The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Putin’s child massacre revealed as his army hit by worst rout in 80 years

- By Mark Hookham and Askold Krushelnyc­ky IN KYIV

RUSSIA was this weekend facing its worst military battlefiel­d defeat in 80 years, as chilling details emerged of fresh Russian atrocities against Ukrainian civilians.

Triumphant Ukrainian soldiers yesterday raised their country’s flag at the entrance to the strategica­lly vital town of Lyman, just days after Vladimir Putin brazenly annexed four occupied Ukrainian regions.

Some of Putin’s troops are believed to be trapped in Lyman, a major logistics hub, after they were encircled by Ukraine’s lightning advance. They face having to surrender or fight their way out in a move that would probably see them suffer huge losses.

But the breakthrou­gh in eastern Ukraine came as new reports of Russian atrocities emerged and fears grew that a humiliated Vladimir Putin could resort to using nuclear weapons. At least 24 civilians, including 13 children and a pregnant woman, were gunned down during a Russian attack on a road conbut voy, Ukraine claimed.

Ukraine troops showed reporters a group of vehicles riddled with bullet holes and several corpses in civilian clothes near the recently recaptured town of Kupiansk in north-east Ukraine.

‘Russians fired on civilians at close range,’ regional governor Oleg Synegubov said.

The region’s prosecutor’s office said Russian troops had opened fire on a convoy of seven cars as civilians attempted to flee the fighting.

‘The car queue was shot by the

Russian army on September 25,

‘Russian forces fired on civilians at close range’

when civilians were trying to evacuate,’ a statement from the office said. ‘Two cars have burnt completely with children and their parents inside.’ Meanwhile, in comments that will stoke fears of even further horrors, Ramzan Kadyrov, one of Putin’s henchmen and the head of Russia’s region of Chechnya, yesterday said Moscow should consider using a low-yield nuclear weapon in Ukraine.

In a message on Telegram criticisin­g Russian commanders for abandoning Lyman, Kadyrov wrote: ‘In my personal opinion, more drastic measures should be taken, right up to the declaratio­n of martial law in the border areas and the use of low-yield nuclear weapons.’ His disturbing comments came as: l Air-raid warnings sounded in Kyiv yesterday as Ukraine braced for a barrage of missile attacks in retaliatio­n for Russia’s losses in the east of the country; l Russian forces ‘almost certainly’ struck a humanitari­an convoy in the southern Zaporizhzh­ia region last Friday, according to the UK Ministry of Defence. At least 30 people in civilian vehicles were killed in the attack; l The head of the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant was detained by Russian troops as part of an apparent plot to transfer the site to Russian energy firm Rosatam; l Explosions were reported at a Russian air base in Crimea.

Serhii Cherevatyi, a spokesman for Ukraine’s forces in the east, yesterday said Russian units in Lyman are ‘surrounded’ and that villages around the town had been recaptured. Up to 5,500 Russian troops were previously in Lyman the number trapped is unknown as some retreated, or were killed, before the encircleme­nt.

Mr Cherevatyi said that Ukrainian forces controlled most routes out of the city and some Russian attempts to break out ‘had not been very successful’. Russia’s defence ministry later said it had withdrawn its troops from the town.

A Russian government news agency announced: ‘In connection with the threat of encircleme­nt the allied [Russian] forces were withdrawn from Lyman to more advantageo­us defences.’ Footage posted on social media by President Volodymyr Zelensky’s head of office Andriy Yermak showed

Ukrainian soldiers raising their blue-and-yellow national flag on the edge of the town.

The town will now be used as a staging post as Kyiv attempts to advance into the Luhansk region.

Professor Michael Clarke, former director-general of the Royal United Services Institute thinktank, said Russia had suffered its biggest battlefiel­d setback since defeats to Nazi Germany in 1943.

‘They haven’t had a brigade-level defeat like this since the Second World War. They were defeated in Afghanista­n but that was a guerrilla war.’

Prof Clarke said Kadyrov’s comments about nuclear weapons did not increase the likelihood that such devastatin­g weapons will be used. ‘He is borderline insane. He thinks he has enormous influence in Russia – and he doesn’t. We are a long, long way from the use of tactical nuclear weapons.’

The United States has warned there would be ‘catastroph­ic consequenc­es’ for Russia if it used nuclear weapons. A Ukrainian source close to the presidenti­al administra­tion said Ukraine believes that Putin would first use other weapons of mass destructio­n, such as chemical weapons.

Ukraine’s retaking of Lyman comes after Moscow used rigged referendum­s to illegally seize Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia in eastern Ukraine on Friday.

A western security source said that the annexation of the four Ukrainian regions and Kyiv’s battlefiel­d successes ‘make this the most dangerous period of the conflict since it began last February’.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? ATROCITY: Bodies being removed from a road in the southern Zaporizhzh­ia where Russians missiles ‘almost certainly’ hit a civilian convoy last Friday. Below: Charred vehicles at the site
ATROCITY: Bodies being removed from a road in the southern Zaporizhzh­ia where Russians missiles ‘almost certainly’ hit a civilian convoy last Friday. Below: Charred vehicles at the site
 ?? ?? JUBILANT: Troops raise a Ukrainian flag in the city of Lyman in eastern Ukraine yesterday
JUBILANT: Troops raise a Ukrainian flag in the city of Lyman in eastern Ukraine yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom