Ukraine battles to push back Russian advance in northern Donetsk
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[July 07, 2022]
By Pavel Polityuk and Simon Lewis
KYIV/KRAMATORSK, Ukraine (Reuters) -
Ukraine has so far staved off any major Russian advance into the north
of its Donetsk region, but pressure is intensifying with heavy shelling
on the city of Sloviansk and nearby populated areas, the Ukrainian
military said on Wednesday.
Russia and separatist proxies were already in control of the southern
part of Donetsk province when they effectively completed the seizure of
the neighbouring Luhansk region on Sunday with the capture of the city
of Lysychansk, much of which now lies in ruins.
Moscow says ejecting the Ukrainian military out of both regions is
central to what it calls its "special military operation" to ensure its
own security, a more than four-month-long offensive that the West calls
an unprovoked war.
Donetsk and Luhansk provinces comprise the Donbas, the eastern, heavily
industrial region of Ukraine that has become Europe's biggest
battlefield for generations and over which Russia wants to wrest control
for separatists it supports.
In its evening note on Wednesday, Ukraine's military suggested that
Russian forces were intensifying pressure on Ukrainian defenders along
the northern flanks of Donetsk province.
It said Russian forces were bombarding several Ukrainian towns with
heavy weaponry to enable ground forces to advance southward into the
region and close in on Sloviansk.
"The enemy is trying to improve its tactical position...(They) advanced
... before being repulsed by our soldiers and retreating with losses,"
the Ukrainian military update said.
Other Russian forces, it said, aimed to seize two towns en route to the
city of Kramatorsk, south of Sloviansk, and were also trying to take
control of the main highway linking Luhansk and Donetsk provinces.
"We are holding back the enemy on the (Luhansk/Donetsk) border," Luhansk
Governor Serhiy Gaidai told Ukrainian TV. Later, he said Luhansk was
still not entirely occupied by Russian forces and that Russia had
sustained "colossal losses."
"They will continue to try to advance on Sloviansk and Bakhmut. There is
no doubt about that," he said.
Sloviansk Mayor Vadym Lyakh told a video briefing the city had been
shelled for the last two weeks.
"The situation is tense," he said, adding that 17 residents had been
killed there since President Vladimir Putin ordered Russian forces into
Ukraine on Feb. 24.
Russia's defence ministry says it does not target civilians and on
Wednesday said it was using high-precision weapons to take out military
threats.
It said it had destroyed two advanced U.S.-made HIMARS rocket systems
and their ammunition depots in Donetsk province. Ukraine denied this and
said it was using HIMARS to inflict "devastating blows" on Russian
forces.
In his nightly video message, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
said Ukrainian fighters were making "tangible strikes" on Russian
logistical targets like depots, affecting their offensive potential.
"At last, Western artillery has started to work powerfully, the weapons
we are getting from our partners. And their accuracy is exactly what is
needed," he said.
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Smoke rises after shelling during Ukraine-Russia conflict in
Donetsk, Ukraine July 6, 2022. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
Ukraine has repeatedly pleaded with the West to send
more weapons to repel the invasion that has killed thousands,
displaced millions, and flattened cities.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said he had
spoken Wednesday with his German and U.S. counterparts, where he
said the importance of continuing military aid was discussed.
'NO SAFE AREAS'
In the Donetsk city of Kramatorsk, which Russian forces are expected
to try to capture in coming weeks, Ukrainian soldiers and a handful
of civilians ran errands in green-painted cars and vans on
Wednesday. Much of the population has left.
"It's almost deserted. It's spooky," said Oleksandr, a 64-year-old
retired metal worker.
He was unlikely to follow official advice to evacuate, he said,
despite an increase in missile strikes. "I'm not looking for death
but if I encounter it it's better to be at home," he said.
The war has also ground on outside Donbas. Kharkiv, Ukraine's second
largest city, was being subjected to "constant" longer-range Russian
shelling, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said on Ukrainian TV.
"Russia is trying to demoralise Kharkiv but it won't get anywhere,"
he said. Ukrainian defenders pushed Russian armoured forces well
back from Kharkiv early in the war, and Terekhov said around 1
million residents remained there.
South of Kharkiv, the governor of Dnipropetrovsk said that region
had been battered by missiles and shelling, while on the southern
coast the port of Mykolaiv was also being heavily shelled, Oleksandr
Senkevych, its mayor, told a briefing. The city has already shed
about half of its pre-war population of half a million.
"There are no safe areas in Mykolaiv," he said. "I am telling the
people... that they need to leave."
Reuters was unable to immediately verify battlefield reports.
Russia says it was forced to try to demilitarise Ukraine after the
West ignored its pleas to guarantee that its fellow former Soviet
republic and neighbour would not be admitted to NATO. Moscow says it
also had to root out what it said were dangerous nationalists and
protect Russian speakers.
Ukraine and its Western backers say Russia's stated aims are a
pretext for an unprovoked, imperial-style land grab.
In a sign that Moscow is not preparing to wind down its operation
anytime soon, Russia's parliament on Wednesday rushed through bills
requiring businesses to supply goods to the armed forces and
obliging employees at some firms to work overtime.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Michael Perry, Andrew
Osborn, Mark Heinrich and Rosalba O'Brien; Editing by Angus MacSwan,
John Stonestreet and Deepa Babington)
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