San Diego Union-Tribune

RUSSIA CLAIMS TO HAVE CONTROL OF MARIUPOL

Ukrainian commander: Troops told to end defense of city to save ‘lives and health’

- BY PATRICK J. MCDONNELL, HENRY CHU & JENNY JARVIE

With its grip tightened along Ukraine’s southern coast, including full control of the steel plant that held the world’s attention for months, Russia redoubled its assault Friday on the eastern industrial heartland known as the Donbas.

At least a dozen people were killed and scores of homes destroyed in the area of Severodone­tsk, the regional governor, Serhiy Haidai, said on social media. The city is the easternmos­t point of the Donbas still in Ukrainian hands.

The nearby city of Lysychansk also came under sustained fire, according to Ukrainian military officials, who said their troops had repelled a series of attacks in the Donbas over the last 24 hours, destroying 14 armored vehicles and shooting down a Russian drone.

In a separate airstrike, about 120 miles west in the Kharkiv region, a Russian missile destroyed the newly renovated Palace of Culture in the city of Lozova.

Russian military authoritie­s also made their biggest victory of the war official on Friday, announcing that Russian forces in the southern port city of Mariupol had “completely liberated” the sprawling Azovstal steelworks, where thousands of Ukrainian fighters had hunkered down for more than two months in a long and bloody standoff.

Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v, spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry, said that all Ukrainian fighters had been removed from the undergroun­d bunkers of the factory, according to Russia’s state news agency RIA Novosti.

The last group of 531 Ukrainian soldiers at the steel factory surrendere­d Friday, bringing the total evacuated since Monday to 2,439, according to the ministry.

There was no immediate confirmati­on from Ukraine. Earlier this week, the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross re

ported that it has registered only “hundreds” of Ukrainian prisoners of war from Azovstal.

According to the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War, the discrepanc­y could be due to the humanitari­an group’s delays in reporting or registrati­on. But analysts also raised the possibilit­y in their daily assessment that Russian officials overstated the number of evacuated Ukrainian fighters — either to maximize the number of Russian prisoners of war they can exchange or avoid the embarrassm­ent of admitting they were locked in a lengthy stalemate with only hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers.

Earlier Friday, Maj. Denys Prokopenko, the Ukrainian commander of the Azov regiment that led the defense of Mariupol, posted a video statement saying that senior military leadership had issued an order to stop defending the city in order to save the “lives and health” of servicemen.

“I hope soon relatives and the whole of Ukraine will be able to bury their soldiers with honors,” Prokopenko said in a video posted on Telegram.

Despite some battlefiel­d successes, the growing war of attrition has exacted a grievous toll on Ukraine’s civilians and infrastruc­ture, with people killed or maimed, houses pulverized and power cut off in hard-hit communitie­s.

In a Friday night video address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged Western allies to hold Russia financiall­y responsibl­e for the devastatio­n it was wreaking across his country.

“Every burned house. Every ruined school, ruined hospital,” he said. “Each blown-up house of culture and infrastruc­ture facility. Every destroyed enterprise. Every shut-down business.”

Russian funds and property under the jurisdicti­on of allied countries, Zelensky said, must be “seized or frozen” and then distribute­d to a special fund for Ukrainian victims

“That would be fair,” he said. “And Russia will feel the true weight of every missile, every bomb, every projectile it has fired at us.”

To bolster Ukraine’s defense, the U.S. Senate approved $40 billion in new aid on Thursday, sending the package to President Joe Biden for his promised signature. In addition, Germany’s finance minister said Friday that the Group of Seven leading industrial­ized nations would allocate $19.8 billion in aid as part of what the G-7 declared was its commitment “to our united response to Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine and to our unwavering support to Ukraine.”

Western military and humanitari­an assistance have been crucial to Ukraine’s ability to defy an enemy whose military might, both in personnel and weaponry, dwarfs its own.

