Ukrainian authorities were hoping yesterday to evacuate more civilians from the besieged southern port city of Mariupol, as Russia’s offensive in the east of Ukraine continued with “active and heavy” fighting.
Kyiv said more than 100 civilians were evacuated over the weekend from the sprawling Azovstal plant, the last holdout of Ukrainian forces in Mariupol, which has been surrounded by Russian forces since they invaded Ukraine on February 24.
The civilians were awaited yesterday in Ukraine-controlled Zaporizhzhia, where vehicles from Unicef and other international NGOs were on standby.
In co-ordinated efforts between Ukraine, Russia and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), another evacuation had been scheduled to start first thing yesterday.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said later that the evacuation was “underway”, but declined to give more details until it was complete.
“Everything is very fragile, things can fall apart at any given moment so it’s better to wait until the evacuation is over,” he told a press conference with his Danish counterpart in Kyiv.
Several hundred Ukrainian soldiers and civilians have been sheltering in the maze of Soviet-era underground tunnels underneath the Azovstal steelworks, many of whom require medical attention.
Over the weekend, “for the first time, there were two days of real ceasefire on this territory”, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said late on Sunday.
“More than 100 civilians have already been evacuated – women and children first of all,” he said in a video address.
Russia’s armed forces said 46 civilians had left Azovstal on Saturday, and had “voluntarily” decided to stay in the separatist region of Donetsk.
Another 80 got out on Sunday – of whom 69 left for Kyiv-controlled territory, it said.
They were “handed over to UN and ICRC representatives”, the Russian ministry said earlier.
Some civilian evacuees reached Zaporizhzhia from Russian occupied territory yesterday morning after making their own way.
One of them, Natalya Tsyntomirska, arrived in a funeral service van.
She said she had left the devastation of Mariupol some time ago and been hiding in a basement in a nearby village.
“Our house is completely destroyed. We had a two-storey building, it’s not there anymore. It burned to the ground,” she said.
Another evacuee, Yelena Aytulova, 44, described sheltering in a bunker in Azovstal since February 24.
She spoke to Reuters at Bezimenne, in an area of Donetsk under the control of Russia-backed separatists on the route of the UN/Red Cross convoy.
“For a month we were eating – over 40 of us – six tins of food. We boiled two buckets of soup out of them and that was it for the whole day,” she said.
She said some civilians remained there after she left.
“The soldiers came and escorted the first 11 people out, those who were seriously ill, had asthma or needed insulin and also three of us, randomly. More than 40 people, including little children are left there.”
Olga Savina, 65, said her home in Mariupol had also been destroyed.
“It can’t be intact because there was bombing every day. All the time we spent in the bunker, they were bombing,” she said through tears.
Mariupol is an important strategic hub connecting the Russian-held southern and eastern parts of Ukraine and has seen some of the worst of the fighting.
With the Russian siege leaving residents in dire conditions, with little access to food, water and medicine, the city has become emblematic of a war that has uprooted more than 13mn people from their homes and killed thousands.
After failing to take the capital Kyiv in the first few weeks of the war, Moscow’s military has refocused efforts on the east of Ukraine, notably the Donbas region, which includes the pro-Russian separatist areas of Donetsk and Luhansk.
Fighting is particularly intense around Izyum, Lyman and Rubizhne, as the Russians prepare their attack on Severodonetsk, the last easterly city still held by Kyiv, Ukraine’s general staff said.
“The situation in the Lugansk region can be described in a few words – active and heavy fighting continues,” the defence ministry added.
In Lyman, relentless shelling has reduced hamlets around the city to rubble, according to AFP reporters.
“Half of the city is destroyed,” said one local in passing, lifting luggage onto the roof of his beat-up Soviet-designed red Lada passenger car.
“I don’t have a house anymore,” he said.
The governor of Luhansk has said he expected more intense battles ahead of May 9, the day Russia celebrates the 1945 surrender of Nazi Germany to allied forces, including the then Soviet Union.
However, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told Italian television late on Sunday that Moscow’s forces “will not artificially adjust their actions to any date, including Victory Day”.
Russia has moved to solidify its grip on areas it controls and from Sunday introduced the Russian ruble in the region of Kherson, initially to be used alongside the Ukrainian hryvnia.
On the frontline in the east, Russian troops – helped by massive use of artillery – have advanced slowly but steadily.
However, Ukrainian forces have also recaptured some territory in recent days, including the village of Ruska Lozova, which evacuees said had been occupied for two months.
“It was two months of terrible fear. Nothing else, a terrible and relentless fear,” Natalia, a 28-year-old evacuee from Ruska Lozova, told AFP after reaching Kharkiv.
Kyiv has admitted that Russian forces have captured a string of villages in the Donbas region and has asked Western powers to deliver more heavy weapons to bolster its defences there.
Ukraine’s defence ministry said yesterday that its drones had sunk two Russian patrol boats near the Black Sea’s Snake Island, which became a symbol of Ukrainian resistance after soldiers there rebuffed Russian demands to surrender.
“The Bayraktars are working,” said Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, the commander in chief of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, referring to Turkish-made military drones.
Western powers have levelled unprecedented sanctions against Russia over the war while delivering money and weapons to Ukraine, including a $33bn (€31bn) arms and support package announced by US President Joe Biden last week.
However, many European Union countries remain dependent on Russian gas and oil, which critics say undermines their attempts to isolate Moscow.
EU ministers met yesterday to respond to Russia’s decision last week to cut gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria, which had refused Moscow’s demand to pay in roubles.
The bloc is also working on a phased ban on Russian oil imports, although several member states are wary of the economic damage, and no decision is expected Monday.
In a symbolic show of support, many Western nations are also reopening their embassies in Kyiv that were closed due to the invasion, with Denmark the latest to make the move yesterday.
Kristina Kvien, the US charge d’affaires, announced that Washington hopes to have its diplomats back in Kyiv “by the end of the month”.
Related Story