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Zelensky seeks aid ‘without limits’

West allies ‘not doing enough’ to help Kyiv

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KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has issued a bitter rebuke to the West for not doing enough to help Kyiv win the war, as fierce battles rage in the country’s east and Russian troops draw ever closer to encircling a key industrial city.

Calling for help “without limits”, specifical­ly shipments of heavy weaponry, Mr Zelensky also blasted recent suggestion­s a negotiated peace could include territoria­l concession­s.

Outside the city of Severodone­tsk, now the focal point of Moscow’s renewed offensive in Ukraine’s Donbas region, fighting was “very difficult”, said Lugansk regional governor Sergiy Gaiday.

But the industrial centre has yet to be surrounded, he said in a video posted to Telegram on Wednesday.

Predicting the “coming week will be decisive”, Mr Gaiday added the city was being subjected to a “colossal amount of shelling” by Russian troops attempting to batter it into submission.

Earlier in the day, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told attendees at the World Economic Forum in Davos his country “badly” needs multiplela­unch rocket systems to match Russian firepower in the battle for Donbas.

Mr Zelensky echoed that plea from Kyiv.

“We need the help of our partners — above all, weapons for Ukraine. Full help, without exceptions, without limits, enough to win,” Mr Zelensky said in his daily address to the nation.

‘KISSINGER’S CALENDAR’

Saying the world had been unprepared “for Ukrainian bravery”, Mr Zelensky called out the internatio­nal community on Wednesday for paying too much attention to Russia’s interests and too little to Ukraine’s.

He took specific aim at former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and The New York Times for suggesting territoria­l sacrifices might be necessary to end the conflict.

Mr Kissinger, the 98-year-old champion of realpoliti­k, this week told World Economic Forum attendees in Davos that a return to the “status quo” before Russia’s Feb 24 invasion would be ideal. Russia had formally annexed Crimea in 2014, while separatist groups aligned with Moscow have long controlled the easternmos­t regions of Donetsk and Lugansk.

Pushing Moscow to surrender that territory threatened to turn the conflict into a new, broader war, Kissinger warned, adding that negotiatio­ns needed to begin within two months.

“It seems Mr Kissinger’s calendar is not 2022, but 1938,” Mr Zelensky responded, comparing his suggestion to the agreement that ceded part of Czechoslov­akia to Nazi Germany more than 80 years ago.

EXTREMELY HEAVY SHELLING

Since failing in its early objective of capturing Ukraine’s capital, Moscow’s army has plotted a slow but steady course deeper into the country’s eastern Donbas region.

In the eastern town of Soledar, Ukraine’s salt manufactur­ing hub, the ground shook moments after Natalia Timofeyenk­o climbed out of her bunker.

“I go outside just to see people. I know that there is shelling out there but I go,” the 47-year-old said after a thundering blast smashed apart a chunk of a salt mine where she worked with most of her friends and neighbours.

Ghostly frontline towns like Soledar are being hammered by Russian artillery, as they sit along the crucial road that leads out of besieged Severodone­tsk and its sister city Lysychansk.

Twelve people were killed by “extremely heavy shelling and attacks” in the neighbouri­ng region of Donetsk, which also forms part of Donbas, the Ukrainian presidency said.

In a sign the rest of the country remains at risk, Russian cruise missiles struck the major southern rail hub of Zaporizhzh­ia, killing one person and damaging dozens of houses, the presidency added.

HERE FOREVER

Russia is also seeking to tighten its grip over the parts of Ukraine it occupies, including fast-tracking citizenshi­p for residents of two southern regions.

President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday signed a decree simplifyin­g a procedure to obtain a Russian passport for residents of Kherson — which remains under full control of Russian troops — and partly occupied Zaporizhzh­ia. Kyiv called plan a “flagrant violation” of Ukraine’s sovereignt­y.

Moscow-backed officials are also pushing for formal annexation by Russia.

“The simplified system will allow all of us to clearly see that Russia is here not just for a long time but forever,” Kherson’s Moscow-appointed deputy leader Kirill Stremousov told Russian state media.

Underlinin­g the human cost, about 200 bodies were found in the basement of a destroyed building in Mariupol, which fell to Moscow recently after a devastatin­g siege, Ukrainian authoritie­s said.

“It is impossible to be within the area due to the corpse smell,” Ukrainian ombudswoma­n Lyudmyla Denisova wrote on Telegram on Wednesday.

“The occupiers turned the entire Mariupol into a cemetery.”

 ?? AFP ?? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky delivers a statement by video link on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on Wednesday.
AFP Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky delivers a statement by video link on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on Wednesday.
 ?? ?? Kuleba: Seeks more weapons
Kuleba: Seeks more weapons

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