Hamilton Journal News

The fall of Mariupol appears at hand, as fighters leave plant

- By Oleksandr Stashevsky­i and Ciaran Mcquillan

KYIV, UKRAINE — Mariupol appeared on the verge of falling to the Russians on Tuesday as Ukraine moved to abandon the steel plant where hundreds of its fighters had held out for months under relentless bombardmen­t in the last bastion of resistance in the devastated city.

The capture of Mariupol would make it the biggest city to be taken by Moscow’s forces in the war yet and would give the Kremlin a badly needed victory, though the landscape has largely been reduced to rubble.

More than 260 Ukrainian fighters — some of them seriously wounded and taken out on stretchers — left the ruins of the Azovstal plant on Monday and turned themselves over to the Russian side in a deal negotiated by the warring parties. Ukrainian authoritie­s said they were working to extract the remaining soldiers from the sprawling steel mill. They would not say how many were still there.

While Russia called it a surrender, the Ukrainians avoided that word and instead said the plant’s garrison had successful­ly completed its mission to tie down Russian forces and was under new orders.

“To save their lives, Ukraine needs them. This is the main thing,” Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said.

The Ukrainians expressed hope that the fighters would be exchanged for Russian prisoners of war. But Vyacheslav Volodin, speaker of the lower house of the Russian parliament, said without evidence that there were “war criminals” among the defenders and that they should not be exchanged but tried.

The operation to abandon the steel plant and its labyrinth of tunnels and bunkers signaled the beginning of the end of a nearly threemonth siege that turned Mariupol into a worldwide symbol of both defiance and suffering.

The Russian bombardmen­t killed over 20,000 civilians, according to the Ukrainian side, and left the remaining inhabitant­s — perhaps one-quarter of the southern port city’s prewar population of 430,000 — with little food, water, heat or medicine.

During the siege, Russian forces launched lethal airstrikes on a maternity hospital and a theater where civilians had taken shelter. Close to 600 people may have been killed at the theater.

Gaining full control of Mariupol would give Russia an unbroken land bridge to the Crimean Peninsula, which it seized from Ukraine in 2014, and deprive Ukraine of a vital port. It could also free up Russian forces to fight elsewhere in the Donbas, the eastern industrial heartland that the Kremlin is bent on capturing.

And it would give Russia a victory after repeated setbacks on the battlefiel­d and the diplomatic front, beginning with the abortive attempt to storm Kyiv, the capital.

Ukrainian presidenti­al adviser Mykhailo Podolyak likened the Ukrainian defenders to the vastly outnumbere­d Spartans who held out against Persian forces in ancient Greece. “83 days of Mariupol defense will go down in history as the Thermopyla­e of the XXI century,” he tweeted.

 ?? RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE VIA AP ?? Wounded Ukrainian servicemen lay in a bus as they are being evacuated from the besieged Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine, as shown in a photo taken from video released by the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on Tuesday.
RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE VIA AP Wounded Ukrainian servicemen lay in a bus as they are being evacuated from the besieged Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine, as shown in a photo taken from video released by the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on Tuesday.

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