Sunday Sun

Putin warns third parties over creating a no-fly zone

MOVE ‘WOULD SIGNAL WAR PARTICIPAT­ION’

- By Yurus Karmanau Associated Press

PRESIDENT Vladimir Putin has warned that Russia would consider any third-party declaratio­n of a nofly zone over Ukraine as participat­ion in the war there, while Ukrainian officials blamed Russian shelling for breaching a ceasefire arranged in two cities to evacuate civilians.

The struggle to enforce the ceasefire in Mariupol, a strategic port in the south east, and the eastern city of Volnovakha, showed the fragility of efforts to stop fighting across Ukraine, as the number of people fleeing the country reached 1.4 million just 10 days after Russian forces invaded.

Mr Putin accused Ukraine of sabotaging the evacuation and even claimed Ukraine’s leadership was calling into question the future of the country’s statehood, saying that “if this happens, it will be entirely on their conscience”.

Earlier, the Russian defence ministry said it had agreed with Ukraine on evacuation routes out of Volnovakha and Mariupol, the site of growing misery amid an ongoing assault that created desperate scenes at hospitals and raised the prospect of food and water shortages for hundreds of thousands of people in freezing weather.

In comments carried on Ukrainian television, Mariupol mayor Vadym Boychenko said thousands of people had gathered for safe passage out of the city and buses were departing when shelling began.

“We value the life of every inhabitant of Mariupol and we cannot risk it, so we stopped the evacuation,” he said.

Before Russia announced the ceasefire, Ukraine had urged Moscow to create humanitari­an corridors to allow children, women and older adults to flee the fighting.

Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov yesterday said Russia was ready for a third round of talks on that and other issues, but he said that “the Ukrainian side, the most interested side here, it would seem, is constantly making up various pretexts

to delay the beginning another meeting”.

While a vast Russian armoured column threatenin­g Ukraine’s capital remained stalled outside Kyiv, the shelling in Mariupol showed Russia’s determinat­ion to cut Ukraine off from access to the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, further damaging the country’s economy.

Even in cities that have fallen to the Russians, there were signs of resistance – peaceful or otherwise.

As homes in the northern city of Chernihiv burned from what locals blamed on the Russian shelling that has targeted Ukraine’s urban areas from the start, Ukrainian officials released images showing a Russian plane they said was shot down there.

Presidenti­al adviser Oleksiy Arestovich said the situation was

generally quiet yesterday and Russian forces “have not taken active actions since the morning.”

Instead it was Mr Putin who was most on the offensive with his comments warning against a wider war.

Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky has pleaded for a no-fly zone over his country and lashed out at Nato for refusing to impose one, warning that “all the people who die from this day forward will also die because of you”.

Nato has said a no-fly zone, which would bar all unauthoris­ed aircraft from flying over Ukraine, could provoke widespread war in Europe.

But as the United States and other Nato members send weapons for Kyiv, the conflict is already drawing in countries far beyond Ukraine’s borders.

 ?? ?? ■ Neighbours and relatives help remove the rubble of a house destroyed with shelling in Markhalivk­a, Ukraine, yesterday
■ Neighbours and relatives help remove the rubble of a house destroyed with shelling in Markhalivk­a, Ukraine, yesterday

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