Western Mail

Ukraine hopes for more evacuation­s from steel mill as scores reach safety

- LORI HINNANT, MSTYSLAV CHERNOV and VASILISA STEPANENKO newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

UKRAINIAN officials and the United Nations say they hope to arrange more evacuation­s from the bombed-out steel mill in Mariupol.

Their comments came as scores of civilians reached relative safety after enduring weeks of shelling that targeted the city’s last pocket of resistance.

While the evacuees savoured hot food, clean clothing and other comforts that were denied to them while undergroun­d, Russian forces on Tuesday began storming the plant, where some Ukrainian fighters were still holed up.

Thanks to the evacuation effort over the weekend, 101 people – including women, the elderly, and 17 children, the youngest six months old – emerged from the bunkers under the Azovstal steelworks to “see the daylight after two months”, said Osnat Lubrani, the UN humanitari­an coordinato­r for Ukraine.

One evacuee said she went to sleep at the plant every night afraid she would not wake up.

“You can’t imagine how scary it is when you sit in the bomb shelter, in a damp and wet basement, and it is bouncing and shaking,” 54-year-old Elina Tsybulchen­ko said upon arriving in the Ukrainian-controlled city of Zaporizhzh­ia, about 140 miles (230 kilometres) north west of Mariupol, in a convoy of buses and ambulances.

She said if the shelter was hit by a bomb like the ones that left the huge craters she saw on the two occasions she ventured outside, “all of us would be done”.

Evacuees, a few of whom were in tears, made their way from the buses into a tent offering food, nappies and connection­s to the outside world. Some of the evacuees browsed racks of donated clothing, including new underwear.

The news for those left behind was more grim. Ukrainian commanders said Russian forces backed by tanks began storming the sprawling plant, which includes a maze of tunnels and bunkers spread out over four square miles (11 square kilometres).

It was unclear how many Ukrainian fighters were still inside, but the Russians put the number at about 2,000 in recent weeks, and 500 were reported to be wounded. A few hundred civilians also remained there, Ukrainian deputy prime minister Iryna Vereshchuk said.

“We’ll do everything that’s possible to repel the assault, but we’re calling for urgent measures to evacuate the civilians that remain inside the plant and to bring them out safely,” Sviatoslav Palamar, deputy commander of Ukraine’s Azov Regiment, said on the messaging app Telegram.

He added that throughout the night, the plant was hit with naval artillery fire and airstrikes. Two civilian women were killed and 10 civilians were wounded, he said.

Ms Lubrani expressed hope for further evacuation­s but said none had been worked out.

In his nightly video address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that by storming the steel mill, Russian forces violated agreements for safe evacuation­s. He said the prior evacuation­s are “not a victory yet, but it’s already a result. I believe there’s still a chance to save other people.”

In other battlefiel­d developmen­ts, Russian troops shelled a chemical plant in the eastern city of Avdiivka, killing at least 10 people, Donetsk regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said.

“The Russians knew exactly where to aim – the workers just finished their shift and were waiting for a bus at a bus stop to take them home,” Mr Kyrylenko wrote in a Telegram post. “Another cynical crime by Russians on our land.”

Explosions were also heard in Lviv, in western Ukraine, near the Polish border. The strikes damaged three power substation­s, knocking out electricit­y in parts of the city and disrupting the water supply, and wounded two people, the mayor said. Lviv has been a gateway for Nato-supplied weapons and a haven for those fleeing the fighting in the east.

Russian Defence Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenko­v said Russian aircraft and artillery had hit hundreds of targets in the past day, including troop stronghold­s, command posts, artillery positions, fuel and ammunition depots and radar equipment.

Ukrainian authoritie­s said the Russians had also attacked at least six railway stations around the country.

The assault on the Azovstal steelworks began almost two weeks after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his military not to storm the plant to finish off the defenders but to seal it off.

The first – and so far only – civilians to be evacuated from the shattered plant got out during a brief ceasefire in an operation overseen by the UN and the Red Cross.

At a reception centre in Zaporizhzh­ia, stretchers and wheelchair­s were lined up, and children’s shoes and toys awaited. Medical and psychologi­cal teams were on standby.

Some of the elderly evacuees appeared exhausted as they arrived. Some of the younger people, especially mothers comforting babies and other children, appeared relieved.

“I’m very glad to be on Ukrainian soil,” said a woman who gave only her first name, Anna, and arrived with two children, aged one and nine.

“We thought we wouldn’t get out of there, frankly speaking.”

The arrival of the evacuees was a rare piece of good news in the nearly10-week conflict that has killed thousands, forced millions to flee the country, laid waste towns and cities, and shifted the post-Cold War balance of power in Eastern Europe.

In addition to the 101 people evacuated from the steelworks, 58 joined the convoy in a town on the outskirts of Mariupol, Ms Lubrani said.

She added that about 30 people who left the plant decided to stay behind in Mariupol to try to find out whether or not their loved ones were alive, with a total of 127 evacuees arriving in Zaporizhzh­ia.

The Russian military said earlier that some of the evacuees chose to stay in areas held by pro-Moscow separatist­s.

Mariupol has come to symbolise the human misery inflicted by the war. The Russians’ two-month siege of the strategic southern port has trapped civilians with little or no food, water, medicine or heat, as Moscow’s forces pounded the city into rubble.

The plant in particular has transfixed the outside world.

After failing to take Kyiv in the early weeks of the war, Russia withdrew from around the capital and announced that its chief objective was the capture of Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland, known as the Donbas.

Mariupol lies in the region, and its fall would deprive Ukraine of a vital port, allow Russia to establish a land corridor to the Crimean Peninsula, which it seized from Ukraine in 2014, and free up troops for fighting elsewhere in the Donbas.

But so far, Russia’s troops and their allied separatist forces appear to have made only minor gains in the eastern offensive.

Meanwhile, the European Union’s leader has called on the 27-nation bloc to ban oil imports from Russia in a sixth package of sanctions targeting Moscow for its war in Ukraine.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen also proposed that Sberbank, Russia’s largest bank, and two other major banks be disconnect­ed from the Swift internatio­nal banking payment system.

Ms von der Leyen, addressing the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, called on the EU’s member nations to phase out imports of crude oil within six months and refined products by the end of the year.

“We will make sure that we phase out Russian oil in an orderly fashion, in a way that allows us and our partners to secure alternativ­e supply routes and minimises the impact on global markets,” said Ms von der Leyen.

The proposals need to be unanimousl­y approved to take effect and are likely to be the subject of fierce debate.

Ms von der Leyen conceded that getting all 27 member countries – some of them landlocked and highly dependent on Russia for energy supplies – to agree on oil sanctions “will not be easy”.

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 ?? ?? > This satellite image taken by Planet Labs PBC yesterday shows extensive damage at the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol
> This satellite image taken by Planet Labs PBC yesterday shows extensive damage at the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol
 ?? ?? > Vehicles ablaze at an oil depot yesterday after missiles struck the facility in an area controlled by Russian-backed separatist forces in Makiivka, 15km east of Donetsk, eastern Ukraine
> Vehicles ablaze at an oil depot yesterday after missiles struck the facility in an area controlled by Russian-backed separatist forces in Makiivka, 15km east of Donetsk, eastern Ukraine

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