San Antonio Express-News

50 saved at steel plant in besieged city

- By Elena Becatoros and Jon Gambrell

ZAPORIZHZH­IA, Ukraine — Fifty more civilians, including 11 children, were rescued Friday from the tunnels under a besieged steel plant in Mariupol where Ukrainian fighters have been making their last stand to prevent Moscow’s complete takeover of the strategica­lly important port city.

The Russian military said Friday that 11 children were among the 50 civilians who were evacuated from the Azovstal steel plant and handed over to representa­tives of the United Nations and the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

Ukraine’s deputy prime minister, Iryna Vereshchuk, confirmed that 50 “women, children

and elderly people” managed to leave the sprawling complex, and she and Russia said evacuation efforts would continue today. The new evacuees were in addition to roughly 500 civilians who the U.N. said were evacuated from the plant and the city in recent days.

The fight for the last Ukrainian stronghold in a city reduced to ruins by the Russian onslaught appeared increasing­ly desperate amid growing speculatio­n that Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to finish the battle for Mariupol so he can present a triumph to the Russian people in time for Monday’s Victory Day, the biggest patriotic holiday on the Russian calendar.

As the holiday commemorat­ing the Soviet Union’s World War II victory over Nazi Germany approached, cities across Ukraine prepared for an expected increase in Russian attacks and officials urged residents to heed air raid warnings.

“These symbolic dates are to the Russian aggressor like red to a bull,” said Ukraine’s first deputy interior minister, Yevhen Yenin. “While the entire civilized world remembers the victims of terrible wars on these days, the Russian Federation wants parades and is preparing to dance over bones in Mariupol.”

Roughly 2,000 Ukrainian fighters, by Russia’s most recent estimate, are holed up in the vast maze of tunnels and bunkers beneath the Azovstal steelworks, and they have repeatedly refused to surrender. Ukrainian officials said before Friday’s evacuation­s that a few hundred civilians were also trapped there, and fears for their safety have increased as the battle has grown fiercer in recent days.

Kateryna Prokopenko, whose husband, Denys Prokopenko, commands the Azov Regiment troops inside the plant, issued a desperate plea to spare the fighters. She said they’d be willing to go to a third country to wait out the war but would never surrender to Russia because that would mean “filtration camps, prison, torture and death.”

If nothing is done to save her husband and his men, they will “stand to the end without surrender,” she said Friday.

U.N. officials have been tightlippe­d about the evacuation efforts, but it seemed likely that the latest evacuees would be taken to Zaporizhzh­ia, a Ukrainian-controlled city about 140 miles northwest of Mariupol where others who escaped the port city were brought.

Some of the plant’s previous evacuees spoke to the Associated Press about the horrors of being surrounded by death in the moldy, undergroun­d bunker with little food and water, poor medical care and diminishin­g hope. Some said they felt guilty for leaving others behind.

“People literally rot like our jackets did,” said 31-year-old Serhii Kuzmenko, who fled with his wife, 8-year-old daughter and four others from their bunker, where 30 others were left behind. “They need our help badly. We need to get them out.”

Fighters defending the plant said Friday on Telegram that Russian troops had fired on an evacuation vehicle on the plant’s grounds. They said the car was moving toward civilians when it was hit by shelling and that one soldier was killed and six were wounded.

Moscow didn’t immediatel­y acknowledg­e renewed fighting there Friday.

Russia took control of Mariupol, aside from the steel plant, after bombarding it for two months. Ahead of Victory Day, municipal workers and volunteers cleaned up what remains of the city, which had a prewar population of more than 400,000 but where perhaps 100,000 civilians remain with little food, water, electricit­y or heat. Bulldozers scooped up debris and people swept streets against a backdrop of hollowedou­t buildings as workers repaired a model of a warship and Russian flags were hoisted.

The fall of Mariupol would deprive Ukraine of a vital port. It would also allow Russia to establish a land corridor to the Crimean Peninsula, which it seized from Ukraine in 2014, freeing some of its troops to fight elsewhere in the Donbas, the eastern industrial region that the Kremlin says is now its chief objective. Its capture also holds symbolic value because the city has been the scene of some of the worst suffering of the war and a surprising­ly fierce resistance.

Asked whether Russia would soon take full control of Mariupol, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said: “Mariupol will never fall. I’m not talking about heroism or anything.”

“It is already devastated,” he told a meeting at London’s Chatham House think tank. He also said he remains open to negotiatio­ns with Russia, but he repeated that Moscow must withdraw its forces.

“We do not see the end of the war yet,” he said, calling on Russia to allow safe passage out of the Mariupol steel plant to the Ukrainian troops who are there.

While they pounded away at the plant, Russian forces struggled to make significan­t gains elsewhere, 10 weeks into a devastatin­g war that has killed thousands of people, forced millions to flee the country and flattened large swaths of cities. In other developmen­ts:

• A Ukrainian army brigade said it used a U.S. Switchblad­e “suicide” drone against Russian forces in what was likely Ukraine’s first recorded use of such a weapon in combat.

• The Ukrainian governor of the eastern Luhansk region said residents of the city of Kreminna were being terrorized by Russian troops trying to cross the Seversky Donets River. Serhiy Haidai accused Russian troops of checking phones and “forcibly disappeari­ng Ukrainian patriots.” His statements could not be immediatel­y verified.

• Haidai also said more than 15,000 people remain in Severodone­tsk, a city in the Luhansk region that’s seen as a key Russian target. He said three people were evacuated from Severodone­tsk on Friday and that he believes most residents wish to remain even though “entire blocks of houses are on fire.”

• The small village of Nekhoteevk, in Russia’s southern Belgorod region bordering Ukraine, was being evacuated Friday because of shelling from Ukrainian territory, according to the regional governor, Vyacheslav Gladkov. His claims couldn’t be immediatel­y verified.

• Russian state agencies reported that two self-proclaimed separatist republics in Ukraine’s industrial east — the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic — appointed extraordin­ary ambassador­s to Moscow. A Ukrainian foreign ministry spokesman, Oleg Nykolenko, said the ambassador­s were “traitors” and will likely be charged with high treason.

 ?? John Moore / Getty Images ?? Halyna Rusova, 80, is shown in a hospital after leaving Sokorivka in south Ukraine.
John Moore / Getty Images Halyna Rusova, 80, is shown in a hospital after leaving Sokorivka in south Ukraine.
 ?? Alexei Alexandrov / Associated Press ?? A man who left the Azovstal steel mill in Mariupol, Ukraine, walks to a bus in the nearby village of Bezimenne.
Alexei Alexandrov / Associated Press A man who left the Azovstal steel mill in Mariupol, Ukraine, walks to a bus in the nearby village of Bezimenne.

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