Herald on Sunday

Ukrainian resistance frustrates Putin’s plan

Russia pulls military units from besieged city to bolster its offensive elsewhere

-

RWe have a difficult situation, but our army is defending our state. Oleksiy Danilov, Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council

ussian troops were pressing their offensive in the eastern Donbas region in an attempt to fully seize Ukraine’s industrial heartland but have made little headway as fierce Ukrainian counter-attacks have slowed their efforts, Ukrainian and British officials said yesterday.

Russia continues to fight for full control of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions that make up the Donbas and seeks to secure “a land route between these territorie­s and the occupied Crimea” including by wiping out the last pocket of Ukrainian resistance in the besieged port city of Mariupol, Ukraine’s General Staff said.

Ukrainian forces had repelled eight Russian attacks in the two regions in the space of 24 hours, destroying nine tanks, 18 armoured units and 13 vehicles, a tanker and three artillery systems, the General Staff said.

“Units of Russian occupiers are regrouping,” the General Staff said on its Facebook page.

“Russian enemy continues to launch missile and bomb strikes on military and civilian infrastruc­ture.”

Luhansk Governor Serhiy Haidai said yesterday two people were killed by Russian shelling in the city of Popasna.

“In addition to the fact that street fighting continues in the city for several weeks, the Russian army constantly fires at multi-storey residentia­l buildings and private houses,” Haidai wrote on Instagram.

“Just yesterday, local residents withstood five enemy artillery attacks . . . Not all survived.”

Britain’s Ministry of Defence said despite their increased activity “Russian forces have made no major gains in the last 24 hours as Ukrainian counter-attacks continue to hinder the efforts”.

Russia has not establishe­d air or sea control due to Ukrainian resistance, and despite President Vladimir Putin’s declaratio­n of victory in Mariupol, “heavy fighting continues to take place, frustratin­g Russian attempts to capture the city, thus further slowing their desired progress in the Donbas”, the ministry said.

Russia has pulled a dozen crack military units from Mariupol to bolster the offensive elsewhere in the Donbas.

Other troops continue to keep the remaining Ukrainian soldiers in the city pinned in the Azovstal steelworks, the last remaining stronghold,

Ukrainian officials said.

Putin is said to have ordered his forces not to storm the plant to finish off the defenders but to seal it off instead in an apparent bid to force them to surrender.

Russian forces have been pummelling the 2000 Ukrainian fighters still holed up inside, the mayor’s office reported yesterday.

“Every day they drop several bombs on Azovstal,” said Petro Andryushch­enko, an adviser to Mariupol’s mayor.

“Fighting, shelling, bombing do not stop.”

Mariupol has been reduced largely to smoking rubble by weeks of bombardmen­t, and Russian state TV showed the flag of the pro-Moscow Donetsk separatist­s raised on what it said was the city’s highest point, its TV tower.

It also showed what it said was the main building at Azovstal steel plant in flames.

Under cover of darkness, Ukrainian forces have managed to deliver weapons to the besieged steelworks via helicopter, said Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council.

Overall, the Kremlin has thrown more than 100,000 troops and mercenarie­s from Syria and Libya into the fight in Ukraine and is deploying more forces in the country every day, Danilov said.

“We have a difficult situation, but our army is defending our state,” he said.

Mariupol has taken on outsize importance in the war. Capturing it would deprive the Ukrainians of a vital port and complete a land corridor between Russia and the Crimean Peninsula, which Putin seized from Ukraine in 2014.

It would also allow Putin to throw more of his forces into the potentiall­y climactic battle for the Donbas and

its coal mines, factories and other industries, or what the Kremlin has now declared to be its main objective.

The latest satellite photos from Maxar Technologi­es revealed what appeared to be a second mass grave site near Mariupol.

The site at a cemetery in the town of Vynohradne has several newly dug parallel trenches measuring about 40m long, Maxar said.

A day earlier, Maxar released photos of what appeared to be rows upon rows of more than 200 freshly dug mass graves next to a cemetery in the town of Manhush, outside Mariupol.

That prompted Ukrainian accusation­s that the Russians are trying to conceal the slaughter of civilians in the city.

The Ukrainians estimated the graves seen in the photos released Friday could hold 9000 bodies.

The Kremlin did not respond to the satellite pictures.

More than 100,000 people — down from a prewar population of about 430,000 — are believed trapped in Mariupol with little food, water or heat, and more than 20,000 civilians have been killed in the nearly twomonth siege, according to Ukrainian authoritie­s.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The gutted remains of a car and damaged trees are all that remain at the spot of a battle between rival forces on the outskirts of Chernihiv.
Photo / AP The gutted remains of a car and damaged trees are all that remain at the spot of a battle between rival forces on the outskirts of Chernihiv.
 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? A missile is left embedded in the road to Kukhari in the Borodyanka region of Ukraine.
Photo / Getty Images A missile is left embedded in the road to Kukhari in the Borodyanka region of Ukraine.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand