The Telegram (St. John's)

In shift, Germany says it could back EU ban on Russian oil

- TOM BALMFORTH

Ukraine says 100,000 people are still living among the ruins in desperate conditions after months of Russian siege.

KYIV— Germany said on Monday it was prepared to back an immediate European Union embargo on Russian oil, a major shift from Moscow’s biggest energy customer that could let Europe impose such a ban within days.

Russia’s energy exports by far its biggest source of income - have so far largely been exempt from internatio­nal sanctions over the war in Ukraine. Kyiv says that loophole means European countries are funding the Kremlin war effort, sending Moscow hundreds of millions of euros every day.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who has been more cautious than other Western leaders in backing Ukraine, has been under growing pressure to take a firmer line, including from within the Social Democrat’s own governing coalition.

“Germany is not against an oil ban on Russia. Of course it is a heavy load to bear but we would be ready to do that,” Economy Minister Robert Habeck, of the Greens, told reporters before talks with his EU colleagues in Brussels.

“With coal and oil, it is possible to forgo Russian imports now,” Finance Minister Christian Lindner of the probusines­s FDP told Die Welt newspaper. “It can’t be ruled out that fuel prices could rise.”

Germany had already reduced the share of Russian oil in its imports to 12 per cent for 35 per cent before Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb.24, but had previously said it needed months to phase out Russian crude to lessen the economic impact at home.

Eastern parts of Germany in particular rely on fuel from a refinery owned by Russia’s state oil company Rosneft, served by the Soviet-era “Friendship” pipeline that runs thousands of miles to oil fields in Siberia.

Weaning Europe off Russian oil is likely to be easier than reducing dependence on Russian natural gas. Moscow has demanded European customers pay for gas in roubles, which the EU rejects. Last week, Moscow cut off supplies to Poland and Bulgaria. The EU ministers meeting on Monday discussed a joint response.

EVACUATION FROM MARIUPOL

The first civilians to be evacuated from a giant steel plant in Mariupol were expected to arrive on Monday in the Ukrainian-held city of Zaporizhzh­ia after an overnight bus journey across the front-line.

Ukraine says hundreds of civilians have been trapped inside the Azovstal plant along with the city’s last Ukrainian defenders. Dozens were able to leave on Sunday in an evacuation organized by the United Nations, the first to escape since President Vladimir Putin ordered the plant barricaded last week.

Captain Sviatoslav Palamar, 39, a deputy commander of Ukraine’s Azov Regiment, told Reuters from inside the plant that fighters could hear voices of women, children and elderly people trapped below ground, and lacked the equipment to dig them out.

“We were planning to tear up the bunkers, the entrance to which is blocked, but all night into Monday naval artillery and barrel artillery were firing. All day today aviation has been working, dropping bombs,” Palamar said by Zoom.

Efforts to organize the evacuation of civilians from other parts of the city, now held by the Russians, ran into delays. Ukraine says 100,000 people are still living in the ruined city in desperate conditions after months of Russian siege.

“Our house is completely destroyed. We had a twostorey building, it’s not there anymore. It burned to the ground,” said Natalya Tsyntomirs­ka, a Mariupol native who reached Zaporizhzh­ia on Monday in a funeral service van.

After being forced to abandon an assault on Kyiv at the end of March, Russia has launched a major new offensive in eastern Ukraine. For its part, Kyiv hopes a massive influx of Western military aid will allow it to repel that assault and then turn the tide with a counter-attack.

The Russian offensive is focused on the eastern Donetsk and Luhansk provinces, parts of which were already held by Russian-backed separatist­s before the invasion. Russian troops are now trying to encircle a large Ukrainian force there, attacking from three directions with massive bombardmen­t along the front.

Ukraine’s military said on Monday Russian forces were trying to take over the frontline Luhansk province town of Rubizhne, and prepare an assault on nearby Sievierodo­netsk.

The heaviest clashes were taking place around Popasna, further south. Shelling was so intense it was not possible to collect the bodies, said regional Governor Serhiy Gaidai.

“I don’t even want to speak about what’s happening with the people living in Popasna, Rubizhne and Novotoshki­vske right now. These cities simply don’t exist anymore. They have completely destroyed them.”

Russia has also been striking targets far from the front line with missiles. The governor of Odesa in the southwest said the city was hit by a rocket that caused death and injury on Monday evening.

In Russia, two explosions took place on Monday in Belgorod, a southern region bordering Ukraine, governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said. The cause of the blasts was not clear but the Kremlin has accused Ukraine of making cross-border attacks. Gladkov said there were no casualties.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Azovstal steel plant employee Valeria, last name withheld, evacuated from Mariupol, hugs her son Matvey, who had earlier left the city with his relatives, as they meet at a temporary accommodat­ion centre during Ukraine-russia conflict in the village of Bezimenne in the Donetsk Region, Ukraine, Sunday.
REUTERS Azovstal steel plant employee Valeria, last name withheld, evacuated from Mariupol, hugs her son Matvey, who had earlier left the city with his relatives, as they meet at a temporary accommodat­ion centre during Ukraine-russia conflict in the village of Bezimenne in the Donetsk Region, Ukraine, Sunday.

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