Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. warns Russia plans to annex part of east Ukraine

- Laura King, Tracy Wilkinson and Henry Chu

LVIV, Ukraine — As a trickle of civilians from the brutalized city of Mariupol headed to safety Tuesday, Russian forces pressed their assault on Ukraine’s eastern heartland, striking at targets across a region that U.S. officials warn is under threat of annexation by Moscow.

The Ukrainian military said Tuesday that 12 attacks were repelled overnight in Luhansk and Donetsk, the two districts that make up the eastern industrial Donbas area coveted by Russia. Officials also reported new shelling in Izium and in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which has undergone some of the most vicious assault since the war began Feb. 24. The attacks could not be independen­tly verified.

At the same time, dozens of exhausted residents of Mariupol, the besieged port in southern Ukraine, were en route to the interior city of Zaporizhzh­ia after their rescue from a steelworks where they had taken shelter, along with local fighters. At least 100 civilians have been evacuated from the Azovstal plant since Saturday, but hundreds of other people remain holed up in the sprawling complex, which Russian forces are blockading.

Under the auspices of the United Nations and the Internatio­nal Red Cross, the escapees set out in buses and ambulances for Zaporizhzh­ia, about 140 miles northwest, where aid workers await.

“Things are moving,” said Dorit Nitzan, the World Health Organizati­on’s incident manager for Ukraine, speaking to reporters in Geneva by video. “We know that they are on their way.”

Some evacuees were also reportedly moved to a village under the control of Moscow-backed separatist­s. The Russian state news agency Tass has said that more than 1 million people from war-torn areas of Ukraine have been taken to Russia in the last nine weeks; Ukraine has alleged that at least some of those transfers have been forced, which Moscow denies.

“It is no coincidenc­e that the Russian occupiers are creating so-called ‘filtration camps’ on Ukrainian land through which thousands of our Ukrainian citizens are passing,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared in his nightly video address. “Where our people are killed, tortured and raped. It is no coincidenc­e that the occupiers capture civilians and take them hostage or deport them as free labor.”

Zelenskyy said evacuation attempts would continue Tuesday in Mariupol, as well as in Berdyansk, Tokmak and Vasylivka, three towns between Mariupol and Zaporizhzh­ia.

Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson delivered an address Tuesday to the Ukrainian parliament by video from London, during which he commended the country’s resistance to the Russian invasion as “Ukraine’s finest hour,” in an echo of Winston Churchill during World War II.

“I have one message for you today: Ukraine will win,” Johnson said. “Ukraine will be free.”

Johnson announced a $375-million package of new military aid, to supplement assistance to Kyiv that has already included missiles and missile launchers. The new package will include electronic equipment and night-vision devices.

U.S. and British military analysts say Russia’s advances are sluggish because of failures in strategic planning and operationa­l execution.

 ?? LEON NEAL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Arina Pasko, 8, and Veronika Martynenko, 6, sit on a wooden bunk in an undergroun­d air raid shelter following an alert on Tuesday in Lviv, Ukraine.
LEON NEAL/GETTY IMAGES Arina Pasko, 8, and Veronika Martynenko, 6, sit on a wooden bunk in an undergroun­d air raid shelter following an alert on Tuesday in Lviv, Ukraine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States