The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Russia shells eastern Ukraine

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At least three Ukrainian civilians have been killed and nearly 20 others wounded in the latest artillery barrages from the Russian military, Ukrainian officials said yesterday.

The eastern region of Donetsk, one of the two provinces making up the country’s industrial heartland of Donbas that has been the focus of a Russian offensive, has faced the most intense shelling.

Regional officials said at least three people died and another 13 were wounded by Russian shelling that hit numerous towns and villages in the Donetsk region during the last 24 hours. The barrage has damaged dozens of residentia­l buildings and civilian infrastruc­ture.

In the country’s secondlarg­est city of Kharkiv, five civilians were wounded in the latest Russian shelling early yesterday, according to the city’s mayor, Ihor Terekhov. The Russian forces also struck several other regions of Ukraine with rockets and artillery.

For their part, the Ukrainian military claimed to have destroyed more than 10 Russian warehouses with ammunition and military equipment in the past week.

Meanwhile, the Ukrainian parliament, Verkhovna Rada, extended martial law and the country’s general mobilisati­on for another 90 days. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sunday: “Ukraine has always longed and longs for peace and many times in various negotiatio­n formats has offered the Russian leadership to end the war and free Ukrainian land from occupation.

“But so far, Russia believes in terror, remains in the grip of its propaganda illusions and still hopes that it can supposedly achieve something through various forms of blackmail. It won’t.”

He emphasised that “we must defend ourselves”, adding that “the stronger Ukraine will be, the weaker Russia will be, and therefore, the less time this war will last”. He also dismissed the heads of three regional branches of Ukraine’s top security agency, SBU, in the Kyiv, Lviv and Tarnopil regions.

Mr Zelensky’s office did not elaborate on the reasons behind the move.

Last month, he dismissed SBU chief Ivan Bakanov and a chief prosecutor, saying their department­s had too many people who faced accusation­s of collaborat­ing with the Russians.

 ?? ?? AFTERMATH: An expert of the State Emergency Service searches in a crater for fragments of a Russian missile for identifica­tion purposes after overnight shelling in Kharkiv.
AFTERMATH: An expert of the State Emergency Service searches in a crater for fragments of a Russian missile for identifica­tion purposes after overnight shelling in Kharkiv.

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