The Hamilton Spectator

Dozens more flee from plant

Fight for last stronghold grows desperate

- ELENA BECATOROS

ZAPORIZHZH­IA, UKRAINE Dozens more civilians were rescued Friday from the tunnels under the besieged steel mill where Ukrainian fighters in Mariupol have been making their last stand to prevent Moscow’s complete takeover of the strategica­lly important port city.

Russian and Ukrainian officials said 50 people were evacuated from the Azovstal plant and handed over to representa­tives of the United Nations and the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross. The Russian military said the group included 11 children.

Russian officials and Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said evacuation efforts would continue Saturday. The latest evacuees were in addition to roughly 500 other civilians who got out of the plant and city in recent days.

The fight for the last Ukrainian stronghold in a city reduced to ruins by the Russian onslaught appeared increasing­ly desperate amid growing speculatio­n that President Vladimir Putin wants to finish the battle for Mariupol so he can present a triumph to the Russian people in time for Monday’s Victory Day, the biggest patriotic holiday on the Russian calendar.

As the holiday commemorat­ing the Soviet Union’s the Second World War victory over Nazi Germany approached, cities across Ukraine prepared for an expected increase in Russian attacks, and officials urged residents to heed air raid warnings.

“These symbolic dates are to the Russian aggressor like red to a bull,” said Ukraine’s first deputy interior minister, Yevhen Yenin. “While the entire civilized world remembers the victims of terrible wars on these days, the Russian Federation wants parades and is preparing to dance over bones in Mariupol.”

By Russia’s most recent estimate, roughly 2,000 Ukrainian fighters are holed up in the vast maze of tunnels and bunkers beneath the Azovstal steelworks, and they have repeatedly refused to surrender. Ukrainian officials said before Friday’s evacuation­s that a few hundred civilians were also trapped there, and fears for their safety have increased as the battle has grown fiercer in recent days.

Kateryna Prokopenko, whose husband, Denys Prokopenko, commands the Azov Regiment troops inside the plant, issued a desperate plea to also spare the fighters. She said they would be willing to go to a third country to wait out the war but would never surrender to Russia because that would mean “filtration camps, prison, torture and death.”

If nothing is done to save her husband and his men, they will “stand to the end without surrender,” she told The Associated Press on Friday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said “influentia­l states” are involved in efforts to rescue the soldiers, although he did not mention any by name.

UN officials have been tightlippe­d about the civilian evacuation efforts, but it seemed likely that the latest evacuees would be taken to Zaporizhzh­ia, a Ukrainian-controlled city about 230 kilometres northwest of Mariupol.

 ?? CHRIS MCGRATH GETTY IMAGES ?? A man throws debris from the window of a residentia­l apartment block damaged one day before by a Russian missile strike in Kramatorsk, Ukraine.
CHRIS MCGRATH GETTY IMAGES A man throws debris from the window of a residentia­l apartment block damaged one day before by a Russian missile strike in Kramatorsk, Ukraine.

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