Ukraine seeks evacuation of wounded fighters as war rages on
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[May 14, 2022] By
Sergiy Karazy and Pavel Polityuk
KYIV (Reuters) -Very complex talks are
underway to evacuate a large number of wounded soldiers from a besieged
steelworks in the strategic southeastern port of Mariupol in return for
the release of Russian prisoners of war, Ukraine's president said.
Mariupol, which has seen the heaviest fighting in nearly three months of
war, is now in Russian hands but hundreds of Ukrainian defenders are
still holding out at the Azovstal steelworks despite weeks of heavy
Russian bombardment.
Fierce Ukrainian resistance, which analysts say Russian President
Vladimir Putin and his generals failed to anticipate when they launched
the invasion on Feb. 24, has slowed and in some places reversed Russian
advances elsewhere in Ukraine too.
As well as losing large numbers of men and much military equipment,
Russia is also reeling from economic sanctions. The Group of Seven
leading Western economies pledged in a statement on Saturday to "further
increase economic and political pressure on Russia" and to supply more
weapons to Ukraine.
In a late night address, Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
addressed the plight of people trapped at the Azovstal site.
"At the moment very complex negotiations are under way on the next phase
of the evacuation mission – the removal of the badly wounded, medics,"
he said, adding that "influential" international intermediaries were
involved in the talks.
Russia, which initially insisted the defenders in the sprawling
Soviet-era bunkers beneath the steel works give themselves up, has said
little publicly about the talks.
Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk told local TV on
Saturday that efforts were now focused on evacuating about 60 people,
comprising the most seriously wounded as well as medical personnel.
The wife of one of the steel works defenders, Natalka Zarytska, appealed
to Chinese President Xi Jinping at a briefing in Kyiv on Saturday to
"show ... great concern for world values and great Eastern wisdom" and
help end the siege of Azovstal.
Xi has aligned China with Russia, blaming the West for the war while
calling for a diplomatic resolution of the crisis.
Many of those still in the plant are members of the Azov Regiment.
Deputy commander Sviatoslav Palamar said his forces would continue to
resist as long as they could.
"Our enemy, supported by planes and artillery ... continue their assault
on our positions but we continue to repel them," he told an online forum
on Friday streamed on YouTube.
DIPLOMATIC TREMORS
Moscow's invasion, which it calls a "special operation" to disarm
Ukraine and protect it from fascists, has jolted European security,
prompting Finland - which shares a long border with Russia - and most
likely Sweden to abandon their long-cherished military neutrality and
seek NATO membership.
Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko, quoted by Russian
news agencies on Saturday, said Moscow had no hostile intentions towards
the two Nordic countries but that it would take "adequate precautionary
measures" if NATO deployed nuclear forces and infrastructure closer to
Russia's border.
Russian Su-27 fighter jets have taken part in drills to repel a mock air
strike on Russia's Kaliningrad exclave on the Baltic Sea that borders
Poland and Lithuania, Interfax news agency reported on Saturday, citing
the Baltic Sea fleet.
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Ukrainian servicemen carry bodies of Russian soldiers killed during
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, before putting them in a refrigerated
rail car, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 13, 2022. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who spoke to Putin by
phone on Friday, said he detected no sign of any change in the
Russian leaders's thinking on the conflict.
In an interview for the t-online news website
published on Saturday, Scholz also said Western sanctions on Russia
would remain in place until it reached an agreement with Ukraine,
adding: "Our aim is for this invasion to fail."
Meeting in Germany, foreign ministers from the G7 group of rich
nations on Friday backed giving Ukraine more aid and arms.
In their statement on Saturday, the G7 ministers - from the United
States, Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Italy and Canada - also
pledged to "expedite our efforts to reduce and end reliance on
Russian energy supplies".
BODIES PILED UP
Despite Ukrainian resistance, Russian forces have made steady gains
in southern Ukraine and the eastern Donbas region.
"We are entering a new, long phase of the war," Ukrainian Defence
Minister Oleksii Reznikov said in a Facebook post, predicting
extremely tough weeks when Ukraine would largely be alone against an
"enraged aggressor".
In its latest bulletin, Russia's defence ministry said its forces
had hit Ukrainian command posts, ammunition depots and other
military equipment in several regions, including the Donbas, killing
at least 100 Ukrainian "nationalists".
Reuters could not independently verify the report.
In a grim illustration of the toll on Russia's own forces, Reuters
footage on Friday showed the bodies of Russian soldiers being
brought to a rail yard outside Kyiv and stacked with hundreds of
others in a refrigerated train, waiting for the time when they can
be sent back to their families.
"Most of them were brought from the Kyiv region, there are some from
Chernihiv region and from some other regions too," Volodymyr Lyamzin,
the chief civil-military liaison officer, told Reuters as
stretcher-bearers in white, head-to-toe protective suits lifted body
bags into the box cars.
He said refrigerated trains stationed in other regions across
Ukraine were being used for the same grim purpose.
Moscow has imposed a military-civilian administration in Ukraine's
southern Kherson region and plans to hold a referendum there on
whether it wishes to join the Russian Federation, mirroring similar
votes held in the adjacent Crimea peninsula in 2014 and in two
Donbas regions.
Russia would almost certainly manipulate the results of such a vote,
Britain's defence ministry said.
Ukrainian forces have driven their enemies away from the second
largest city, Kharkiv, near the Russian border, but Moscow was still
bombarding nearby villages, including Dergachi, some 10 km (six
miles) north of Kharkiv.
"I can't call it anything but a terrorist act," Dergachi Mayor
Vyacheslav Zadorenko told Reuters after missiles struck a building
used to distribute aid.
(Additional reporting by Natalia Zinets, Tom Balmforth, Idrees Ali,
David Ljunggren and Reuters bureaux; Writing by Gareth Jones;
Editing by William Mallard and David Clarke)
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