Silence from Kyiv as Russia claims more than 1,700 surrender in Mariupol
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[May 19, 2022] By
Max Hunder and Natalia Zinets
KYIV, Ukraine (Reuters) -Moscow said on
Thursday that 1,730 Ukrainian fighters had surrendered in Mariupol over
three days, including 771 in the past 24 hours, claiming a surrender on
a far bigger scale than Kyiv has acknowledged since ordering its
garrison to stand down.
The ultimate outcome of Europe's bloodiest battle for decades remained
publicly unresolved, with no confirmation of the fate of the hundreds of
Ukrainian troops who had held out in a vast steelworks at the end of a
near three-month siege.
Ukraine, which says it aims to secure a prisoner swap, has declined to
say how many were inside the plant or comment on the fate of the rest
since confirming that just over 250 had surrendered in the initial hours
after it ordered them to yield.
The leader of Russian-backed separatists in control of the area said
nearly half of the fighters remained inside the steelworks, where
underground bunkers and tunnels had protected them from weeks of Russian
bombardment.
"More than a half have already left - more than half have laid down
their arms," Denis Pushilin told the Solovyov Live internet television
channel. "Let them surrender, let them live, let them honestly face the
charges for all their crimes."
The wounded had been given medical treatment while those who were fit
had been taken to a penal colony and were being treated well, he said.
Ukrainian officials say they cannot comment publicly on the fate of the
fighters, as negotiations are under way behind the scenes to rescue
them.
"The state is making utmost efforts to carry out the rescue of our
service personnel," military spokesman Oleksandr Motuzaynik told a news
conference. "Any information to the public could endanger that process."
Russia denies that it has agreed to a prisoner swap for them. Many of
the Azovstal defenders belong to a Ukrainian unit with far-right
origins, the Azov Regiment, which Moscow calls Nazis and says must be
prosecuted for crimes. Ukraine calls them national heroes.
The end of fighting in Mariupol, the biggest city Russia has captured so
far, allows Russian President Vladimir Putin to claim a rare victory in
the invasion it began on Feb. 24. It gives Russia complete control of
the Sea of Azov and an unbroken stretch of territory along eastern and
southern Ukraine.
Ukraine says tens of thousands of civilians died in
nearly three months of Russian siege and bombardment that lay the city
to waste. The Red Cross and United Nations say the true toll is
uncounted but at least in the thousands, making it the bloodiest battle
in Europe at least since the Chechnya and Balkan wars of the 1990s.
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Service members of Ukrainian forces who have surrendered after weeks
holed up at Azovstal steel works are seen inside a bus, which
arrived under escort of the pro-Russian military at a detention
facility in the course of Ukraine-Russia conflict in the settlement
of Olenivka in the Donetsk Region, Ukraine May 17, 2022.
REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
Moscow denies targeting civilians in its "special military
operation" to disarm and "de-Nazify" its neighbour. Ukraine and the
West say Russian forces have killed many thousands of civilians in
an unprovoked war of aggression.
DONBAS ATTACKS
Russian forces were driven out of northern Ukraine and the area
around the capital at the end of March, and were pushed away from
the second largest city Kharkiv this month.
In a sign of the return of normal life to the capital, the United
States reopened its embassy in Kyiv on Wednesday.
"The Ukrainian people... have defended their homeland in the face of
Russia's unconscionable invasion, and, as a result, the Stars and
Stripes are flying over the Embassy once again," said U.S. Secretary
of State Antony Blinken.
But Russia is still pressing its main offensive using massed
artillery and armour, trying to capture more territory in the
eastern Donbas, comprised of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, which
Moscow claims on behalf of separatists.
Ukraine's general staff said on Thursday Russia's attacks were
focused on Donetsk. Russian forces "suffered significant losses"
around Slovyansk to the north of Donetsk.
Police said on Telegram on Thursday that two children had been
killed in the Donetsk city of Lyman. Serhiy Gaidai, governor of
neighbouring Luhansk region, said four people had been killed and
three wounded in shelling of the frontline city of Sievierodonetsk.
In Russia, the regional governor of the Kursk border region accused
Ukrainian forces of shelling a border village, killing at least one
civilian. Both sides have accused each other of cross border
shelling for weeks.
Reuters was unable to verify the reports.
(Reporting by Natalia Zinets and Max Hunder in Kyiv and a Reuters
journalist in Mariupol; Additional reporting by Reuters bureaux;
Writing by Peter Graff and Stephen Coates; Editing by Richard Pullin
and Nick Macfie)
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