Los Angeles Times

First lady pays visit to Ukraine

As many as 60 people are missing and feared dead in a Russian bombing of a school.

- By Laura King and Courtney Subramania­n

KYIV, Ukraine — As air raid sirens wailed repeatedly Sunday in Kyiv and in cities and towns across Ukraine, First Lady Jill Biden made a foray into the embattled country, meeting her Ukrainian counterpar­t near the Slovakian border.

The day also saw another high-profile Western visit from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who traveled to a suburban town outside Kyiv where evidence has emerged of gruesome atrocities committed by Russian troops during a monthlong occupation.

And U.S. diplomats returned to Kyiv, the capital, for the first time since Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, with the U.S. Embassy tweeting a photo of acting Ambassador Kristina Kvien’s arrival.

Meanwhile, rescuers in an eastern Ukrainian village dug through the rubble of a bombarded school turned shelter where up to 60 people were missing and feared dead, according to Ukrainian officials. If confirmed, the death toll would be the worst known in a single strike since Russian missiles last month slammed into a train station in the eastern city of Kramatorsk.

As fighting raged in Ukraine’s east, tensions rose on the eve of a major Russian holiday celebratin­g the then-Soviet Union’s role in defeating Nazi Germany 77 years ago in World War II. Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to use Monday’s Victory Day commemorat­ions to somehow glorify, or at least rebrand, his army’s 10-week-old invasion of Ukraine.

In a preview of his holiday messaging, Putin on Sunday described Russia’s war in

Ukraine as meant to achieve Ukrainians’ “liberation of their native land from Nazi filth.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky put a very different stamp on the memorial occasion, observed Sunday in Ukraine — a Soviet republic before it became independen­t more than 30 years ago — as the Day of Remembranc­e and Reconcilia­tion. The United States and most of Europe mark May 8 as V-E Day.

In a starkly dramatic video shot in the badly damaged Kyiv satellite town of Borodyanka, occupied by Russia during Moscow’s failed attempt early in the war to capture Kyiv, Zelensky likened his country’s fierce resistance against the invasion to the World War II struggle against fascism.

“Never again?” he asked, with ruined buildings as a backdrop. “Try telling Ukraine that.”

Separately, the Ukrainian leader said in his overnight video address that the brutality of Russia’s war against its smaller neighbor “should remind every state and every nation that it is impossible to defeat evil once and for all.”

Amid continuing Western efforts to get Putin to break off his assault, leaders of the Group of 7 nations, including President Biden, held a video consultati­on with Zelensky on Sunday.

“We reiterate our condemnati­on of Russia’s unprovoked, unjustifia­ble and illegal military aggression against Ukraine and the indiscrimi­nate attacks against civilians and civilian infrastruc­ture, which has resulted in terrible humanitari­an catastroph­e in the heart of Europe,” the leaders wrote in a statement afterward. “We are appalled by the large-scale loss of human life, assault on human rights, and destructio­n that Russia’s actions have inflicted on Ukraine.”

In addition to announcing further sanctions, the G-7 said it was committed to phasing out the use of Russian oil and gas, or banning them outright, but did not give a timetable for doing so. The U.S. has already banned Russian energy imports, but Europe is considerab­ly more dependent.

The call, intended as a show of Western solidarity, came hours after Jill Biden’s trip to Ukraine, which was disclosed after she had departed the country.

The first lady spent about two hours in Ukraine, holding a meeting Sunday with counterpar­t Olena Zelenska at a school in the town of Uzhhorod, not far from the Slovakian border.

Biden, whose trip came amid a four-day visit to front-line countries in Eastern Europe, said she wanted to make the visit on Mother’s Day to underscore that “this war has been brutal, and that the people of the United States stand with the people of Ukraine.”

Zelenska, appearing publicly for the first time since the Russians invaded her nation, thanked Biden for her “courageous act” at a time when “military actions are taking place every day, where air sirens are happening every day.”

Trudeau presided over a flag-raising at the Canadian Embassy in Kyiv and met with Ukrainian officials. His visit to the town of Irpin was documented by its mayor, Oleksandr Markushyn, who wrote on the messaging app Telegram that the Canadian leader, the latest in a string of visiting dignitarie­s, was shown “the horror that the Russian occupiers had done to our city.”

In the bomb-flattened southern port city of Mariupol, Ukrainian officials said efforts were turning Sunday to extracting defenders of a sprawling steel plant that is the final Ukrainian redoubt in the strategic city.

The last of the civilians trapped there — women, children and the elderly — were brought to safety Saturday, Ukrainian officials said, after spending weeks, hungry and frightened, seeking safety in the steel plant’s warren of undergroun­d bunkers and tunnels.

