Gulf Times

Fighting traps civilians in Ukraine plant

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Scores of Ukrainian civilians, including women and children, were trapped yesterday in undergroun­d bunkers at a steel works in the ruined port city of Mariupol, although President Vladimir Putin said Russia was ready to allow them to leave safely.

He told Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in a phone call that Kyiv should order Ukrainian fighters defending the besieged Azovstal plant to disarm, and Russia was still prepared to provide safe passage out for civilians.

Ukrainian defenders at the site have clung on desperatel­y for weeks, and while some civilians have made it to safety via humanitari­an corridors, about 200 others, Ukrainian officials say, remain inside with little food, water or medicine.

The Kremlin earlier denied that Russian forces were storming the Sovietera plant, referring to an April 21 order from Putin that they should seal it off but not venture inside its labyrinth of undergroun­d tunnels.

However, a Ukrainian fighter who said he was holed up in the vast complex – the last part of the city still in Ukrainian hands – accused Russian forces of breaching the plant’s defences for a third day in violation of an earlier pledge by Moscow to pause military activity to permit civilian evacuation­s.

“Heavy, bloody fighting is going on,” said Captain Sviatoslav Palamar, a deputy commander of Ukraine’s Azov Regiment, in a video posted online.

“Yet again, the Russians have not kept the promise of a ceasefire and have not given an opportunit­y for the civilians who seek shelter ... in basements of the plant to evacuate,” he said.

Reuters could not independen­tly verify his account or from where he was speaking.

The United Nations meanwhile said that a new convoy was en route to evacuate civilians from the “hell” of a besieged steel plant in Mariupol.

Despite the uncertaint­y, UN humanitari­an chief Martin Griffiths said a rescue convoy was on its way.

“A convoy is proceeding to get to Azovstal by tomorrow morning hopefully to receive those civilians remaining in that bleak hell ... and take them back to safety,” he told a Ukraine’s donor conference in Warsaw.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) confirmed to AFP “that a safe passage operation is ongoing” in co-ordination with the UN.

The two organisati­ons already worked together to evacuate some 100 civilians from the plant at the weekend.

Ukraine’s stubborn defence of Azovstal has underlined Russia’s failure to take major cities in a 10-week-old war that has united Western powers in arming Kyiv and punishing Moscow with sanctions.

In what would be a major historic shift sure to infuriate Moscow, Sweden and Finland may shortly decide to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato).

Russia’s military promised to pause its activity in Azovstal during the daytime yesterday and the next two days to allow civilians to leave, after fighting prevented evacuation­s from the plant on Wednesday.

The Kremlin said humanitari­an corridors from the plant were in place.

Pictures released by Russian-backed fighters appeared to show smoke and flames enveloping the complex.

In an early morning address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine stood ready to ensure a ceasefire.

“It will take time simply to lift people out of those basements, out of those undergroun­d shelters,” he said. “In the present conditions, we cannot use heavy equipment to clear the rubble away. It all has to be done by hand.”

Ukraine’s military general staff said the assault on the plant included air support.

The chief commander of Ukraine’s armed forces said they needed multiple launch rocket systems to defend against resumed Russian cruise missile strikes around the country.

Russia has in recent days attacked railways, weapons dumps and fuel depots.

The US Congress is debating an aid package for Ukraine worth $33bn, largely for weapons.

If it gets more supplies, Ukraine could launch a counter-offensive in midJune, an adviser to Zelensky said.

Mariupol is an important target in Russian efforts to cut Ukraine off from its coastal grain and metals export routes, as well as to link Russiancon­trolled territory in the east of the country to Crimea, seized by Moscow in 2014.

“God forbid more shells hit near the bunkers where the civilians are,” said Tetyana Trotsak, an Azovstal evacuee among dozens who reached a Ukrainecon­trolled town this week, describing her two-and-a-half hour walk to get across a short stretch of ground at the plant strewn with rubble.

Sweden and Finland, which shares a 1,300km border with Russia, stayed out of the Nato during the Cold War, but Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine has prompted a rethink of security needs.

Putin embarked on the war partly to counter the expansion of Nato.

Sweeping sanctions from Washington and European allies have hobbled Russia’s $1.8tn economy, while billions of dollars worth of military aid has helped Ukraine frustrate the invasion.

European Union countries are “almost there” in agreeing the bloc’s proposed new package of sanctions against Russia, including an oil embargo, the bloc’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said.

The Kremlin said Russia was weighing responses to the plan.

Ukraine and Russia said fighting had been heavy across the south and east over the past day.

Ukrainian authoritie­s reported shelling of towns near a frontline that divides territory it holds in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions from land held by Russian-backed separatist­s.

The Ukrainian air force said it had downed three Russian cruise missiles and four aircraft, including two Sukhoi fighter jets, while Russia said it had killed 600 Ukrainian soldiers overnight.

Reuters could not independen­tly either report.

Ukrainian officials have warned that Russia might step up its offensive before May 9, when Moscow commemorat­es the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War II.

Russia calls its actions a “special military operation” to disarm Ukraine and protect it from fascists.

Ukraine and the West say the fascist allegation is baseless and that the war is an unprovoked act of aggression.

More than 5mn Ukrainians have fled abroad since the start of the invasion.

 ?? ?? Interior ministers Denys Monastyrsk­y (Ukraine), Mariusz Kaminski (Poland), Kristian Jaani (Estonia), Agne Bilotaite (Lithuania) and Marija Golubeva (Latvia) are seen yesterday in front of an Antonov An-225 Mriya cargo plane, the world’s biggest aircraft, destroyed by Russian troops, at an airfield in the town of Hostomel, in Kyiv region.
Interior ministers Denys Monastyrsk­y (Ukraine), Mariusz Kaminski (Poland), Kristian Jaani (Estonia), Agne Bilotaite (Lithuania) and Marija Golubeva (Latvia) are seen yesterday in front of an Antonov An-225 Mriya cargo plane, the world’s biggest aircraft, destroyed by Russian troops, at an airfield in the town of Hostomel, in Kyiv region.

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