Otago Daily Times

Mercenarie­s on frontline for Russia: UK

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KYIV: Russia has tasked mercenarie­s to hold sections of the frontline in Ukraine in a sign it is running short of combat infantry, Britain’s Ministry of Defence said yesterday, as Kyiv steps up a counteroff­ensive in the south.

Greater reliance on paid fighters from the Russian private military company Wagner Group for frontline duties rather than their usual work in special operations would be another sign that Russia’s military is under stress six months into its war in Ukraine.

But the British ministry said in an intelligen­ce update that Wagner mercenarie­s were unlikely to make up for the loss of regular infantry units or alter the trajectory of Russia’s invasion.

‘‘This is a significan­t change from the previous employment of the group since 2015, when it typically undertook missions distinct from overt, largescale regular Russian military activity,’’ the ministry said on Twitter.

Wagner and the Kremlin were not immediatel­y available for comment outside regular business hours.

Officials in Kyiv said on Thursday they had observed a ‘‘massive redeployme­nt’’ of Russian forces to the south where British defence officials believe

Russia’s 49th Army, stationed on the west bank of the Dnipro River, is vulnerable.

The southern city of Kherson, key to Russia’s overland supply lines from Russianann­exed Crimea, was now virtually cut off from the other territorie­s occupied by Russia, British intelligen­ce said yesterday.

Kherson region fell to Russian forces soon after they began what Moscow calls ‘‘a special military operation’’ on February 24. Ukraine describes Russia’s invasion as an imperialst­yle war of conquest.

The Ukrainian military has used Westernsup­plied longrange missile systems to badly damage three bridges across the Dnipro in recent weeks, making it harder for Russia to supply its forces on the western bank.

Ukraine said its planes struck five Russian stronghold­s around Kherson and another nearby city yesterday, the focus of its biggest counteroff­ensive of the conflict.

Russia bombed Kyiv’s outskirts for the first time in weeks yesterday. Fifteen people were injured when missiles hit military installati­ons in Vyshhorod district on the edge of the capital, regional Governor Oleksiy

Kuleba said on Telegram.

Air raid sirens blared as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy addressed Parliament alongside visiting Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda.

The attack shattered the sense of normalcy that has returned to life in Kyiv since Russian forces abandoned attempts to capture the city in the first weeks of the war, in the face of fierce Ukrainian resistance.

More than 10 Russian missiles also hit the Chernihiv region northeast of Kyiv, regional Governor Vyacheslav Chausov said yesterday. Like Kyiv, Chernihiv had not been targeted for weeks.

The north district command of the Ukrainian armed forces said more than 20 missiles had been fired at Chernihiv region bordering Russia from a base in Belarus — Russia’s ally.

Reuters could not verify the battlefiel­d reports.

As the fighting rages, internatio­nal efforts continued to try to reopen Ukrainian ports and allow exports of grain and other commoditie­s.

Allowing safe passage for grain shipments from Ukraine should ease shortages that have left tens of millions of people around the world facing soaring food prices and hunger.

Russia and Ukraine struck a deal last week to unblock grain exports from Black Sea ports, but U.N. aid chief Martin Griffiths said ‘‘crucial’’ details for the safe passage of vessels were still being worked out.

Griffiths was hopeful the first shipment of grain from a Ukrainian Black Sea port could take place as early as today. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Destructio­n . . . A young woman wearing a Tshirt in the colours of the Ukrainian national flag inspects destroyed Russian military vehicles displayed in St Michael's Square in Kyiv yesterday.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Destructio­n . . . A young woman wearing a Tshirt in the colours of the Ukrainian national flag inspects destroyed Russian military vehicles displayed in St Michael's Square in Kyiv yesterday.
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