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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Russia-Ukraine war: Ugly street clashes rage in Mariupol

Local officials have tallied more than 2,500 deaths in the siege , although the true number can’t be counted because of the relentless shelling

Marc Santora And Valerie Hopkins Published 20.03.22, 02:11 AM
It is one of dozens of Ukrainian towns now in ruins, setting off the worst humanitarian crisis in Europe since the end of World War II.

It is one of dozens of Ukrainian towns now in ruins, setting off the worst humanitarian crisis in Europe since the end of World War II. File photo

The desperate race to rescue any survivors entombed for a third night in the ruins of a theater in the besieged Ukrainian city of Mariupol was complicated on Saturday by raging street battles, Russian artillery barrages and the destruction of the city’s basic services.

Russia’s defence ministry said on Friday that it was “tightening the noose” around the city. The Ukrainian government said that its forces were outgunned, that attempts to provide air support had failed and that it had “temporarily” lost contact with officials in Mariupol.

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Yet the Ukrainian forces defending the city have refused to surrender, even as tank battles and street fighting were reported in what remains of the city centre.

Video shared by the Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov showed soldiers purportedly from the Russian region in the Caucasus in Mariupol. “The Chechen security forces delight us with new cadres of captured Ukronazis,” Kadyrov said in a caption for the video, using a derogatory term for those who support the Ukrainian Army, whom Putin of Russia has tried to portray as “Nazis”.

The New York Times has not independently verified the video’s contents.

Russia’s wars in Chechnya — where Moscow’s artillery and air forces turned city blocks to rubble and its ground troops massacred civilians in what was many viewed as a deliberate campaign to terrorise the population into submission — have been widely seen as a prelude to the campaign of destruction in Ukraine.

“One by one, the areas are cleared, and soon it will reach you,” Kadyrov continued, addressing his remarks to Ukrainians inside the city. “Either you voluntarily lay down your arms and accept the punishment you deserve, or we will knock it out of your hands and take punitive measures ourselves.”

Local officials have tallied more than 2,500 deaths in the siege of Mariupol, although the true number can’t be counted because of the relentless shelling.

Roughly 9,000 people have escaped the city in recent days, President Volydymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said in an overnight address to the nation. But hundreds of thousands remain trapped with no heat or water in a wasteland of bombed-out buildings where dead bodies dot the streets. The surrounding roads are mined, and the port is blockaded.

It is one of dozens of Ukrainian towns and cities now in ruins, setting off the worst humanitarian catastrophe in Europe since the end of World War II.

The attack on the theatre in Mariupol has become emblematic of a war in which civilians have come under withering assault, with scores of schools, hospitals and residential buildings destroyed by Russian bombardments. The theatre struck on Wednesday was clearly labelled as a haven for families, with satellite imagery showing the word children spelled out on the ground outside in a way that was visible to any planes flying overhead.

As many as 1,300 people were believed to have been sheltering at the theatre from the fighting. Ukrainian officials said on Friday that 130 people had been rescued.

Missile warehouse hit

A Ukrainian military spokesman confirmed that Russian forces had hit an underground warehouse for missiles and aviation ammunition in a western Ukrainian village. “The type of missile is yet to be determined,” said Yuriy Ignat, a spokesman.

New York Times News Service

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