Russia, under pressure in southern Ukraine, captures villages in east
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[October 14, 2022]
By Max Hunder and Abdelaziz Boumzar
KYIV/KUPIANSK, Ukraine (Reuters)
-Russian-backed forces have made some advances in eastern Ukraine,
Britain said on Friday, even as Moscow's hold weakens in the south,
where a Russian-installed official has advised residents to flee a
region Russia claims to have annexed.
A British intelligence update said forces led by the private Russian
military company Wagner Group had captured the villages of Optyine and
Ivangrad south of the fiercely-contested town of Bakhmut, the first such
advance in more than three months.
"There have been few, if any, other settlements seized by regular
Russian or separatist forces since early July," said the daily update
from London, which normally focuses on Ukrainian battlefield successes.
Ukraine launched a counteroffensive in late August against Russian
forces occupying the country since the start of their invasion in
February, pushing them out of the northeast and putting them under heavy
pressure in the south.
Its main focus now is Kherson - one of four partially occupied Ukrainian
provinces that Russia claims to have annexed in recent weeks, and
arguably the most strategically important.
Russia's TASS news agency said evacuees from the Kherson region were
expected to begin arriving in Russia on Friday, a day after a
Russian-installed official advised all residents of the region to flee,
especially those around Kherson city.
While some people in Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine have fled to
Russia as Ukrainian forces advance, others have reported being forced
towards Russia and others still have fled westward to
Ukrainian-controlled parts of their country.
STRATEGIC TARGET
A flight of civilians from Kherson would be a blow to Russia's claim
last month to have annexed around 15% of Ukraine's territory and
incorporated an area the size of Portugal into Russia.
Kherson city, the only major conurbation Russia has captured intact
since invading in February, controls the only land route to the Crimea
peninsula seized by Russia in 2014 and the mouth of the Dnipro river
that bisects Ukraine.
Since the start of October, Ukrainian forces have burst through Russia's
front lines in the region in their biggest advance in the south since
the war began, aiming to cut Russian troops off from supply lines and
escape routes across the river.
Ukraine said earlier on Friday that its armed forces had retaken 600
settlements in the past month, including 75 in the Kherson region and 43
in the eastern Donetsk region, where Optyine and Ivangrad lie.
"The area of liberated Ukrainian territories has increased
significantly," the Ministry for Reintegration of the Temporary Occupied
Territories said on its website.
Reuters was not immediately able to confirm the battlefield reports.
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A Russian military truck drives past an
unexploded munition during Ukraine-Russia conflict in the
Russia-controlled village of Chornobaivka, Ukraine July 26, 2022.
REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
Moscow calls the conflict, which has killed thousands of Ukrainians
and left cities, towns and villages in ruins, a "special military
operation" to demilitarise a country whose moves towards the West
threaten Russia's own security. Kyiv and its Western allies say it
is an unprovoked war of conquest.
The British report said Moscow's overall military campaign in
Ukraine was still being undermined by Ukrainian forces along the
northern and southern ends of the front line as well as by severe
shortages of munitions and manpower.
Russia was targeting Bakhmut, it said, to try to seize the
Kramatorsk-Solviansk urban area of the eastern Donetsk region, which
was among those Russia said it had annexed despite not being in full
control.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in a video address late
on Thursday that "brutal" fighting was continuing there.
He also accused the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
of inaction in upholding the rights of Ukrainian prisoners of war
and urged it to undertake a mission to a camp in the
Russian-occupied east of the country.
In the latest of a series of Ukrainian criticisms of the ICRC, he
said no one had yet visited Olenivka - a notorious camp in eastern
Ukraine where dozens of Ukrainian POWs died in an explosion and fire
in July.
Alongside the annexation, Russian President Vladimir Putin has
responded to the battlefield setbacks with other moves to escalate
the conflict: calling up hundreds of thousands of reservists and
threatening to use nuclear weapons.
This week, Russia launched the biggest air strikes since the start
of the war, firing more than 100 cruise missiles mainly at Ukraine's
electricity and heat infrastructure.
Officials in Russia's Belgorod region bordering Ukraine have since
accused Ukraine of targeting its power supplies and hitting an
apartment block in the regional capital. Ukraine said the block was
damaged by a Russian missile that went astray.
On Friday, Belgorod regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said train
operations were suspended near Novyi Oskol, a town of about 18,000
people which lies about 90 kilometres (56 miles) north of the
border, after remains of a missile fell nearby.
Putin said the Russian strikes on Ukraine were retaliation for a
blast on Saturday that damaged Russia's bridge to Crimea.
Damage to the bridge, which is a showcase project of Putin's rule,
will not be repaired until next summer, a document published on the
Russian government's website said on Friday.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Stephen Coates and
Philippa Fletcher; Editing by Michael Perry and Frank Jack Daniel)
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