Bangkok Post

Russia admits ‘difficulti­es’ in annexed areas

Putin orders security surveillan­ce boosted

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President Vladimir Putin said the situation in four areas of Ukraine that Moscow has declared are part of Russia was “extremely difficult” and ordered security services to step up surveillan­ce to secure its borders and combat new threats.

Mr Putin’s comments made on Security Services

Day, widely celebrated in Russia, came as Kyiv renewed calls for more weapons after Russian drones hit energy targets and as fears grow that Moscow’s ally Belarus could open a new invasion front against Ukraine.

Mr Putin ordered the Federal Security Services (FSB) to step up surveillan­ce of Russian society and the country’s borders to combat the “emergence of new threats” from abroad and traitors at home.

In a rare admission of the invasion of Ukraine not going smoothly, Mr Putin cautioned about the difficult situation in Ukraine’s regions that Moscow moved to annex in September and ordered the FSB to ensure the “safety” of people living there.

“The situation in the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics, in the Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia regions is extremely difficult,” Mr Putin said late on Monday in comments translated by Reuters.

In September, a defiant Mr Putin moved to annex a swathe of Ukraine — some 15% of the country — in a Kremlin ceremony, but earlier this month, he said the war “can be a long process.”

Mr Putin’s move to annex the areas was condemned by Kyiv and its Western allies as illegal.

On Monday, Mr Putin made his first visit to Belarus since 2019, where he and his counterpar­t extolled ever-closer ties at a news conference late in the evening but hardly mentioned Ukraine.

Kyiv, meanwhile, was seeking more weapons from the West after Russian “kamikaze” drones hit energy targets early on Monday.

“Weapons, shells, new defence capabiliti­es... everything that will give us the ability to speed up the end to this war,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his evening address.

The Ukrainian military high command said their air defences had shot down 23 of 28 drones — most over the capital Kyiv — in what was Moscow’s third air strike in six days. Russia has targeted Ukraine’s power grid, causing blackouts amid sub-zero temperatur­es.

The “kamikaze” drones used in the attacks are cheaply produced, disposable unmanned aircraft that fly toward their target before plummeting at speed and detonating on impact.

To the northwest of Ukraine, there has been constant Russian and Belarusian military activity for months in Belarus, a close Kremlin ally that Moscow’s troops used as a launch pad for their abortive attack on Kyiv in February.

Mr Putin’s trip to Minsk has stirred fears in Ukraine about the involvemen­t of Belarusian forces in the invasion. The Kremlin on Monday dismissed the suggestion that Mr Putin wanted to push Belarus into a more active role. RIA Novosti quoted Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov as saying such reports were “groundless”.

 ?? AFP ?? A local resident walks past a row of damaged buildings in the Russiancon­trolled Ukrainian city of Mariupol on Monday.
AFP A local resident walks past a row of damaged buildings in the Russiancon­trolled Ukrainian city of Mariupol on Monday.
 ?? ?? Putin: Warns of long conflict
Putin: Warns of long conflict

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