The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

West rushes more aid as Mariupol teeters

- By Oleksandr Stashevsky­i and Ciaran Mcquillan

KYIV, UKRAINE » The West moved to pour billions more in aid into Ukraine on Friday, as Russia shifted forces freed up by the imminent fall of the pulverized port city of Mariupol and fighting raged in the country’s industrial heartland in the east.

Ukraine said its troops repelled a Russian attack in the grinding, back-and-forth battle for the Donbas, the mostly Russian-speaking expanse of coal mines and factories that the Kremlin is bent on capturing.

Battered by their nearly three-month siege of the Mariupol, Russian troops need time to regroup, Britain’s Defense Ministry said in an assessment, but they may not get it.

With the battle winding down for the steel plant that represente­d the last bastion of Ukrainian resistance in Mariupol, Russia is continuing to pull back forces there, and their commanders are under pressure to quickly send them elsewhere in the Donbas, according to the British.

“That means that Russia will probably redistribu­te their forces swiftly without adequate preparatio­n, which risks further force attrition,” the ministry said.

An undisclose­d number of Ukrainian soldiers remained at the Azovstal steel plant. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said more than 1,900 surrendere­d in recent days. Also remaining at the plant were the bodies of soldiers who defended it while tying down Russian forces.

Denis Prokopenko, commander of the Azov Regiment, which had led the defense of the plant, called them “fallen heroes.”

“I hope soon relatives and the whole of Ukraine will be able to bury the fighters with honors,” he said.

Pro-Moscow separatist­s have fought Ukrainian forces in the Donbas for the past eight years and held a considerab­le swath of it before Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion. But the effort by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s troops to take more territory there has been slow-going.

In a sign of Russia’s frustratio­n with the war, some senior commanders have been fired in recent weeks, the British Defense Ministry said.

Meanwhile, Russian forces elsewhere in Ukraine continued to blast away at targets, some of them civilian.

In the village of Velyka Kostromka, west of the Donbas, explosions in the middle of the night Thursday shook Iryna Martsyniuk’s house to its foundation­s. Roof timbers splintered and windows shattered, sending shards of glass into a wall near three sleeping children.

“There were flashes everywhere,” she said. “The windows smashed, there was smoke every

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