that it was waging a tough battle to keep one of its last cities there from falling.

In the fourth month of the Russian invasion, Ukraine redoubled its pleas for more heavy weaponry to parry slow and grinding advances by Moscow’s troops, which are backed by relentless artillery fire, in the contested region known as the Donbas, made up of two eastern provinces, Luhansk and Donetsk.

Moscow’s triumphal claim came from Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, who said in televised remarks that 97% of Luhansk had been “liberated” by Russian forces.

Separately on Tuesday, a Defense Ministry spokesman, Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v, said some Western-supplied military equipment deployed in the country’s east, including two U.S.-provided artillery systems, had been knocked out by Russian artillery, a claim that could not be independen­tly verified.

Crucial to Moscow’s eastern campaign is control of the industrial city of Severodone­tsk, one of only two major population centers in the region that Russia has not yet been able to capture. Ukraine said its forces were holding on in Severodone­tsk, but with difficulty. “Our armed forces are doing their utmost to defend the city,” Mayor Oleksandr Stryuk told Ukrainian TV Tuesday.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in his overnight address to the nation, said “fierce street fighting” was underway to keep Severodone­tsk in Ukrainian hands.

Ukrainian officials say Russia is throwing more and more military resources into the fight, and Western military officials said Tuesday that Russian forces are apparently trying to isolate the city by cutting off both northern and southern approaches.

“Russia will almost certainly need to achieve a breakthrou­gh” in the area in order to consolidat­e tactical gains into “operationa­l level success” in the wider region, British military intelligen­ce said in its latest assessment.

Zelenskyy told his compatriot­s that Russia also has set its sights now on Zaporizhzh­ia, a major southeaste­rn city of nearly threequart­ers of a million people that is a gateway to central Ukraine. It is the capital of a province of the same name, and has served as an important way station for Ukrainians fleeing from heavily battered or Russian-occupied areas, such as the fallen city of Mariupol. “We will do everything for the defense” of Zaporizhzh­ia and its environs, Zelenskyy said.

Along the eastern front lines, civilian suffering has intensifie­d as bombardmen­t rains down on cities, towns and villages in the path of Russia’s military push.

Over the past 24 hours, Russian forces have fired on more than 20 populated areas in the Donbas provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk,

the Ukrainian military said. In an operationa­l report Tuesday, Ukraine’s military General Staff said that, in addition to aiming shellfire at towns and villages, Russia was launching airstrikes on Donetsk.

The Kremlin says it does not deliberate­ly target civilians — which is considered a war crime — but on the ground, mainly elderly residents who have stayed behind face punishing daily barrages that force them to cower in makeshift undergroun­d shelters and endure primitive conditions reminiscen­t

of life in pre-industrial times. “We could never imagine a time where we would have to make fires for cooking,” said Liubov Vedeneeva, 69, who was chopping wood outside her apartment building in Lysychansk, a city not far from Severodone­tsk.

Control of the Donbas region is now Moscow’s principal declared war aim, after it failed in the war’s early days to seize the capital, Kyiv, and its forces were pushed away from Kharkiv, the country’s second-largest city.

 ?? NATACHA PISARENKO AP ?? Civilian militia men hold rifles during training at a shooting range in outskirts Kyiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday.
NATACHA PISARENKO AP Civilian militia men hold rifles during training at a shooting range in outskirts Kyiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday.

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