“This is a demonstrat­ion of strong leadership and a necessary contributi­on to our common defense of freedom,” Zelensky said of the new U.S. pledge.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday accused Western countries of mounting a “serious,” though ultimately unsuccessf­ul, campaign of cyberattac­ks against his country.

“A true aggression has been initiated against Russia, a war in informatio­nal space,” Putin said to members of Russia’s Security Council, according to Russian state news agency Tass. “That cyberaggre­ssion against us, as well as the overall sanctions attack on Russia, has failed.”

The Kremlin has warned of reprisals against countries rallying behind Ukraine. On Friday, Finland’s state-owned natural gas wholesaler, Gasum, said Russia’s state energy company, Gazprom, had announced that it would halt supplies to the Finnish company starting Saturday.

With the conquest of Mariupol, Moscow now controls access to the Sea of Azov and has secured a land corridor that links the Donbas to Crimea, the peninsula it annexed in 2014.

That has had disastrous effects on Ukraine’s economy, particular­ly its ability to export the grain that millions of people around the world depend on for food. Officials said the loss in trade and the costs of war have contribute­d to a budget deficit of $5 billion. And reduced exports and rising prices for wheat have worsened food insecurity in Egypt, Pakistan and elsewhere.

At a United Nations Security Council meeting Thursday to address the crisis, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the food supply for millions of people worldwide was being “held hostage by the Russian military” — an accusation that Russian officials dismissed as a lie. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he was trying to negotiate a plan to move Ukrainian food exports out through the Black Sea.

Valeriy Zaluzhny, the commander in chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, told journalist­s that his troops have so far managed to keep the key Black Sea port of Mykolaiv, west of Crimea, under Ukrainian control.

Ukrainian forces are also pushing southeast toward Kherson, the first city to fall after the war began Feb. 24, amid growing signs that Russia is planning to annex parts of the region, including the city of Melitopol, where the occupiers are reportedly introducin­g the use of the ruble in place of the Ukrainian hryvnia.

Fears remain high for the Ukrainian soldiers captured in Mariupol who Moscow now says number more than 2,000. Ukrainian officials have declined to give a precise figure. Transferre­d to a penal camp in Russian-controlled territory, many are severely injured and face deep hostility from Russian soldiers and politician­s, who have branded the Azov regiment as “Nazis” deserving trial and punishment.

The Internatio­nal Red Cross says it has registered as prisoners of war hundreds of troops evacuated from the massive steel plant.

Earlier this week, the government in Kyiv said it was giving up the fight for the devastated city, but a band of diehard soldiers remained holed up in the plant.

Completing its takeover of Mariupol allows Russia to continue moving troops to the Donbas, now the focus of its offensive after its failure to capture Kyiv or the northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv. But having been tied up so long in Mariupol and suffered losses, the forces there “must be re-equipped and refurbishe­d before they can be redeployed effectivel­y,” which can be a lengthy process, Britain’s Ministry of Defense said in its daily assessment of the war.

The British government reported earlier that a number of senior commanders had already been relieved of their posts, including Lt. Gen. Serhiy Kisel, whose fighters were unable to subdue Kharkiv.

 ?? FRANCISCO SECO AP ?? A man tries to clear rubble next to a shopping and entertainm­ent mall in Odesa, a port city in southern Ukraine. The buildings were destroyed in a series of Russian missile strikes on May 9.
FRANCISCO SECO AP A man tries to clear rubble next to a shopping and entertainm­ent mall in Odesa, a port city in southern Ukraine. The buildings were destroyed in a series of Russian missile strikes on May 9.
 ?? AP ?? An armored personnel vehicle carrying members of the Donetsk People’s Republic militia accompanie­s buses with Ukrainian servicemen to a penal colony in Olyonivka, Ukraine, after they left the Azovstal steel plant.
AP An armored personnel vehicle carrying members of the Donetsk People’s Republic militia accompanie­s buses with Ukrainian servicemen to a penal colony in Olyonivka, Ukraine, after they left the Azovstal steel plant.

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