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Crikey
Crikey
National
DPA

Russia hammers Ukraine’s Donetsk region

Russian forces have struck targets across Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, a day after President Vladimir Putin declared victory in the neighbouring province of Luhansk after months of gruelling attritional warfare in which both sides lost many troops.

Donetsk and Luhansk comprise the Donbas, the industrialised eastern part of Ukraine that has seen the biggest battle in Europe for generations. 

Russia says it wants to wrest control of the Donbas from Ukraine on behalf of Moscow-backed separatists in two self-proclaimed people’s republics.

After Russian forces on Sunday took control of Lysychansk, the last bastion of Ukrainian resistance in Luhansk, Ukrainian officials said they now expect Moscow to focus its efforts on the cities of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk in Donetsk.

There was heavy fighting at the edge of Luhansk region, its governor Serhiy Gaidai told Ukrainian television, saying Russian regular army and reserve forces had been sent there in an apparent effort to cross the Siverskiy Donets River.

“A large quantity of equipment is being sent towards Donetsk region,” Gaidai said, adding Ukrainian forces were destroying considerable amounts of Russian equipment and fuel, and saying Moscow’s forces “will have to take a breather at some point”.

On Tuesday, Russian forces struck a market and a residential area in Sloviansk, killing at least two people and injuring seven, local officials said.

Donetsk regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said Sloviansk and nearby Kramatorsk had suffered heavy shelling overnight. 

“There is no safe place without shelling in the Donetsk region,” he said.

Russia’s defence ministry, which says it does not target residential areas, said it had used high-precision weapons to destroy command centres and artillery in Donetsk, where Ukraine still controls some major cities.

Moscow ramped up its war rhetoric with parliamentary speaker Vyacheslav Volodin saying Ukraine had become a “terrorist state” that was doing everything to ensure Russia did not stop its invasion at the borders of the Donbas.

The remarks by the chairman of the lower house of parliament suggested Russia may wish to expand its stated war aims, having abandoned offensives on the capital Kyiv and second-largest city Kharkiv in the face of fierce Ukrainian resistance early in the conflict.

Putin has told troops involved in capturing Luhansk – who would also be part of any attempt to take cities in Donetsk – to “rest and recover their military preparedness”, while units elsewhere in Ukraine keep fighting.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy during a phone call he believed Kyiv’s military could retake territory recently captured by Russia.

Zelenskiy adviser Oleksiy Arestovych said Russia’s capture of Lysychansk and Sievierodonetsk – two medium-sized cities in Luhansk, now largely in ruins – came at a heavy human and financial cost for Moscow and took 90 days.

Some military experts argued Russia’s victory in Luhansk had brought its forces little strategic gain, and the war’s outcome remained unclear.

“It’s a tactical victory for Russia but at an enormous cost,” said Neil Melvin of the RUSI think tank in London.

Melvin said the decisive battle for Ukraine was likely to be fought not in the east, where Russia is mounting its main assault, but in the south, where Kyiv has begun a counter-offensive to recapture territory around the city of Kherson.

Ukrainian air defences intercepted and destroyed three missiles fired by Russia’s air force on Tuesday at Ukraine’s western Black Sea ports of Ochakiv and Chernomorsk, Serhiy Bratchuk, spokesman for the Odessa regional administration, said.

Earlier, Russian rockets hit Mykolaiv, a southern city on the main highway between Kherson and Odessa, according to its mayor, Oleksandr Senkevych. 

Russian missiles or mortar fire also struck Ukraine’s Khmelnitskiy, Sumy and Dnipropetrovsk regions, their governors said on Telegram.

Ukraine has asked Turkey to help investigate three Russian-flagged ships as part of Kyiv’s efforts to probe what it says is the theft of grain from Russian-occupied territory, according to official documents. Russia denies stealing Ukrainian grain.

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