Muscat Daily

Ukraine strikes key bridge in Kherson region

Russian administra­tion says the strike in Moscowcont­rolled territory won’t affect the outcome of the hostilitie­s

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Kyiv, Ukraine - Ukrainian artillery on Wednesday struck a key bridge in Moscow-controlled territory in south Ukraine, damaging an important supply route as Kyiv’s forces look to wrest back the Kherson region.

The strike on the Antonivski­y bridge over the Dnipro river came hours ahead of the opening in Istanbul of a joint observatio­n centre to monitor Ukrainian grain exports that have been blocked by the Kremlin’s warships.

German authoritie­s said Russian energy giant Gazprom had drasticall­y cut gas deliveries to Europe via the Nord Stream pipeline to about 20 per cent of capacity, after the European Union agreed a plan to slash its usage this winter.

Kirill Stremousov, the deputy head of the Russian-installed regional administra­tion in Kherson, confirmed the bridge had been hit overnight and traffic had been halted. But he sought to downplay the damage, insisting that the attack would not affect the outcome of the hostilitie­s ‘in any way’.

“The special military operation is continuing,” Stremousov said in a video posted on social media, using the Kremlin’s preferred term to refer to their invasion.

Ukrainian forces in recent weeks have been clawing back territory in the Kherson region, which fell to Russian forces easily and early after their invasion launched on February 24.

Their counter-offensive supported by Western-supplied long-range artillery has seen its forces push closer to Kherson city, which had a pre-war population of under 300,000 people.

‘Leave Kherson’

Ukrainian officials have said their forces in the Black Sea region have changed tack, from defensive to offensive and that Kherson will ‘definitely’ be liberated by the end of September.

Russian forces ‘should leave Kherson while it is still possible. There may not be a third warning’, Ukrainian presidenti­al advisor Mykhaylo Podolyak said on Twitter after the attack.

The United Nations and Turkey are due to open a joint centre with Russia and Ukraine in Istanbul to coordinate the resumption of grain deliveries across the Black Sea.

The two sides agreed a mechanism last week to unblock millions of tonnes of grain trapped by a Russian blockade of Ukrainian ports - an accord called into question by Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Odessa port within 24 hours. Kyiv insists it is still preparing for the first ships to leave and said on Monday that it hopes to restart exports ‘this week’.

The blockage of deliveries from two of the world’s biggest grain exporters has contribute­d to a spike in prices that has made food imports prohibitiv­ely expensive for some of the world’s poorest countries.

Erdogan wants Turkey - on good terms with both Kyiv and Moscow - at the centre of diplomatic efforts to halt the fivemonth war.

Russian news agencies - citing Moscow’s embassy in Ankara - said on Wednesday that a previously announced meeting between Erdogan and Russian leader Vladimir Putin would take place next Friday in Sochi.

 ?? (aFp) ?? Ukrainian firefighte­rs arrive in front of a burning house hit by a shell on the outskirts of Bakhmut, in eastern Ukraine on Wednesday
(aFp) Ukrainian firefighte­rs arrive in front of a burning house hit by a shell on the outskirts of Bakhmut, in eastern Ukraine on Wednesday

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