The United Nations’ humanitari­an coordinato­r for Ukraine announced Sunday that more than 170 people had been evacuated from Mariupol after 10 weeks of shelling and brought to Zaporizhzh­ia, a city in southeaste­rn Ukraine. More than 600 people have now been evacuated from the Mariupol area, according to coordinato­r Osnat Lubrani.

“We are also working to evacuate our military,” Zelensky said in his overnight address. “We do not lose hope, we do not stop — every day we are looking for a diplomatic option that could work out.”

In an online appeal Sunday from inside the plant, a Ukrainian commander, Capt. Sviatoslav Palamar, said the defenders would “continue to fight as long as we are alive.” The Ukrainian forces have refused to surrender, saying they expected to be tortured and killed by Russian forces if they did.

Russia, which has been trying to capture Mariupol, is thought to attach not only practical but also symbolic importance to finally subduing the city in time for Monday’s Victory Day celebratio­ns.

Putin declared victory in the battle for Mariupol on April 21, but full control of the city will give Moscow the ability to create a land bridge between territory where it holds sway and the Crimean peninsula, which Russia seized in 2014.

Municipal officials have said up to 20,000 Mariupol residents have died in the course of the war, and satellite imagery has pinpointed the presence of mass graves on the ruined city’s outskirts.

In Ukraine’s eastern battle zone, Ukrainian officials described a horrific toll on noncombata­nts caught in intensifyi­ng Russian bombardmen­t. Moscow’s forces have been using barrages of artillery, often hitting civilian areas, to try to break through Ukrainian lines.

In Bilohorivk­a, a village in Luhansk province, about 90 people were sheltering at a school when it was bombed and burst into flames Saturday, Ukrainian officials said. Regional Gov. Serhiy Haidai said about 30 people had been rescued, with two confirmed dead and seven others injured, leaving dozens unaccounte­d for in the incinerate­d wreckage.

“Sixty people were likely to have died under the rubble,” he wrote Sunday on Telegram.

Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry called the shelling of the school a war crime. Noting that the attack took place hours before the start of Ukrainian commemorat­ions of the defeat of Nazi Germany, the ministry said Russian forces were “constantly repeating the tragedy of World War II.”

In a separate episode in the village of Shypilovo, about 11 people were thought to have been inside a home that was hit by shelling, Haidai said, citing preliminar­y informatio­n. His province, Luhansk, is one of two making up the Donbas region, the industrial heartland that Russia is trying to capture.

Adding to the misery of life in the battle zone, a Russian airstrike in Luhansk damaged electrical infrastruc­ture, cutting off power to the Ukrainian-held part of the province. Many civilians have fled, at the government’s urging, but tens of thousands of residents remain.

Western military analysts have painted Russia’s much-vaunted offensive in Ukraine’s east as beset by problems. An assessment Sunday by British military intelligen­ce cited “difficulti­es in command and control, as well as faltering Russian performanc­e on the front line,” a 300-mile arc stretching from Ukraine’s southeast to northeast.

After actor and humanitari­an Angelina Jolie’s trip to western Ukraine last week, Sunday saw another celebrity visit to the country.

Bono, the lead singer of the Irish rock band U2, and its guitarist the Edge staged a surprise performanc­e at a Kyiv subway station where residents had sheltered from bombardmen­t earlier in the war.

In addition to some of their signature songs, they invited a soldier to join them in performing Ben E. King’s “Stand By Me.” On Twitter, the group said Zelensky had invited them to visit the capital.

 ?? Yasuyoshi Chiba AFP/Getty Images ?? SMOKES RISES from a train station bombed by Russian forces in Siversk in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky likened his country’s fight to the World War II struggle against fascism.
Yasuyoshi Chiba AFP/Getty Images SMOKES RISES from a train station bombed by Russian forces in Siversk in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky likened his country’s fight to the World War II struggle against fascism.
 ?? Felipe Dana Associated Press ?? THE BODIES of Russian soldiers are put on a train in Kharkiv, Ukraine. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited the country, and U.S. diplomats returned to Kyiv for the first time since Russia invaded.
Felipe Dana Associated Press THE BODIES of Russian soldiers are put on a train in Kharkiv, Ukraine. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited the country, and U.S. diplomats returned to Kyiv for the first time since Russia invaded.
 ?? Susan Walsh Pool Photo ?? FIRST LADY JILL BIDEN greets Ukrainian refugees in Kosice, Slovakia. Biden later traveled to Ukraine, where Olena Zelenska, wife of President Volodymyr Zelensky, praised Biden for her “courageous act.”
Susan Walsh Pool Photo FIRST LADY JILL BIDEN greets Ukrainian refugees in Kosice, Slovakia. Biden later traveled to Ukraine, where Olena Zelenska, wife of President Volodymyr Zelensky, praised Biden for her “courageous act.”

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