San Diego Union-Tribune

UKRAINE: 200 BODIES FOUND IN BASEMENT

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Workers digging through the rubble of an apartment building in Mariupol found 200 bodies in the basement, Ukrainian authoritie­s said Tuesday, as more horrors come to light in the ruined city that has seen some of the worst suffering of the 3month-old war.

The bodies were decomposin­g and the stench hung over the neighborho­od, said Petro Andryushch­enko, an adviser to the mayor. He did not say when they were discovered, but the sheer number of victims makes it one of the deadliest known attacks of the war.

Heavy fighting, meanwhile, was reported in the Donbas, the eastern industrial heartland that Moscow’s forces are intent on seizing. Russian troops took over an industrial town that hosts a thermal power station, and intensifie­d efforts to encircle and capture Sievierodo­netsk and other cities.

Twelve people were killed by Russian shelling in the Donetsk region of the Donbas, according to the regional governor. And the governor of the Luhansk region of the Donbas said the area is facing its “most difficult time” in the eight years since separatist fighting erupted there.

“The Russians are advancing in all directions at the same time. They brought over an insane number of fighters and equipment,” the governor, Serhii Haidai, wrote on Telegram. “The invaders are killing our cities, destroying everything around.” He added that Luhansk is becoming “like Mariupol.”

Mariupol was relentless­ly pounded during a nearly three-month siege that ended last week after some 2,500 Ukrainian fighters abandoned a steel plant where they had made their stand. Russian forces already held the rest of the city, where an estimated 100,000 people remain out of a prewar population of 450,000, many of them trapped during the encircleme­nt with little food, water, heat or electricit­y.

At least 21,000 people were killed in the siege, according to Ukrainian authoritie­s, who have accused Russia of trying to cover up the horrors by bringing in mobile cremation equipment and by burying the dead in mass graves.

Russian officials announced that Moscow’s forces had finished clearing mines from the waters off Mariupol and that a safe corridor will open today for the exit of as many as 70 foreign ships from Ukraine’s southern coast.

 ?? NATACHA PISARENKO AP ?? A resident enters her apartment building that was heavily damaged by shelling in Borodyanka, Ukraine, on Tuesday.
NATACHA PISARENKO AP A resident enters her apartment building that was heavily damaged by shelling in Borodyanka, Ukraine, on Tuesday.

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