The Citizen (Gauteng)

Russian ceasefire begins

WAR GOALS: MORE SANCTIONS MOOTED AMID THREE-DAY HALT IN ATTACKS

- Zaporizhzh­ia

►► EU pledges to ‘significan­tly increase’ support for besieged country.

ARussian-announced ceasefire was due to begin yesterday at the besieged steel plant in the devastated Ukrainian city of Mariupol, to allow civilians to flee, even as its defenders vowed to fight to the end.

The three-day halt in Russia’s attack on the Azovstal steelworks was announced as European Union (EU) member states debated a proposed ban on Russian oil, the bloc’s toughest move yet over Moscow’s invasion of its neighbour.

The EU also pledged to “significan­tly increase” support for Ukrainian neighbour Moldova, where a series of attacks in a Russia-backed separatist region has sparked fears a war that has killed thousands could spread more than two months after it began.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday said the bloc would “phase out Russian supply of crude oil within six months and refined products by the end of the year”, a move that would still not touch its huge gas exports.

But within hours, Hungary – whose populist leader Viktor Orban is one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s few EU partners – said it could not support the plan “in this form”, as it would “completely destroy” the security of its energy supply.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba hit back that EU countries blocking an oil embargo would be “complicit” in Russia’s crimes in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s allies have sent money and, increasing­ly, heavy weapons to Kyiv to help it defend itself in a war US President Joe Biden has framed as a historic battle for democracy.

Biden said on Wednesday he was “open” to imposing more sanctions on Russia and would be discussing measures with allies from the Group of Seven democracie­s in the coming days.

Intelligen­ce provided by the US has helped Ukrainian military target “many” of the about a dozen Russian generals who have been killed in the war so far, the New York Times reported on Wednesday.

The US National Security Council slammed the assertion that the United States was helping Ukraine kill Russian generals as “irresponsi­ble”, with a spokespers­on saying US intelligen­ce was aimed at helping “Ukrainians defend their country... we do not provide intelligen­ce with the intent to kill Russian generals.”

Despite severe blows to its economy and the thwarting of its early war goals, Russia continues to steadily pound away at Ukraine’s embattled eastern defences.

After failing to capture Kyiv, Russia’s military campaign is now focused on uniting separatist pro-Russian areas in the east with Crimea, which Moscow seized in 2014.

The strategic southern port of Mariupol has become an emblem of the suffering of the war, with an untold number of dead and basic supplies cut off as Moscow carried out a scorched-earth campaign to wrest control.

We do not provide intelligen­ce with the intent to kill Russian generals

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? FOCUSED. Sasha, nine, a daughter of chaplain Oleg, is guided on Wednesday by her mother Evgenia as she attends online schooling with a smartphone at the charity centre managed by the pentecosta­l church, Awakening, hosting evacuees from the surroundin­g area near the front line, in Pokrovske, Ukraine.
Picture: AFP FOCUSED. Sasha, nine, a daughter of chaplain Oleg, is guided on Wednesday by her mother Evgenia as she attends online schooling with a smartphone at the charity centre managed by the pentecosta­l church, Awakening, hosting evacuees from the surroundin­g area near the front line, in Pokrovske, Ukraine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa