Russia blames its soldiers' mobile phone use for deadly missile strike
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[January 04, 2023]
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia's defence ministry on Wednesday
blamed mobile phone use by its soldiers for a deadly Ukrainian missile
strike that it said killed 89 servicemen, raising the reported death
toll from 63.
The New Year's Eve strike, the deadliest single incident Moscow has
acknowledged since the start of the war, has angered pro-war Russian
commentators, increasingly vocal about what they see as a half-hearted
and incompetent campaign in Ukraine.
Criticism has been directed at military commanders rather than Russian
President Vladimir Putin, who has not commented publicly on the attack,
which has dealt a further blow after major battlefield retreats in
recent months.
The Russian defence ministry said four Ukrainian rockets had hit a
temporary Russian barracks in a vocational college in Makiivka, twin
city of the Russian-occupied regional capital of Donetsk in eastern
Ukraine.
Although a probe has been launched, the Russian ministry said the main
reason for the attack was the mass use of mobile phones by servicemen,
which it described as illegal.
"This factor allowed the enemy to track and determine the coordinates of
the soldiers' location for a missile strike," it said in a statement
issued just after 1 a.m. (2200 GMT Tuesday) on Wednesday.
Russia has effectively shut down all direct opposition to the war, with
open criticism banned by severe media rules. But it has given
comparatively free rein to pro-war nationalist bloggers, many with
hundreds of thousands of followers on social media.
Semyon Pegov, a war correspondent awarded the Order of Courage by Putin,
said on Telegram that pointing the finger at troops using mobile phones
"looks like an outright attempt to smear the blame". There were other
ways Ukraine could have spotted the base, he said.
Pegov said the death toll would rise further: "The announced data is
most likely for those who were immediately identified. The list of the
missing, unfortunately, is noticeably longer."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who rarely comments on specific
Ukrainian military strikes, made no mention of the attack in a video
address on Tuesday.
Ukraine initially said hundreds of Russians were killed in Makiivka. It
has since avoided giving details.
'MAJOR RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE'
Zelenskiy said Russia was set to launch a major offensive.
"We have no doubt that current masters of Russia will throw everything
they have left and everyone they can round up to try to turn the tide of
the war and at least delay their defeat," Zelenskiy said in a video
address.
"We have to disrupt this Russian scenario. We are preparing for this.
The terrorists must lose. Any attempt at their new offensive must fail,"
he continued.
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People take part in a ceremony in memory
of Russian soldiers killed in the course of Russia-Ukraine military
conflict, the day after Russia's Defence Ministry stated that 63
Russian servicemen were killed in a Ukrainian missile strike on
their temporary accommodation in Makiivka (Makeyevka) in the
Russian-controlled part of Ukraine, in Glory Square in Samara,
Russia, January 3, 2023. REUTERS/Albert Dzen
With Russia losing territory in the second half of 2022, Putin
ordered the first call-up of reservists since World War Two. Kyiv
has been saying for weeks that Russia plans to order another mass
conscription drive and shut its borders to prevent men from escaping
the draft.
In the latest sign that the Kremlin may be considering such a move,
a little known group claiming to represent widows of Russian
soldiers released a call for Putin to order a large-scale
mobilisation of millions of men.
The General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces on Wednesday said Russia
had launched seven missile strikes, 18 air strikes and more than 85
attacks from multiple-launch rocket systems in the past 24 hours on
civilian infrastructure in three cities, Kramatorsk, Zaporizhzhia
and Kherson.
"There are casualties among the civilian population," it said.
Russia denies targeting civilians.
The battlefield reports could not be independently verified by
Reuters.
Ukraine's General Staff also said Russian forces continued to
concentrate on advancing in the area of Bakhmut, a city in Donetsk
now largely reduced to ruins after months of fighting, while also
trying to improve their positions elsewhere along the front line in
that region.
Mikhail Razvozhayev, the Russian-installed governor of Sevastopol in
Crimea, said on Wednesday on the Telegram messaging app that air
defence systems had shot down two drones near the Belbek military
airfield.
Putin plans to talk to Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on
Wednesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Interfax, the latest
in a series of conversations the two leaders have had since the
start of the war.
Turkey acted as mediator alongside the United Nations to establish a
deal allowing grain exports from Ukrainian ports. But the chances of
serious peace talks appear remote, with Moscow demanding Kyiv accept
its annexation of seized land and Ukraine vowing to drive Russian
troops from all its territory.
Putin launched what he calls a "special military operation" in
Ukraine on Feb. 24, citing threats to Russian security and a need to
protect Russian speakers. Ukraine and its allies accuse Moscow of an
unprovoked imperialist-style grab for territory.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Michael Perry and Gareth
Jones; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Peter Graff)
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