Azovstal siege ends as hundreds of Ukrainian fighters surrender
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[May 17, 2022] MARIUPOL,
Ukraine (Reuters) -More than 250 Ukrainian fighters have surrendered
after weeks holed up in the labyrinth of bunkers and tunnels below
Mariupol's Azovstal steel works as the most devastating siege of
Russia's war in Ukraine draws to a close.
Russian forces pummelled Mariupol, a major port on the Sea of Azov
between Russia and Crimea, with artillery for weeks while some of the
fiercest urban warfare of the conflict left much of the city a
wasteland.
Civilians and hundreds of Ukrainian fighters, many of them from the Azov
Regiment, sought refuge in the Azovstal works, a vast Soviet-era plant
founded under Josef Stalin and designed with a maze of bunkers and
tunnels to withstand nuclear attack.
Russia's defence ministry said 265 Ukrainian fighters had surrendered,
including 51 who were seriously wounded and would be treated at
Novoazovsk in the Russian-backed breakaway Donetsk region.
Ukraine's military command had said in the early hours of Tuesday that
the mission to defend the steel plant was over.
"Ukraine needs Ukrainian heroes alive," President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
said in his nightly video address.
Pro-Russian forces posted video showing more than 30 fighters carrying
wounded soldiers out of the plant before about a dozen buses took the
combatants to Novoazovsk.
Most civilians in the plant had been rescued in the last few weeks after
the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross
brokered a deal with Russia and Ukraine.
But it was unclear what would happen to the fighters now.
Moscow has depicted the Azov Regiment as one of the main perpetrators of
the alleged radical anti-Russian nationalism or even Nazism from which
it says it needs to protect Ukraine's Russian-speakers.
The Kremlin said the combatants would be treated in line with
international norms, while Ukrainian Deputy Defence Minister Hanna
Malyar posted a video in which she said: "An exchange procedure will
take place for their return home."
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Service members of pro-Russian troops stand guard on a road before
the expected evacuation of wounded Ukrainian soldiers from the
besieged Azovstal steel mill in the course of Ukraine-Russia
conflict in Mariupol, Ukraine May 16, 2022. REUTERS/Alexander
Ermochenko
SIEGE
Civilians had spoken of desperate conditions in the bunkers, and
some of the fighters had endured horrific battle injuries with
minimal medical assistance.
The Azov Regiment was formed in 2014 as an extreme right-wing
volunteer militia to fight Russian-backed separatists who had taken
control of parts of the Donbas - the largely Russian-speaking
industrial heartland of eastern Ukraine where Russia says it wants
to end Ukrainian rule.
The regiment denies being fascist, racist or neo-Nazi, and Ukraine
says it has been reformed away from its radical nationalist origins
to be integrated into the National Guard. Ukraine's military command
cast all the defenders as "heroes of our time".
Kyiv also denies that Russian speakers have been persecuted in
Ukraine, and says the allegation that it has a fascist agenda,
repeated daily on Russian media, is a baseless pretext for a Russian
war of aggression.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday that President
Vladimir Putin had guaranteed that the fighters who surrendered
would be treated "in accordance with international standards".
Zelenskiy said in his address that "the work of bringing the boys
home continues, and this work needs delicacy - and time".
But Vyacheslav Volodin, speaker of the State Duma, Russia's lower
house, said: "Nazi criminals should not be exchanged."
And lawmaker Leonid Slutsky, one of Russia's negotiators in talks
with Ukraine, called the evacuated combatants "animals in human
form" and said they should receive the death penalty.
"They do not deserve to live after the monstrous crimes against
humanity that they have committed and that are committed
continuously against our prisoners," he said.
(Reporting by Reuters; writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by
Kevin Liffey)
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