The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ukrainians plead for Mariupol rescue

Russia’s crawling advance continues focus on south, east.

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KHARKIV, UKRAINE — Ukrainian forces fought Saturday to hold off a Russian advance aimed at capturing an eastern industrial region along with Ukraine’s last holdout in the southern city of Mariupol, where fighters and civilians hiding under a heavily damaged steel mill endure agonizing conditions.

The United Nations continued trying to broker an evacuation of civilians from the sprawling Soviet-era plant and other bombed-out ruins of Mariupol, a port city which Russia has sought to capture and has subjected to heavy bombardmen­t since it invaded Ukraine more than nine weeks ago.

There are up to 1,000 civilians at the Azovstal steelworks, according to Ukrainian officials, who have not said how many fighters remained in the only part of Mariupul not occupied by Russian forces. The Russians estimated the number of Ukrainian soldiers at the plant at about 2,000.

Video and images shared with The Associated Press by two Ukrainian women who said their husbands are among the fighters there showed wounded men with stained bandages in need of changing; others had open wounds or amputated limbs.

A skeleton medical staff was treating at least 600 wounded people, said the women, who identified their husbands as members of the Azov Regiment of Ukraine’s National Guard. Some of the wounds were rotting with gangrene, they said.

In the video the women shared, the wounded men tell the camera they eat once a day and share as little as 50 ounces of water a day among four people. Supplies inside the surrounded facility are depleted, they said.

The AP could not independen­tly verify the date and location of the footage, which the women said was taken in the last week in the warren of passageway­s beneath the steel mill.

One shirtless man spoke in obvious pain as he described his wounds: two broken ribs, a punctured lung and a dislocated arm that “was hanging on the flesh.”

“I want to tell everyone who sees this. If you will not stop this here, in Ukraine, it will go further, to Europe,“he said.

In other developmen­ts:

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an interview that Russian and Ukrainian negotiator­s talk “almost every day.” However, he told Chinese state news agency Xinhua that “progress has not been easy.”

A former U.S. Marine was killed while fighting alongside Ukrainian forces, his family said, in what would be the war’s first known death of an American in combat. The U.S. government has not confirmed the report.

Two buses that were headed to the town of Popasna in eastern Ukraine to evacuate residents were fired upon, and contact with the drivers was lost, Mayor Nikolai Khanatov said.

Russian air defense forces detected a Ukrainian military plane over Russia’s Bryansk region and tried to repel the aircraft. Two shells fell on a village, regional Gov. Alexander Bogomaz said. No one was injured, but an oil terminal suffered some damage, Bogomaz said.

Getting a full picture of the unfolding battle in the east has been difficult because airstrikes and artillery barrages have made it extremely dangerous for reporters to move around. Both Ukraine and the Moscow-backed rebels fighting in the east also have introduced tight restrictio­ns on reporting from the combat zone.

But Western military analysts suggested that Moscow’s offensive in the eastern Donbas region, which includes Mariupol, was going much slower than planned. So far, Russia’s troops and the separatist forces Moscow has backed in the region since 2014 appeared to have made only minor gains in the month since Moscow said it would focus its military strength in eastern Ukraine.

Numericall­y, Russia’s military manpower vastly exceeds Ukraine’s. In the days before the war began, Western intelligen­ce estimated Russia had positioned near the border as many as 190,000 troops; Ukraine’s standing military is about 200,000, spread throughout the country.

In part because of the tenacity of the Ukrainian resistance, the U.S. believes the Russians are “at least several days behind where they wanted to be” as they try to encircle Ukrainian troops in the east, said a senior U.S. defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the American military’s assessment.

The British Defense Ministry offered a similar conclusion in its daily assessment of the war, saying it believes Russian forces in Ukraine are likely suffering from “weakened morale,” along with a lack of unit-level skills and “inconsiste­nt air support.” It did not say on what basis it made the evaluation.

 ?? EMILIO MORENATTI/AP ?? Houses and apartments ravaged by Russia’s relentless bombardmen­t of civilian targets can be seen Saturday in Irpin, on the outskirts of Kyiv.
EMILIO MORENATTI/AP Houses and apartments ravaged by Russia’s relentless bombardmen­t of civilian targets can be seen Saturday in Irpin, on the outskirts of Kyiv.
 ?? EMILIO MORENATTI/AP ?? The wrecks of military vehicles can be seen Saturday from the air in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv.
EMILIO MORENATTI/AP The wrecks of military vehicles can be seen Saturday from the air in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv.

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