Russia says it repels border incursion, Kyiv hit kills three
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[June 01, 2023]
By Valentyn Ogirenko and Guy Faulconbridge
KYIV/MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia said on Thursday it had repelled more
cross-border attacks from Ukraine while its relentless aerial assaults
on Kyiv killed another three people including a nine-year-old girl and
her mother locked out of an air raid shelter.
Both sides are trying to sap morale and weaken military capacity ahead
of a long-promised Ukrainian counter-offensive against Russia's
15-month-old invasion.
The war has killed tens of thousands of people, uprooted millions,
shattered Ukrainian cities, and brought increasing attacks on Russian
soil.
Russia's defence ministry said its troops thwarted three attempted
incursions near the western town of Shebekino, killing 30 Ukrainian
fighters and destroying four armoured vehicles.
Earlier, the Russian Volunteer Corps (RVC), a far-right paramilitary
group of ethnic Russians that supports Ukraine, had said it was fighting
inside Russia. Kyiv denies direct involvement but Moscow accuses it of
masterminding the raids.
The Belgorod region's governor, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said Ukraine's armed
forces had repeatedly shelled Shebekino with Soviet-designed Grad 122mm
rockets, setting alight a dormitory and damaging an administrative
building.
At least nine civilians were injured, he said, with hundreds of
children, women and elderly being evacuated. Unverified video showed a
fire at a large building in Shebekino.
'NO ONE OPENED SHELTER'
In Kyiv, Ukraine said it shot down 10 ballistic and Iskander cruise
missiles in Russia's 18th attack on the capital since the start of May.
But a nine-year-old girl, her mother and another woman died when rocket
debris fell near an air raid shelter they had been trying to enter.
"The entrance was closed, there were already maybe five to 10 women with
children," local resident Yaroslav Ryabchuk said. "They knocked loudly
enough ... They tried to enter the shelter, no one opened up for them.
My wife died."
Russia denies targeting civilians or committing war crimes but its
forces have devastated Ukrainian cities and repeatedly hit residential
areas since the Feb. 24, 2022 invasion.
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People run to a shelter past a
residential building damaged during the last Russian missile strike,
amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, while an air raid alert sounds in
Kyiv, Ukraine June 1, 2023. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
ZELENSKIY RALLIES EUROPE
President Vladimir Putin's government claims to have annexed parts
of east and south Ukraine in a "special military operation" to "denazify"
its neighbour, protect Russian speakers and defend its borders from
aggressive Western ambitions.
Kyiv and its Western allies accuse Putin of a barbaric invasion and
imperialist-style land grab in Ukraine, which was long dominated by
Russia within the Soviet Union before its break-up in 1991.
At a European summit in Moldova, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
pressed his case for Ukraine to be part of the NATO military
alliance and reiterated his appeal for Western fighter jets to
bolster his army.
"You supported our people, our refugees who fled in the first days
of the war, and we will never forget it," Zelenskiy told his host,
Moldovan President Maia Sandu. "Our future is in the EU. Ukraine is
ready to join NATO."
Zelenskiy said Kyiv had not yet set a date for a proposed peace
summit in July, because it was working to try and bring as many
countries as possible to the table.
Several locations in Scandinavia have been mooted with Denmark
offering to host a meeting. There is also a possibility of staging
it in Lithuania before a NATO heads of state meeting there on July
10-11, a European diplomatic source said.
Ukraine says only a full Russian withdrawal will end the war.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge, Felix Light, Valentyn Ogirenko,
Olena Harmash, John Irish and Andrew Gray; writing by Andrew
Cawthorne; editing by Ros Russell and Mark Heinrich)
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