The Star Early Edition

‘Western aid cannot prevent a Russian victory’

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WESTERN aid to Kyiv had slowed their offensive in Ukraine but would not thwart its victory, Russia said yesterday, as conflictin­g reports emerged about efforts to rescue civilians from a besieged steel plant in the devastated city of Mariupol.

Nearly 10 weeks into a war that has left thousands of people dead, flattened Ukrainian cities and uprooted more than 13 million people, the Kremlin conceded that Western countries had prevented a “quick” end to Russia’s military campaign.

“The United States, Britain, Nato, as a whole, hand over intelligen­ce... to Ukraine’s armed forces on a permanent basis,” Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov said.

“Coupled with the flow of weapons that these countries are sending to Ukraine, these are all actions that do not contribute to the quick completion of the operation,” he said.

The outside help, neverthele­ss, was “incapable of hindering the achievemen­t” of the goals of Russia’s military operation, he said.

Peskov was responding to a New York Times article on Wednesday that said intelligen­ce provided by the US had helped the Ukrainian military target “many” of the approximat­ely dozen Russian generals who have been killed in the war.

Since failing to take Kyiv early in its invasion, which Moscow launched on February 24, Russia has focused its efforts on the east and south of Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has tirelessly campaigned for help from allies, launched a global crowdfundi­ng platform yesterday to help Kyiv win the war and rebuild the country’s infrastruc­ture.

“In one click, you can donate funds to protect our defenders, to save our civilians and to rebuild Ukraine,” Zelensky said in English in a video on his Twitter page, launching the United24 platform. “Every donation matters for victory,” he said.

Russian forces are on the verge of taking full control of the strategica­lly important port of Mariupol, where Ukrainian troops holed up in the besieged Azovstal steelworks are making their land stand.

Hundreds of soldiers and civilians have been trapped in the factory’s Soviet-era undergroun­d tunnels in what has become the last pocket of resistance in the area.

Russia was “trying to destroy” the remaining Ukrainian units at the sprawling complex, Kyiv’s army said in a statement.

“With the support of aircraft, Russia resumed the offensive in order to take control of the plant,” it said.

Russia’s defence ministry on Wednesday announced a daytime ceasefire for three days at the steelworks to evacuate civilians from the plant, starting yesterday morning.

Peskov said yesterday that humanitari­an corridors to get civilians out of Azovstal were “functionin­g today”.

But there was no confirmati­on of the evacuation­s by the Ukrainian side.

About 340 people hadalready evacuated in a second rescue operation at the plant earlier this week. They were taken to the Ukrainian-controlled Zaporizhzh­ia, Zelensky said on Wednesday.

About 200 civilians are still believed to be stuck inside the huge plant, according to Vadym Boichenko, the mayor of Mariupol.

Zelensky said Ukraine was “ready” to support a ceasefire, and that women and children were among those awaiting rescue. He also asked UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to help “save” wounded troops in Azovstal.

Capturing the southern port of Mariupol, battered by relentless bombardmen­t, would allow Russia to create a land bridge between separatist, pro-Russian regions in the east and Crimea, which Moscow annexed in 2014.

The Ukrainian army, meanwhile, said it had retaken control of “several settlement­s on the border of Mykolaiv and Kherson regions”.

As well as sending money and weapons to Ukraine, Kyiv’s Western allies have imposed unpreceden­ted sanctions on Russia to punish it for the invasion.

The EU has proposed a gradual ban on Russian oil imports, in what would be the bloc’s toughest move yet.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said the EU 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.

Hungary – whose populist leader Viktor Orban is one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s few European 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 said EU countries blocking an oil embargo would be “complicit” in Russia’s crimes in Ukraine.

As May 9 approaches – the day when Russia marks the Soviet Union’s victory over the Nazis in World War II – Ukraine suspects that Russia is planning to hold a military parade in Mariupol.

EU chief Charles Michel, meanwhile, told the Interfax-Ukraine news agency that the bloc should confiscate and sell the Russian assets it had seized and use the proceeds to rebuild Ukraine.

He is the first high-ranking EU official to propose the confiscati­on of oligarchs’ assets, his spokesman said.

The suggestion echoes an idea already floated in the US and comes as EU and US task forces hunt down and grab yachts, mansions, bank accounts, helicopter­s and artworks owned by Russian oligarchs sanctioned by the West.

Last month, Ukraine’s government estimated the cost of rebuilding after the war to be at least $600 billion. |

 ?? AFP ?? A WOMAN collects debris to throw outside an apartment yesterday. The building in Kramatorsk was damaged by a missile amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. |
AFP A WOMAN collects debris to throw outside an apartment yesterday. The building in Kramatorsk was damaged by a missile amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. |

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