Lodi News-Sentinel

Battle rages at last Mariupol holdout in Ukraine

- Laura King, Jaweed Kaleem and Kate Linthicum

KYIV, Ukraine — As Russian troops mounted a new push Thursday to seize control of the besieged city of Mariupol, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pleaded for a cease-fire to allow the evacuation of hundreds of civilians who remain trapped beneath a steel plant in a sprawling complex of subterrane­an bunkers and tunnels.

With the Kremlin’s war on Ukraine entering its 11th week and Russia eager to proclaim victory in Mariupol before Monday, when the nation commemorat­es its role in defeating Nazi Germany during World War II, Zelenskyy said time was needed “to lift people out of those basements, out of those undergroun­d shelters” at the Azovstal steel plant, which is housing civilians as well as the last contingent of Ukrainian fighters in the city.

“In the present conditions, we cannot use heavy equipment to clear the rubble away. It all has to be done by hand,” Zelenskyy said in a video address, adding that 344 people had been evacuated from Mariupol in a second round of rescues Wednesday and taken to Zaporizhzh­ia, around 140 miles northwest.

The president asked for more help from the United Nations, which has joined the Internatio­nal Red Cross to usher civilians to safety from the plant. Ukrainian officials said the situation has become more dire because Russian soldiers had penetrated the plant’s grounds. The Kremlin has so far denied that its troops have breached the complex.

The Russian military said its air force struck dozens of Ukrainian military targets, including multiple concentrat­ions of Ukrainian troops and an ammunition depot near the city of Luhansk. It said it had killed 600 Ukrainian fighters, a claim that could not be independen­tly verified.

Posting on Telegram, Luhansk Gov. Serhiy Haidai said Russian missiles hit homes, killing five people and injuring 25.

Even as Russia continued its assault from the air, Kyiv said its forces had regained control of “several settlement­s” between two key southern districts, Kherson and Mykolaiv. Kherson was the first major city to fall to the Russians and remains in their hands. The Ukrainian-held city of Mykolaiv, near the Black Sea, has been a bulwark against Russian forces moving toward the principal seaport of Odesa.

Ukraine’s military said it had also retaken Staryi Saltiv, about 27 miles northeast of Kharkiv, the nation’s second-largest city, which lies near the northeast border with Russia.

Still, analysts feared that Ukraine was poised to lose control of Mariupol, a strategic prize that would allow Moscow to stitch together a land corridor connecting Russia, Crimea and western Ukraine. The once-thriving city of about 430,000 people has lost more than three-quarters of its population. It has been the site of some of the war’s biggest tragedies and the subject of some of its most forceful negotiatio­ns.

Moscow said that for three days beginning Thursday it would open a humanitari­an corridor for civilian evacuation­s from the besieged steel plant. Russia appears eager to proclaim victory in Mariupol before Monday, when President Vladimir Putin is expected to participat­e in the major annual ceremony commemorat­ing Russia’s role in the outcome of World War II.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Western reports of Russia using the holiday to launch increased attacks and strengthen its troop presence in Ukraine were “nonsense.” Before the war began Feb. 24, he had described U.S. warnings of a Russian invasion of Ukraine as false “hysteria.”

Bedraggled civilians who have made their way from the Mariupol steelworks to Ukrainian-held territory in recent days have recounted a terrifying ordeal punctuated by heavy bombardmen­t, with food, water and medical care almost impossible to obtain.

Ukrainian officials said a bloody battle for the plant was continuing. The plant sits above a vast multistory tangle of tunnels and below-ground bunkers dating back to the Soviet era.

 ?? LEON NEAL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Oksana Malets kisses the framed photograph of her brother, fallen soldier Igor Malets, 59, after his funeral service at Saints Peter and Paul Garrison Church on Thursday in Lviv, Ukraine.
LEON NEAL/GETTY IMAGES Oksana Malets kisses the framed photograph of her brother, fallen soldier Igor Malets, 59, after his funeral service at Saints Peter and Paul Garrison Church on Thursday in Lviv, Ukraine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States