The Jerusalem Post

Russia drives to cut off key towns in Ukraine’s east

- • By PAVEL POLITYUK and MAX HUNDER

KYIV/KRAMATORSK, Ukraine (Reuters) – Russian forces intensifie­d their assault on two key towns in Ukraine’s industrial Donbas region on Wednesday, with constant mortar bombardmen­t destroying houses, killing civilians and threatenin­g the last escape route, Ukrainian officials said.

After failing to seize Kyiv or Ukraine’s second city Kharkiv, Russia is trying to take the rest of the separatist-claimed Donbas’s two provinces, Donetsk and Luhansk, and trap Ukrainian forces in a pocket on the main eastern front.

In the easternmos­t part of the Ukrainian-held Donbas pocket, the city of Sievierodo­netsk on the east bank of the Siverskiy Donets River and its twin Lysychansk on the west bank have become a pivotal battlefiel­d. Their fall would leave the whole of Luhansk region under Russian control, a key Kremlin war aim.

Russian forces were advancing from three directions to encircle them and shelling the main road from the towns to Ukrainian territory in a bid to cut off their key supply route.

President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office said the Russians had launched an offensive on Sievierodo­netsk early on Wednesday and the town was under constant fire from mortars.

“All the remaining strength of the Russian army is now concentrat­ed on this region... the occupiers want to destroy everything there,” Zelensky said of the situation in Donbas in a late-night address.

Luhansk Regional Governor Serhiy Gaidai said six civilians had been killed and at least eight wounded, most near bomb shelters in Sievierodo­netsk.

Ukraine’s military said it had repelled nine Russian attacks on Tuesday in the Donbas and that Moscow’s troops had killed at least 14 civilians there, using aircraft, rocket launchers, artillery, tanks, mortars and missiles.

In Kramatorsk, nearer the front line, the streets were largely deserted, while in Sloviansk in the western Donbas, many residents took advantage of what Ukraine said was a break in the Russian assault to leave.

“My house was bombed, I have nothing,” said Vera Safronova, seated in a train carriage among the evacuees.

Along with the eastern Donbas region, Moscow is also targeting southern Ukraine, where officials said shelling had killed a civilian and damaged scores of houses in Zaporozhzh­ia.

MOSCOW HAS blockaded ships from southern Ukraine that would normally export Ukrainian grain and sunflower oil through the Black Sea, pushing up prices globally and threatenin­g lives.

“It cannot be in Russia’s interest that because of Russia, people are dying of hunger abroad,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told Reuters on Tuesday at the World Economic Forum in Davos, calling for a dialogue.

Russia, which has blamed Ukraine and the West for the food crisis, said on Wednesday

it was ready to provide a humanitari­an corridor for vessels carrying food to leave Ukraine but said Western sanctions would need to be lifted in return.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Rudenko was quoted by Interfax news agency as saying solving the food problem required a “comprehens­ive approach.” Russia was in touch with the United Nations, and “does not rule out the possibilit­y of global talks to unblock Ukraine’s ports,” he said.

Ukrainian lawmaker Yevheniia Kravchuk told Reuters time was running out to get grain out as the new harvest would be in six weeks, although it was only expected to be 70% of the normal level because of territory being occupied or mined.

Separately, Russia’s Defense Ministry said the Port of Mariupol, the Ukrainian city taken by Russia last week after devastatin­g bombardmen­t and a three-month siege, was operating normally.

Rudenko said it was premature to establish a Russian military base in Ukraine’s Kherson region, adjacent to Crimea, which Moscow seized in 2014.

Three months into the invasion, Russia still has only limited gains to show for its worst military losses in decades, while much of Ukraine has suffered devastatio­n as Moscow stepped up artillery strikes to compensate for its slow progress.

Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Russia was deliberate­ly advancing slowly in what it calls its “special operation” to avoid civilian casualties, comments Zelensky dismissed as “absolutely unreal.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel