Russian forces pound key cities as Ukraine demands tougher sanctions
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[April 06, 2022]
By Natalia Zinets and Conor Humphries
LVIV, Ukraine/DUBLIN (Reuters) - Artillery
pounded key cities in Ukraine on Wednesday, as its president urged the
West to act decisively in imposing new and tougher sanctions being
readied against Russia in response to civilian killings widely condemned
as war crimes.
Western sanctions over Russia's invasion gained new impetus this week
when dead civilians shot at close range were found in the town of Bucha
after it was retaken from Russian forces.
As Pope Francis described the killings there as a "massacre", the head
of the European Commission signalled further sanctions - including
examining a ban on energy imports - on top of ones unveiled by the bloc
on Tuesday. Washington is in turn due to announce new sanctions on
Wednesday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the West needed to act
decisively in taking "more rigid" steps.
"When we are hearing new rhetoric about sanctions... I can't tolerate
any indecisiveness after everything that Russian troops have done," he
told Irish lawmakers by videolink.
Ukrainian officials say between 150 and 300 bodies might be in a mass
grave by a church in Bucha, north of the capital Kyiv, where satellite
images taken weeks ago show bodies of civilians on a street, a private
U.S. company said.
Moscow, which refers to the conflict as a "special military operation"
designed to demilitarise Ukraine, denied targeting civilians there and
called the evidence presented a forgery staged by the West to discredit
it.
To the south, the besieged southern port of Mariupol has been under
bombardment throughout most of the invasion that began on Feb. 24,
trapping tens of thousands of residents without food, water or power.
"The humanitarian situation in the city is worsening," British military
intelligence said on Wednesday, while Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister
Iryna Vereshchuk said people trying to flee would have to use their own
vehicles..
Reuters could not immediately verify the British report.
Vereshchuk said authorities would try to evacuate civilians trapped
elsewhere through 11 humanitarian corridors.
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State Emergency Service members collect ordnance after Russia's
withdrawal from the area, in Bucha, Ukraine, in this still image
taken from video uploaded to a social media website on April 4,
2022. State Emergency Service in Kyiv Oblast/Handout via REUTERS
ENERGY SANCTIONS PUSH?
Ukraine's foreign minister said that while he welcomed the latest
set of EU sanctions only an embargo on Russian gas and oil and
cutting off all Russian banks from the global financial system could
"stop" President Vladimir Putin.
"I will take a gas/oil embargo and de-SWIFTing of all Russian banks
to stop Putin. Difficult times require difficult decisions," Dmytro
Kuleba said on Twitter.
Russian forces last week pulled back from positions outside Kyiv and
shifted the focus of their assault away from the capital, and
Ukraine's general staff said the northeastern city of Kharkiv, the
country's second-largest, also remained under attack.
Authorities in the eastern region of Luhansk on Wednesday urged
residents to get out "while it is safe" from an area that Ukraine
also expects to be the target of a new offensive.
Speaking a day after the European Union announced new sanctions,
including a ban on Russian coal imports and denying Russian ships
access to EU ports, the head of the EU executive, Ursula von der
Leyen, said there was more to come.
"These sanctions will not be our last sanctions," she told European
Parliament on Wednesday. "Now we have to look into oil and revenues
Russia gets from fossil fuels."
Von der Leyen's remarks signalled the bloc's strengthening resolve
to take the step that Kyiv says is vital to securing a deal to end
the war. But German Finance Minster Christian Lindner said in a
newspaper interview, Europe's biggest economy which relies on
Russian gas for much of its energy needs, was just not ready for an
immediate ban.
The White House said earlier that new sanctions, coordinated between
Washington, the Group of Seven advanced economies and the EU, will
target Russian banks and officials and ban new investment in Russia.
($1 = 0.9186 euros)
(Additional reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Tomasz Janowski;
Editing by John Stonestreet)
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