The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Russia tries to block city, cement its gains in east

Relentless assault hammers Ukrainian resistance in area.

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Russian forces were trying to block a city in eastern Ukraine, the region’s governor said Saturday, after a relentless assault on a neighborin­g city forced Ukrainian troops to begin withdrawin­g after weeks of intense fighting.

Russia also launched missile attacks on areas far from the heart of the eastern battles.

Serhiy Haidai, governor of Luhansk province, said on Facebook that Russian and separatist fighters tried to blockade the city of Lysychansk from the south. The city lies next to Sievierodo­netsk, which has endured relentless assault and houseto-house fighting for weeks.

Russia’s Interfax news agency quoted a spokesman for the separatist forces, Andrei Marochko, as saying Russian troops and separatist fighters had entered Lysychansk and that fighting was taking place in the heart of the city. There was no immediate comment on the claim from the Ukrainian side

Lysychansk and Sievierodo­netsk have been the focal point of a Russian offensive aimed at capturing all of eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region and destroying the Ukrainian military defending it — the most capable and battle-hardened segment of the country’s armed forces.

The two cities and surroundin­g areas are the last major pockets of Ukrainian resistance in Luhansk, 95% of which is under Russian and local separatist control. The Russians and separatist­s also control about half of Donetsk, the second province in the Donbas.

Russian bombardmen­t has reduced most of Sievierodo­netsk to rubble and cut its population from 100,000 to 10,000. Some Ukrainian troops are holed up in the huge Azot chemical factory on the city’s edge, along with about 500 civilians. A separatist representa­tive, Ivan Filiponenk­o, said forces evacuated 800 civilians from the plant during the night, Interfax reported.

After Haidai said Friday that Ukrainian forces had begun retreating from Sievierodo­netsk, military analyst Oleg Zhdanov said some of the troops were heading for Lysychansk. But Russian moves to cut off Lysychansk will give those retreating troops little respite.

Some 600 miles to the west, four Russian rockets hit a “military object” in Yaroviv, Lviv regional governor Maksym Kozytskyy said. He did not give further details of the target, but Yaroviv has a sizable military base used for training fighters, including foreigners who have volunteere­d to fight for Ukraine.

Russian rockets struck the Yaroviv base in March, killing 35 people. The Lviv region, although far from the front lines, has come under fire at various points in the war as Russia’s military worked to destroy fuel storage sites.

About 30 Russian rockets also were fired on the Zhytomyr region in central Ukraine on Saturday morning, killing one Ukrainian soldier, regional governor Vitaliy Buchenko said.

In the north, about 20 rockets were fired from Belarus into the Chernihiv region, the Ukrainian military said.

Ukraine’s air command said Russian longrange Tu-22 bombers were deployed from Belarus for the first time. The neighborin­g country hosts Russian military units and was used as a staging ground before Russia invaded Ukraine, but its own troops have not crossed the border.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko were to meet Saturday in St. Petersburg.

 ?? TYLER HICKS/NEW YORK TIMES ?? A Ukrainian soldier wounded in an artillery strike is rushed into a bus stop that was turned into a first-aid station in Bakhmut, Ukraine, as Russian forces try to sever key highways that lead to Lysychansk.
TYLER HICKS/NEW YORK TIMES A Ukrainian soldier wounded in an artillery strike is rushed into a bus stop that was turned into a first-aid station in Bakhmut, Ukraine, as Russian forces try to sever key highways that lead to Lysychansk.

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