Ukraine claims battlefield successes, curbs Russian gas to Europe
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[May 11, 2022] By
Pavel Polityuk and Jonathan Landay
KYIV/VILHIVKA, Ukraine (Reuters) -Ukrainian
forces reported battlefield gains on Wednesday in a counterattack that
could signal a shift in the momentum of the war, while Kyiv shut gas
flows on a route through Russian-held territory, raising the spectre of
an energy crisis in Europe.
In Vilhivka, a village east of Kharkiv held by Ukrainian forces, the
thump of near constant artillery and swoosh of multiple rocket launchers
could be heard from fighting at the front, now pushed substantially
further east, where Ukraine has been trying to capture the banks of the
Donets river and threaten Russian supply lines on the far side.
Following days of advances, Ukrainian forces were within several
kilometres of the Russian border in the Kharkiv region on Wednesday
morning, one Ukrainian military source told Reuters.
East of Vilhivka, Ukrainian forces seemed to be in control of the
village of Rubizhne, on the banks of the Donets, after what appear to
the be the fastest advances since April when Ukraine pushed Russian
forces back from Kyiv and the country's north.
"It is burned out, just like all Russian tanks," a Ukrainian soldier
told Reuters outside the village next to the ruins of one Russian tank.
"The weapons are helping a lot, the anti-tank ones."
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's office said Russian forces were
"gradually being pushed out of Kharkiv", though Kyiv has so far
confirmed few details of the advance through the region, preferring to
remain cautious.
Zelenskiy himself said the successes were putting the second largest
city - under constant bombardment since the war's early days - beyond
the range of Russian artillery, but he cautioned Ukrainians against
raising expectations too high yet.
"We should not create an atmosphere of excessive moral pressure, where
victories are expected weekly and even daily," he said in an overnight
video address.
The 92nd Mechanised Brigade confirmed to Reuters on Tuesday that it had
recaptured four villages north of Kharkiv, pushing Russian forces closer
to the border.
"The enemy is trying to prevent our troops from moving further towards
the border in the Kharkiv region," the Ukrainian general staff said,
without providing specifics.
Russia also gave few details about fighting in the area.
Ukrainian progress could be seen on the ground in Vilhivka, a severely
damaged village recaptured by Ukrainian forces weeks ago but where few
civilians had so far dared return.
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A pressure gauge, pipe and valves are pictured at a boosting
compressor station (BCS) on the East Poltava gas field near the
village of Kovalivka, in Poltava region, Ukraine, June 27, 2014.
REUTERS/Gleb Garanich/File Photo
With the Russians having now been pushed further east
in recent days, more people were now venturing back to comb through
the wreckage of their homes. The bloated body of a Russian soldier
still lay moldering outside the bombed out school where his unit had
made its headquarters before being driven out.
GAS SUPPLIES
Wednesday's separate move by Ukraine to cut off Russian gas supplies
through territory held by Russian-backed separatists was one of the
first times gas shipments to Europe have been directly affected by
the conflict.
Gas flows from Russia's export monopoly Gazprom to Europe via
Ukraine fell by a quarter after Kyiv said it was forced to halt all
flows from the Sokhranovka transit point in southern Russia, because
Russian-backed separatists were siphoning supplies.
Should the supply cut-back persist, it would be the most direct
impact so far on European energy markets of the war that the Kremlin
calls a "special military operation".
Apart from the east, Russia has seized a swathe of southern Ukraine,
where Kyiv and its Western allies say they believe Moscow intends to
organise a fake referendum on independence or annexation to make its
occupation permanent.
The Kremlin said on Wednesday it was up to residents living in the
Russian-occupied Kherson region to decide whether they wanted to
join Russia, but any such decision must have a clear legal basis.
Earlier, TASS news agency quoted an official in the
Russian-controlled administration as saying the region planned to
ask President Vladimir Putin to incorporate it into Russia.
Russian forces have also continued to bombard the Azovstal
steelworks in the southern port of Mariupol.
Ukraine's general staff said Moscow was trying to capture the last
bastion of Ukrainian resistance in the ruined city.
The Azov Regiment holed up inside it said Russia was bombing the
factory from the air and trying to storm it. Reuters was unable to
independently verify the reports of fighting there.
(Additional reporting Tom Balmforth in Kyiv and Vitalii Hnidyi in
RubizhneWriting by Peter Graff; editing by John Stonestreet)
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