Fighting intensifies in east Ukraine, Kyiv seeks more weapons
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[January 27, 2023]
By Tom Balmforth and Ivan Lyubysh-Kirdey
KYIV (Reuters) -Russia has stepped up attempts to break through
Ukraine's defences with heavy fighting in the north and east of the
country, underlining Kyiv's need for more Western weapons, Ukrainian
officials said on Friday.
The Ukrainian military said fierce battles were under way, a day after
Russian missiles and drones killed at least 11 people in what appeared
to be a response to promises by Western nations to supply Ukraine with
tanks.
After weeks of wrangling, Germany and the United States have promised
Ukraine dozens of modern tanks to help push back Russian forces, opening
the way for Canada, Poland, Finland, Norway and others to follow suit.
Russia accused the United States of "pumping weapons into Ukraine" and
chided President Joe Biden, saying he held the key to ending the
conflict in Ukraine - which Moscow says does Washington's bidding - but
had not used it.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy thanked allies for their support
but renewed calls for tougher sanctions on Moscow and more weapons to
repel the invaders in the twelfth month of the war.
"This evil, this Russian aggression can and should be stopped only with
adequate weapons. The terrorist state will not understand anything
else," Zelenskiy said in his nightly television address on Thursday.
Local officials on Friday reported heavy shelling in the north,
northeast and east of Ukraine, scene of some of the heaviest combat
since Russia's invasion on Feb. 24 last year.
"Fierce fighting continues along the front lines. Our defenders are
firmly holding their positions and inflicting losses to the enemy," said
Oleh Synehubov, governor of the northeastern region of Kharkiv.
Reuters could not verify battlefield reports.
PROBING ATTACKS
Front lines have been largely frozen over the past two months, with
Russia trying to gain ground in the east after occupying swathes of
territory there and protect a corridor of land it has seized in southern
Ukraine.
Both sides are widely expected to launch a spring offensive though the
United States has publicly advised Ukraine against doing so until the
latest weapons are in place and training has been provided -- a process
expected to take several months.
Oleskandr Musiyenko, head of the Military and Strategic Research Centre
of Ukraine, said Russia was sending in more reinforcements, mainly
conscripts, to block Ukrainian advances.
"But they do not have the level of artillery and tank support they had
on Feb. 24," Musiyenko told Ukrainian television.
Britain said in an intelligence update that Russian forces had probably
conducted probing attacks near Orikhiv in southeastern Ukraine and in
Vuhledar in the east, but were unlikely to have achieved "substantive
advances."
Russian forces are intensifying the fight along the eastern front line,
using their recent capture of the town of Soledar to build pressure on
the besieged city of Bakhmut nearby where Ukrainians have held back an
onslaught for months.
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A local resident carry home staff from a
house of his neighbour damaged by a Russian military strike, amid
Russia's attack on Ukraine, in the town of Hlevakha, outside Kyiv,
Ukraine January 26, 2023. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
"Where will the main (Russian) strike occur? For now, we have no
idea," said Mykola Sunhurovskiy, director of military programmes at
Ukraine's Razumkov Centre think tank, warning of possible
"diversionary strikes" to confuse Ukraine's military.
CHILDREN DEPORTED
Russia's invasion has killed thousands of civilians, uprooted
millions and reduced cities to rubble.
Thursday's missile and drone strikes were the latest in a series of
Russian attacks on energy facilities that have depriving millions of
people of heating, light and water.
Ukraine also accuses Moscow of deporting children as well as adults
from occupied areas and giving them Russian passports, actions
condemned by the U.N.'s refugee agency (UNHCR).
"Giving them (Russian) nationality or having them adopted goes
against the fundamental principles of child protection in situations
of war," UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi told Reuters after touring
Ukraine. "This is something that is happening in Russia and must not
happen."
Kyiv's allies have imposed several rounds of sanctions on Russia,
hoping to hinder its ability to wage war.
Japan tightened sanctions against Russia on Friday, expanding an
export ban list and freezing assets of Russian officials and
entities.
But Ukraine's hopes that the European Union will impose sanctions
affecting nuclear energy were dealt a blow by Hungary, which said
that it would veto such moves. Hungary has a Russian-built nuclear
plant which it plans to expand.
The United States also increased pressure on Russia on Thursday by
designating the Wagner Group, a private Russian mercenary company,
as a transnational criminal organisation, freezing its U.S. assets
for helping Russia's military.
The Kremlin brushed off the decision, saying Washington had been "demonising"
the group for years without basis.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has meanwhile been visiting
Africa to shore up support for Moscow. His latest stop on a tour
that began in South Africa was in Eritrea.
Russia has shifted the focus of its rhetoric from "denazifying" and
"demilitarising" Ukraine to confronting what is says is an
aggressive and expansionist U.S.-led NATO alliance. Ukraine and the
West say the invasion on Feb. 24, 2022 was an unprovoked act of
aggression.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Timothy Heritage; Editing
by Frank Jack Daniel)
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