The Morning Call (Sunday)

Fighting flares up after observance­s

Ukraine: Dozens of Russian strikes in country’s east, south

- By John Leicester

KYIV, Ukraine — Fighting is grinding on in Ukraine after the country marked the anniversar­y of Russia’s invasion, with Ukrainian authoritie­s on Saturday reporting dozens of new Russian strikes and attacks on cities in the east and south.

After a somber and defiant day of commemorat­ions on Friday and a marathon news conference, Ukraine’s seemingly indefatiga­ble president followed up with new video posts a day later in which he declared that “Russia must lose in Ukraine.”

In a separate tweet, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also pushed for more sanctions pressure on Russia after the U.K., U.S. and the European Union all announced new measures aimed at further choking off funding and support for Moscow.

“The pressure on Russian aggressor must increase,” Zelenskyy tweeted in English.

He said Ukraine wants to see “decisive steps” against Russian state nuclear corporatio­n Rosatom and the Russian nuclear industry as well as “more pressure on military and banking.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin said last week that Rosatom and his Defense Ministry need to work on ensuring that Russia is ready to resume nuclear weapons tests if needs be.

He alleged that the U.S. is working on nuclear weapons and that some in the U.S. are pondering plans to carry out nuclear tests banned under the global test ban that took effect after the end of the Cold War.

“If the U.S. conducts tests, we will also do it,” Putin said.

Russia has already become the most sanctioned nation in the world over the past year, targeted by more than 30 countries representi­ng more than half of the world’s economy. But the squeeze on its economy, trade and firms has yet to deliver a knockout blow.

Russia’s ambassador to Washington, Anatoly Antonov, called the latest U.S. sanctions “thoughtles­s.”

“We have learned to live under economic and political pressure,” the ambassdor said.

Friday’s anniversar­y of last year’s invasion brought no respite in Russian attacks. But in one of his video posts on Saturday, Zelenskyy asked: “Is it possible for us to win?”

“Yes,” he said. “We are capable of this in unity, resolutely and unyielding­ly, to put an end to Russian aggression this year.”

Ukraine’s military on Saturday reported 27 Russian airstrikes and 75 attacks from multiple rocket launchers in the most recent 24-hour span. It said Russian offensive efforts continue to be concentrat­ed in Ukraine’s industrial east and northeast. Five wounded civilians were reported in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk province, where territory is roughly split between Russian and Ukrainian control.

Battles raged “around” and “nearby” Bakhmut, a city in the Donetsk region that has become the focus of the fighting in recent months, according to Ukraine’s Land Forces. The military said the Russian forces continued attempts to break through Ukrainian defenses, encircle and seize the city.

Yevgeny Prigozhin, owner of Russia’s private military company Wagner, claimed Saturday that his fighters had “completely taken over” the village of Yahidne on the north outskirts of Bakhmut. There has been no confirmati­on of the claim from either the Russian military or the Ukrainian army.

In the southern Kherson region, Gov. Oleksandr Prokudin reported 83 Russian shelling attacks, with the regional capital, also called Kherson, hit nine times.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Saturday that he aims to discuss peace efforts related to the Ukraine war with China when he travels there in April. China has called for a cease-fire and peace talks.

Macron said in Paris “that China must now help us to put pressure on Russia.”

“Obviously so that Russia never uses neither chemical nor nuclear weapons,” he said. “But also so that (Russia) stops this aggression as a condition for a negotiatio­n.”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Saturday that he welcomed parts of the peace plan for Ukraine proposed by China, but disagreed with other aspects.

“There are things that are remarkably right, such as the renewed condemnati­on of the use of nuclear weapons,” Scholz said in India. “What’s missing in my view is a discernibl­e line that says: ‘Russian troops must also withdraw.’ ”

Meanwhile, thousands of people protested in Berlin on Saturday to condemn Germany’s supply of arms to Ukraine and call for peace talks to end the war.

The organizers were criticized before the protest for downplayin­g Ukraine’s right to defend its territory from Russian aggression and failing to distance themselves from political extremists on the far right and far left, where pro-Russia views are common.

 ?? VADIM GHIRDA/AP ?? A priest blesses soldiers with holy water Saturday in Kharkiv, Ukraine, during a ceremony where they were honored for their bravery and accomplish­ments in the war against Russia, now more than a year old.
VADIM GHIRDA/AP A priest blesses soldiers with holy water Saturday in Kharkiv, Ukraine, during a ceremony where they were honored for their bravery and accomplish­ments in the war against Russia, now more than a year old.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States