West to bolster Ukraine aid as Russian assault enters second month
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[March 24, 2022]
By John Chalmers and Natalia Zinets
BRUSSELS/LVIV/
MARIUPOL, Ukraine (Reuters) -
Western leaders meeting in Brussels on Thursday will agree to strengthen
their forces in Eastern Europe and increase military aid to Ukraine as
the Russian assault on its neighbour entered its second month.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged them to go further and
repeated his call for a no-fly zone over his country, where thousands of
people have been killed, millions become refugees, and cities pulverised
since Russian President Vladimir Putin unleashed his invasion on Feb.
24.
In Mariupol, the southern port city that has come to symbolise Ukraine's
plight, people were burying their dead and queuing for rations in pauses
in the bombing.
One woman there, Viktoria, buried her 73-year-old stepfather Leonid,
killed when the car ferrying him to a hospital was blown up 12 days ago.
"This guy had taken a seat instead of me and then they all got blown up
in that car," she told Reuters, pointing to the mangled remains of the
vehicle.
"It could have been me," she sobbed.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been hiding in basements in
Mariupol with no running water, food, medicine or power.
Ukrainian officials say they have pushed back the invaders in other
areas, including around the capital Kyiv, thwarting Russian hopes of a
swift victory.
RUINOUS
In Brussels, Western leaders will warn Putin his country will pay
"ruinous" costs for invading Ukraine during a series of NATO, G7 and EU
summits over Thursday and Friday. U.S. President Joe Biden is among
those attending.
Alarmed by the prospect that Russia might escalate the war, the NATO
nations will agree to send Kyiv equipment to defend against biological,
chemical and nuclear attacks.
"We must ensure that the decision to invade a sovereign independent
country is understood to be a strategic failure that carries with it
ruinous costs for Putin and Russia," Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau told the EU parliament.
The first U.S. shipment from a new, $800 million arms package for
Ukraine will start flying out in the next day or so, a U.S. defence
official said.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the alliance would boost
its forces in Eastern Europe by deploying four new battle groups in
Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia.
The Kremlin said most NATO member states suffered from an "hysterical
and inadequate" understanding of what is going on in Ukraine.
Washington said Biden and his European counterparts would announce new
sanctions against Russia and measures to tighten existing sanctions.
However, EU diplomats played down expectations of major new sanctions.
Zelenskiy, who will address the NATO and EU summits by video conference,
said he expected "serious steps" from Western allies. He repeated his
call for a no-fly zone, although Western leaders have rejected this as a
move that would drag them directly into the war.
He complained that the West had not provided Ukraine with planes, modern
anti-missile systems, tanks or anti-ship weapons.
The Ukrainian leader, who has won admiration across the West for his
leadership under fire, also urged people around the world to take to the
streets in support of Ukraine.
"Come from your offices, your homes, your schools and universities, come
in the name of peace, come with Ukrainian symbols to support Ukraine, to
support freedom, to support life," he said in a video address.
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Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan and U.S. President Joe Biden shake
hands during a family photo opportunity before a NATO summit to
discuss Russia's invasion of Ukraine at the alliance's headquarters
in Brussels, Belgium, March 24, 2022. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
After four weeks of conflict, Russia has failed to seize any big
city and with its ground advances seemingly stalled has engaged in
aerial bombardments of cities, causing a humanitarian crisis. The
Kremlin denies targeting civilians.
Although the Kremlin says its operation is going to plan, Russian
forces have taken heavy losses and face supply problems.
Moscow calls its actions a "special operation" that it says is not
designed to occupy territory but to destroy its southern neighbour's
military capabilities and capture what it regards as dangerous
nationalists.
The West says this a baseless pretext for an unprovoked war.
The port of Mariupol has been worst hit. Satellite photographs from
commercial firm Maxar showed massive destruction of what was once a
city of 400,000 people, with residential apartment buildings in
flames.
Reuters on Wednesday reached a part of the city captured by Russian
forces. More than 100 people waited patiently in line for boxes of
food and humanitarian supplies being distributed from a truck.
Angelina, a young mother of two, said she had received bread,
diapers and baby food.
"It's difficult to leave by bus now. We hope the number of people
trying to get out will go down and it will get easier for us to
leave," she said.
Ukraine's armed forces chief of staff said on Thursday Russia was
still trying to resume offensive operations to capture the cities of
Kyiv, Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkiv and Mariupol.
To counter troop shortages, Moscow was moving in fresh units close
to the Ukraine border and calling up soldiers who had recently
served in Syria, it said.
Zelenskiy repeated he was ready to have a face-to-face meeting with
Putin to end the war.
"We are ready to discuss the terms of the ceasefire, the terms of
peace, but we are not ready for ultimatums," he said.
FREEZE OUT
Britain imposed new sanctions on Russian elites and businesses,
targeting strategic industries including a defence company, shipping
group Sovcomflot and lender Gazprombank.
The individuals sanctioned included Polina Kovaleva, stepdaughter of
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who reportedly owns a
4-million-pound property in London
International sanctions have frozen Russia out of world commerce.
But the biggest loophole is an exception for its energy exports.
Some EU member states are resisting calls to ban Russian oil and gas
as they rely heavily on them.
EU leaders are expected to agree at their summit to jointly buy gas
as they seek to cut that reliance. [L3N2VQ3IG]
Brussels is also aiming to strike a deal with Biden to secure
additional U.S. liquefied natural gas supplies for the next two
winters.
(Reporting by a Reuters journalist in Mariupol, Natalia Zinets in
Lviv, John Chalmers in Brussels and Reuters bureaux; Writing by
Angus MacSwan, Editing by Peter Graff and Jon Boyle)
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