Russian advance on Ukraine's Donetsk region thwarted so far, Kyiv says
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[July 06, 2022]
By Pavel Polityuk and Max Hunder
KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine has so far
thwarted an attempted Russian advance into the north of its Donetsk
region but the city of Sloviansk and other civilian areas are being
heavily shelled, Ukrainian officials said on Wednesday.
Russia has increased its focus on Donetsk, the southern part of which it
and its proxies already control, after completing its seizure of the
neighbouring Luhansk region on Sunday with the capture of Lysychansk,
which now lies in ruins.
Moscow says fully pushing the Ukrainian military out of both regions is
central to what it calls its "special military operation" to ensure its
own security, a now four-months-long offensive which the West calls an
unprovoked war of aggression.
Donetsk and Luhansk comprise the Donbas, the industrialised eastern part
of Ukraine that has seen the biggest battle in Europe for generations
and which Russia wants to wrest control of on behalf of Moscow-backed
separatists in two self-proclaimed people's republics.
Ukrainian officials said heavy fighting had been taking place as Russian
forces tried to push from Luhansk into Donetsk region and towards the
city of Sloviansk.
"We are holding back the enemy on the border of Luhansk region and
Donetsk region," Luhansk governor Serhiy Gaidai told Ukrainian
television.
He said Russian regular army and reserve forces had been sent there in
an apparent effort to cross the Siverskiy Donets River and that two
small settlements just inside Luhansk's borders were the scene of fierce
fighting.
"Luhansk region even now is fighting. Almost all the territory has been
captured, but in two settlements fighting is ongoing" he told a video
briefing.
Gaidai and other Ukrainian officials have said Russian forces are
pounding targets in the Donetsk region with artillery.
Vadym Lyakh, the mayor of Sloviansk, told a video briefing on Wednesday
the city had been shelled for the last two weeks.
"The situation is tense," he said, speaking a day after local officials
said Russian forces had struck a market and a residential area in
Sloviansk and killed at least two people.
Russia says it does not target civilians.
Lyakh said 17 residents had been killed and 67 wounded since President
Vladimir Putin ordered his troops into Ukraine on Feb. 24. Its pre-war
population of more than 100,000 had shrunk to around 23,000 people, he
added, and more and more people wanted to leave because of the shelling.
The southern port city of Mykolaiv was also being heavily shelled,
Oleksandr Senkevych, its mayor, told a briefing. Russian forces were
using multiple launch rocket systems to shell the city which had shed
about half of its pre-war population of half a million people, he said.
"There are no safe areas in Mykolaiv," he said. "I am
telling the people of the city that they need to leave."
Kyiv and the West say Russia is waging an unjustified imperial-style
land grab in its fellow ex-Soviet republic, and accuse Moscow and its
allies of committing war crimes, something the Kremlin has denied.
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Smoke rises from the territory of an automotive centre following
recent shelling during Ukraine-Russia conflict in Donetsk, Ukraine
July 5, 2022. REUTERS/Kazbek Basayev
Russia says it was forced to try to de-militarise Ukraine after the
West ignored its pleas to provide it with guarantees that its
westerly neighbour would not be admitted to NATO. It says it also
had to act to root out what it said were dangerous nationalists and
to protect Russian speakers.
Its invasion has killed thousands, displaced millions and flattened
cities. It has also raised global energy and food prices and raised
fears of famine in poorer countries as Ukraine and Russia are both
major grain producers.
A RUINED CITY
A Reuters reporter who visited Lysychansk on Tuesday, once a city of
a 100,000 people, found many buildings scorched and holed by shells,
cars up-ended and streets strewn with rubble, testament to the
ferocity of the battle it endured.
Tatiana Glushenko, a 45-year-old Lysychansk resident, told Reuters
there were people still sheltering in basements and bomb shelters,
including children and elderly.
Glushenko said she did not think she would be safe in other parts of
Ukraine, so remained in Lysychansk with her family.
"All of Ukraine is being shelled: western Ukraine, central Ukraine,
Dnipro, Kyiv, everywhere. So we decided not to risk our lives and
stay here, at home at least," she said.
Glushenko now hopes peace will return to her ruined city, but for
elderly residents Sergei and Evgenia the prospect of rebuilding from
the ruins is daunting.
"We have to get out of here somehow," said Sergei, sitting in a dark
shelter with a lone flash light.
"The roof is broken. You have to fix it, but how and how do you pay
for it?...Winter is coming soon too," said Evgenia
Luhansk governor Gaidai said Russian forces were pillaging
Lysychansk and its twin city Sievierodonetsk.
"They are hunting down pro-Ukraine residents. They are making deals
with collaborators, they are identifying apartments where servicemen
lived, breaking in and taking clothing," he said.
"Everything is being destroyed."
Reuters could not immediately verify this report.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Michael Perry and Andrew
Osborn; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Angus MacSwan)
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