The Columbus Dispatch

Official: Russians control 80% of contested city

Evacuation of citizens ‘not possible’ with its three bridges destroyed

- Yuras Karmanau

LVIV, Ukraine – Russian troops control about 80% of the fiercely contested eastern Ukrainian city of Sievierodo­netsk and have destroyed all three bridges leading out of it but Ukrainian authoritie­s are still trying to evacuate the wounded, a regional official said Tuesday.

Serhiy Haidai, governor of the eastern Luhansk region, acknowledg­ed that a mass evacuation of civilians from Sievierodo­netsk now is “simply not possible” due to the relentless shelling and fighting. Ukrainian forces have been pushed to the industrial outskirts of the city because of “the scorched earth method and heavy artillery the Russians are using,” he said.

“There is still an opportunit­y for the evacuation of the wounded, communicat­ion with the Ukrainian military and local residents,” he told The Associated Press, adding that Russian forces have not yet completely blocked off the strategic city.

About 12,000 people remain in Sievierodo­netsk, from a pre-war population of 100,000. More than 500 civilians are sheltering in the city's Azot chemical plant, which is being relentless­ly pounded by the Russians, according to Haidai.

In all, 70 civilians were evacuated from the Luhansk region in the last day, the governor said.

A Russian general said a humanitari­an corridor will be opened Wednesday to evacuate civilians from the Azot plant. Col.-gen. Mikhail Mizintsev said evacuees would be taken to the town of Svatovo, 35 miles to the north in territory under the control of Russian and separatist forces.

He said the plan was made after Ukraine called for an evacuation corridor leading to territory it controls.

Mizintsev, head of the National Defense Management Center, is accused by Ukraine of human rights violations while commanding troops during the long siege of Mariupol, Ukraine's key port on the Sea of Azov that has been taken over

by the Russians.

Russian forces in the past few weeks have pressed hard to capture Ukraine's eastern industrial Donbas area, which borders Russia and is made up of the regions of Luhansk and Donetsk.

“The situation is difficult,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a news conference Tuesday with Danish media. “Our task is to fight back.”

With the conflict now in its fourth month, the battle of Donbas could dictate the course of the war.

If Russia prevails, Ukraine will lose not only land but perhaps the bulk of its most capable military forces, opening the way for Moscow to grab more territory and dictate its terms to Kyiv.

A Russian failure, however, could lay the grounds for a Ukrainian counteroff­ensive – and possible political upheaval for the Kremlin.

Jan Egeland, the Secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, one of the aid organizati­ons supplying food to civilians in the Donbas, said fighting in

the past few weeks has made regular food distributi­ons impossible. Now, he said, the remaining civilians in Sievierodo­netsk “are almost entirely cut off from aid supplies after the destructio­n of the last bridge.”

Reports of overnight shelling came from other Ukrainian regions as well, with five people wounded in the northeaste­rn Kharkiv region. According to an intelligen­ce update Tuesday by the U.K. Defense Ministry, Russian forces appear to have made small advances in the Kharkiv sector for the first time in several weeks.

A regional Ukrainian military official said the country's air defense shot down two Russian cruise missiles targeting the southern region of Odesa, a key western port on the Black Sea.

In other developmen­ts, U.S. President Joe Biden said he's working closely with European partners to get 20 million tons of Ukrainian grain, currently blocked from leaving ports due to Russia's invasion, onto internatio­nal markets.

He said Tuesday the plan would involve building temporary storage silos on Ukraine's borders to deal with the problem of the different rail gauges that Ukrainian and European railway systems use.

“Ukraine has a system, like Russia has, a rail gauge that is different than the gauge of the rest of the tracks in Europe,” Biden said. “So we're going to build silos, temporary silos, in the borders of Ukraine, including in Poland. So we can transfer it from those cars into those silos into cars in Europe and get it out to the ocean and get it across the world. But it's taking time.”

Ukraine is a global bread basket nation whose exports to world markets have been sharply disrupted by the war. The lack of Ukraine grain on world markets is threatenin­g to exacerbate food shortages and inflation across the world. Many African and Middle Eastern countries rely heavily on Ukrainian grain and could face problems feeding their people without it.

 ?? ALEXEY FURMAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Svitlana Nazarenko, sister of Mykhailo Tereshchen­ko, is comforted by her son during her brother’s funeral Tuesday in Kyiv, Ukraine. Mykhailo Tereschche­nko, 50, was a Ukrainian soldier killed in the region of Donbas.
ALEXEY FURMAN/GETTY IMAGES Svitlana Nazarenko, sister of Mykhailo Tereshchen­ko, is comforted by her son during her brother’s funeral Tuesday in Kyiv, Ukraine. Mykhailo Tereschche­nko, 50, was a Ukrainian soldier killed in the region of Donbas.

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