The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Zelenskiy tells Putin to hold peace talks

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LVIV/ODESSA, Ukraine — President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called yesterday for comprehens­ive peace talks with Moscow to stop its invasion of Ukraine, saying it would otherwise take Russia “several generation­s” to recover from its losses in the war.

Russian forces have taken heavy losses and their advance has largely stalled since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the assault on February 24, with long columns of troops that bore down on Kyiv halted in its suburbs.

However, they have laid siege to cities, blasting urban areas to rubble, and in recent days have intensifie­d missile attacks on scattered targets in western Ukraine, away from the main battlefiel­ds in the north and east of the country.

Yesterday, Russia said its hypersonic missiles had destroyed a large undergroun­d depot for missiles and aircraft ammunition in the western Ivano-Frankivsk region. Hypersonic weapons can travel faster than five times the speed of sound and the Interfax agency said it was the first time Russia had used them in Ukraine.

A spokespers­on for the Ukrainian Air Force Command confirmed the attack, but said the Ukrainian side had no informatio­n on the type of missiles used.

Ukrainian authoritie­s said yesterday they have not seen any significan­t shifts over the past 24 hours in front line areas, noting cities of Mariupol, Mykolaiv and Kherson in the south, and Izyum in the east continued to see the heaviest fighting.

More than 3.3 million refugees have already fled Ukraine through its western border, with around 2 more million displaced inside the country. Efforts to evacuate civilians from cities under siege through “humanitari­an corridors” continued.

Ukrainian authoritie­s said they hoped to open 10 such evacuation routes yesterday.

Unpreceden­ted Western sanctions aimed at crippling Russia’s economy and starving its war machine have yet to halt what Putin calls a “special operation” to disarm its neighbour and purge it of “Nazis”. Kyiv and its allies have called this a baseless pretext for war. —

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