Cape Argus

Ukraine loses 9 000 troops

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NEARLY 9 000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed since Russia invaded, the country’s top military officer said yesterday, as Moscow accused Kyiv over the assassinat­ion of the daughter of a leading hardliner.

The EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell meanwhile told reporters in Spain that the bloc was considerin­g military training for Ukraine’s forces.

General Valeriy Zaluzhny, Ukraine’s commander-in-chief, said Ukraine’s children needed particular attention “because their fathers have gone to the front and are maybe among the nearly 9 000 heroes who have been killed”.

Zaluzhny’s comments on the Ukrainian death toll, reported by Interfax-Ukraine news agency, was the first indication of Kyiv’s military losses since April.

Tomorrow, Ukraine will mark its independen­ce day, and six months since Russian troops invaded.

After Ukrainian resistance thwarted an early Russian push on the capital Kyiv, Moscow’s forces have focused on gaining ground in the east of the country.

The shockwaves of the war are being felt around the world with soaring energy prices and food shortages.

Russia’s FSB security services on Monday accused Ukraine of being behind Saturday’s car bombing on the outskirts of Moscow that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of hard-line Russian ideologue Alexander Dugin.

“The crime was prepared and committed by Ukrainian special services,” the FSB said in a statement yesterday carried by Russian news agencies.

Russian President Vladimir Putin denounced the “vile crime” in a message of condolence to her family.

The FSB statement said the person responsibl­e was a Ukrainian woman born in 1979 who had rented an apartment in the same building where Dugina lived.

After the car bombing, she had fled to EU member Estonia, it added.

Alexander Dugin, 60, is an outspoken Russian ultranatio­nalist intellectu­al who enthusiast­ically backs Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as did his daughter. Russian media reports suggest Dugina had borrowed her father’s car at the last minute.

Over the weekend, Ukrainian presidenti­al adviser Mykhaylo Podolyak denied that Kyiv had had anything to do with the bombing.

In Spain, Borrell told reporters that EU defence ministers would next week discuss launching a major training operation for Ukrainian forces in nearby countries.

“It seems reasonable that a war that is lasting and looks set to last requires an effort not only in terms of supplies of material,” Borrell said.

EU defence ministers have a twoday meeting in Prague from next Monday. “I hope it will be approved,” said Borrell, adding that the details would have to be agreed by all EU member states.

Any such operation would be a step up from the military training that several nations are already providing to Ukrainian forces under bilateral agreements.

With much of Europe preparing for fuel shortages as Moscow cuts back its deliveries to the West in response to sanctions, Bulgaria said on Monday it was seeking talks with Russia gas giant Gazprom.

The country is almost totally dependent on Russia for its annual consumptio­n of 3.0 billion cubic metres of natural gas. “We obviously have to turn to them,” said Energy Minister Rosen Hristov.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy warned over the weekend that Russia might mark Ukraine’s independen­ce day by launching a trial of Ukrainian soldiers captured during the siege of Mariupol.

“This will be the line beyond which no negotiatio­ns are possible,” he warned in Sunday’s nightly address.

Kyiv has already announced a ban on public gatherings during the public holiday tomorrow, and the city of Kharkiv, in the east, has declared a curfew.

Ahead of independen­ce day, residents in Kyiv clambered on destroyed Russian tanks put on display in the city centre over the weekend.

 ?? | AFP ?? A MAN looks at a destroyed Russian tank at Khreshchat­yk street in Kyiv, that has been turned into an open-air military museum ahead of Ukraine’s Independen­ce Day tomorrow, amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
| AFP A MAN looks at a destroyed Russian tank at Khreshchat­yk street in Kyiv, that has been turned into an open-air military museum ahead of Ukraine’s Independen­ce Day tomorrow, amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

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