Business Day

Artillery shells hit Donetsk as Russian aid convoy nears

- THOMAS GROVE Donetsk, Ukraine

ARTILLERY shells hit close to the centre of Ukraine’s separatist-held city of Donetsk for the first time yesterday, killing at least one person, as a large Russian aid convoy rumbled towards the border.

With Ukrainian government forces tightening the noose on pro-Russian separatist­s, shelling rocked Donetsk, sending frightened residents rushing for cover, witnesses said.

It was not immediatel­y clear if the artillery was fired by the government or rebel forces.

Two shells landed 200m from the Park Inn Radisson, one of the city’s main hotels, shattering windows. The blasts opened up a yawning hole on the third floor of an apartment block and left a broad crater on the pavement. Nearby, a body covered by a sheet lay on the blood-stained ground.

A Russian convoy carrying 2,000 tonnes of water, baby food and humanitari­an aid drove through southern Russia towards the frontier — while Kiev repeated it could not enter until Ukrainian authoritie­s had cleared its cargo. The pro-Western Kiev government says the humanitari­an crisis is partly of Moscow’s making and has denounced the dispatch of aid as an act of cynicism. It is also fearful that the operation could become a covert military interventi­on by Moscow to prop up the rebels who appear on the verge of defeat.

Moscow, which denies charges — also voiced by the West — of giving the rebels heavy weapons, has dismissed as “absurd” suggestion­s it could use the convoy as a cover for invasion. By yesterday evening, the convoy had stopped near Kamensk- Shakhtinsk­y, and one of the drivers told Reuters it would be heading to the crossing point at Izvarine, which is held by the Ukrainian rebels.

If this were the case, Ukrainian border guards and customs officers would be unable to conduct proper formalitie­s and make the checks they say are needed on the cargo.

“The cargo will all the same have to be looked at by Ukrainian border guards and transferre­d to representa­tives of the Red Cross,” military spokesman Andriy Lysenko said yesterday. It was not immediatel­y clear how this could happen.

The caravan of 280 trucks left the Moscow region on Tuesday, looking to take aid to the Luhansk region, in eastern Ukraine, where the main city is held by the separatist­s.

Even if the convoy was to enter Ukraine via Izvarine, it would not be able to get to Luhansk city without encounteri­ng government troops at Novosvitli­vka, a settlement which Kiev forces took only yesterday.

“Ukrainian forces have closed the last possibilit­y for road communicat­ions between Luhansk and other territorie­s which are controlled by Russian mercenarie­s — in particular, Izvarine,” Mr Lysenko said.

Relief agencies say people living in Luhansk and in Donetsk are facing shortages of water, food and electricit­y after four-months of conflict in which the United Nations says more than 2,000 people have been killed.

Ukrainian troops have been slowly encircling Donetsk, which had a peace- time population of nearly 1-million.

Mr Lysenko said a further nine Ukrainian servicemen had been killed in the past 24 hours up to yesterday afternoon. Regional health authoritie­s said 15 people, including three children, were killed by a shell which hit a public transport depot at Zurges, east of Donetsk, on Wednesday.

In Donetsk yesterday, people poured out of offices into the stairwell of the city’s main administra­tion building after loud explosions nearby triggered an evacuation warning. A short while later, the whistling sound of incoming shells were swiftly followed by at least two further blasts.

“It came straight into the apartment. Thank God I was not in the kitchen,” said Liliya Chalina, who lived in the apartment block whose wall was smashed by a projectile.

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