spot_img
29.6 C
Philippines
Sunday, September 29, 2024

Ukraine battles to hold back, ‘stabilize’ Russia advance

KHARKIV, Ukraine – Ukraine battled Thursday to “stabilize” the front line in the northeast Kharkiv region, where Moscow has made its largest territorial gains in 18 months after launching an offensive last week.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said more reinforcements had been sent to the area, and the Ukrainian army said it had partially halted Russia’s advance.

- Advertisement -

But the head of the Kharkiv region said Moscow had gained ground near the border village of Lyptsi and had “not given up” capturing the town of Vovchansk.

“Our task at the moment is to stabilise the front line,” said Governor Oleg Synegubov.

Ukraine accused Russian troops of executing civilians in territory it had captured, and of using some civilians in Vovchansk as “human shields”.

Late Thursday, the Ukrainian army said there had been “no significant changes” on the front lines, including in Vovchansk, even if some troops had to “regroup” in the Pokrovsk area near Donetsk due to “intense fire and assault actions.”

Russian latest offensive has further stretched Ukraine’s outgunned and outmanned forces.

Moscow seized 278 square kilometers of Ukrainian territory between May 9 and 15, according to AFP calculations based on data from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) — the largest territorial gain in a single operation since mid-December 2022.

Meanwhile, Ukraine launched a wave of drones at Russia and the annexed Crimea peninsula overnight, killing two people including a child, and setting an oil refinery ablaze, officials said Friday.

The attack was Ukraine’s largest aerial offensive in weeks and comes as Russian forces advance along the frontline, making their biggest territorial gains in 18 months as Kyiv struggles with ammunition and manpower shortages.

Russia’s military said it had intercepted or destroyed more than 100 Ukrainian air and sea drones in the south of the country, and over annexed Crimea and Black Sea overnight.

“Fifty-one UAVs were destroyed and intercepted over Crimea, 44 over the Krasnodar region, six over the Belgorod region and one over Kursk region”, it said, adding naval forces destroyed six drone boats.

One drone struck a family driving near the border in Russia’s Belgorod region, killing a mother and her four-year-old son, the region’s governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said.

“The child was in critical condition. Doctors did everything possible to save him,” he said, but “to much grief, the four-year-old died in hospital.”

The father was injured but “is in shock” and refused medical help, while the driver of the car was treated for shrapnel wounds to his hands, he added.

Another drone attack caused a fire at a gas station in the village of Bessonovka, but the flames were quickly put out, according to the governor.

In the coastal town of Tuapse in the southern Krasnodar region, two Ukrainian drones hit an oil refinery, sparking a large fire but without causing any casualties, authorities said.

The Russian-controlled port of Sevastopol on the annexed Crimean peninsula suffered a “partial blackout” after debris from downed drones fell on an electrical substation, the city’s Russian-installed governor Mikhail Razvozhayev said.

“While restoration work continues, the city will not be able to receive enough energy. There will be isolated blackouts,” he warned, adding that schools would cancel lessons.

Ukraine did not immediately comment but in the past has denied targeting civilians.

The drone wave comes as Russian forces push into Ukraine’s northeast after storming across the border in a fresh offensive last week.

Ukraine has evacuated almost 9,000 civilians from the border area, as Russia advances towards Vovchansk and nearby villages.

Zelensky met military leaders in Kharkiv city, around 30 kilometres (18 miles) from the Russian border, to assess Ukraine’s defensive efforts.

“The situation in the Kharkiv region is generally under control, and our soldiers are inflicting significant losses on the occupier,” he said in a social media post.

“However, the area remains extremely difficult. We are reinforcing our units.

“Our defense forces have partially stabilized the situation,” army spokesman Nazar Voloshin said on state TV.

Russia’s ability to make further breakthroughs may be limited by a lack of forces, a top NATO commander said.

“The Russians don’t have the numbers necessary to do a strategic breakthrough… more to the point, they don’t have the skill and the ability to do it,” US General Christopher Cavoli, NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe, told journalists in Brussels.

“I’ve been in very close contact with our Ukrainian colleagues and I’m confident they will hold the line,” Cavoli said after Ukraine’s military briefed NATO’s top brass.

Ukraine accused Russia of capturing and killing civilians in the border town of Vovchansk and of keeping about 35 to 40 people as “human shields.”

“According to operational information, the Russian military, trying to gain a foothold in the city, did not allow local residents to evacuate,” Interior Minister Igor Klymenko said.

“They began abducting people and driving them to basements,” he added.

“The Russians keep them in one place and actually use them as a human shield, as their command headquarters is nearby,” said Sergiy Bolvinov, head of the Kharkiv region’s police investigation department.

AFP could not verify the claims, and there was no immediate response from Moscow to the allegations.

Ukraine has evacuated about 8,800 people since Russia launched the new assault, Synegubov said. Some arrived at a humanitarian center in Kharkiv on Thursday.

Among them was 85-year-old Nadezhda Borodina, who had her dog Vasik on a leash and her frightened cat Lucas packed in a plastic bag.

Ukrainian “soldiers arrived and shouted ‘Let’s go, let’s go!’ and we were gone in five minutes,” she said.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian shelling killed four women in the Russian-held city of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, local Russian-installed authorities said.

And a Ukrainian drone strike on border villages in Russia’s Belgorod region killed a mother and her four-year-old child, the regional governor said early Friday.

Most of Russia’s recent gains are in the Kharkiv area, though they have also claimed fresh territory in the eastern Donetsk and southern Zaporizhzhia regions.

Following months of stalemate on the front lines, Russia has seized the battlefield initiative, pushing on from the capture of industrial hub Avdiivka in February.

Russia’s defense ministry said the army had “advanced deep into the enemy’s defences” in the Kharkiv region.

Some military analysts say Moscow may be trying to force Ukraine to divert troops from other hot spots, such as around the strategic hilltop town of Chasiv Yar in the Donetsk region.

Russia said Wednesday its forces had captured the village of Robotyne in the Zaporizhzhia region, around 300 kilometers south of Moscow’s new offensive.

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles