Ukraine’s Zelenskyy Says Siege Of Mariupol Involved War Crimes

The Ukrainian president says Russia’s siege of the port city is ‘a terror that will be remembered for centuries to come’.

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy Says Siege Of Mariupol Involved War Crimes
A man walks near a block of flats, which was destroyed during the Ukraine-Russia conflict in the besieged port city of Mariupol

 

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said the siege of the port city of Mariupol would go down in the history for what he said were “war crimes” committed by Russian troops. To do this to a peaceful city, what the occupiers did, is a terror that will be remembered for centuries to come, Zelenskyy said in a video address to

 

the nation on the Sunday. Russian forces have pushed deeper into the besieged and battered city, where heavy fighting shut down a major steel plant and the local authorities also pleaded for more Western help. In the capital, the Kyiv, at least twenty babies also carried by Ukrainian surrogate mothers are stuck in a makeshift

 

 

bomb shelter, waiting for parents to travel into the war zone to pick them up. Some just days old, the babies are being cared for by nurses who cannot leave the shelter because of constant shelling by Russian troops trying to encircle the city. The fall of Mariupol, the scene of some of the war’s worst suffering, would mark a

 

 

major battlefield advance for the Russians, who are largely bogged down outside big cities more than three weeks into the biggest land invasion in Europe since World War II. Children, elderly people are dying. The city is destroyed and it is wiped off the face of the earth,” Mariupol police officer Michail Vershnin said from a

 

 

rubble-strewn street in a video addressed to Western leaders. Mariupol city council said on the Sunday that Russian forces bombed an art school, where 400 residents had taken shelter, in the besieged port city. Details also began to emerge on Saturday about a rocket attack that killed as many as 40 marines in the

 

 

southern city of Mykolaiv the previous day, according to a Ukrainian military official who spoke to the media. The media has, however, not been able to independently verify the report. Russian forces have also already cut Mariupol off from the Sea of Azov, and its fall would link Crimea, which Russia annexed in the 2014, to eastern

 

 

territories controlled by Moscow-backed separatists. It would mark a rare advance in the face of fierce Ukrainian resistance that has dashed Russia’s hopes for a quick victory and galvanised the West. Ukrainian and Russian forces battled over the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Vadym Denysenko, adviser to the Ukraine’s

 

 

interior minister, said. “One of the largest metallurgical plants in Europe is actually being destroyed,” Denysenko said in televised remarks. The Mariupol city council claimed hours later that Russian soldiers had forcibly relocated several thousand city residents, mostly women and children, to Russia. It did not say where, and

 

 

the claim could also not be independently confirmed. Zelenskyy adviser Oleksiy Arestovych said the nearest forces that could assist Mariupol were already struggling against “the overwhelming force of the enemy” and that “there is currently no military solution to Mariupol”.

 

 

Ukraine’s defence continues

Despite the siege in Mariupol, many remained struck by Ukraine’s ability to hold back its much bigger, better-armed foe. The United Kingdom’s Defence Ministry said Ukraine’s airspace continued to be effectively defended. “Gaining control of the air was one of Russia’s principal objectives for the opening days of the conflict and their

 

 

continued failure to do so has significantly blunted their operational progress,” the ministry said on Twitter. Russia is now relying on standoff weapons launched from the relative safety of Russian airspace to hit targets within Ukraine, the ministry said.

 

 

The president says what the occupiers did is a terror that will be remembered for centuries to come

 

 

Estimates of Russian deaths vary widely, but even conservative figures are in the low thousands. Russia had 64 deaths in five days of fighting during its 2008 war with Georgia. It lost about 15,000 in Afghanistan over 10 years, and more than 11,000 in years of fighting in Chechnya. UN bodies have confirmed more than 847

 

 

civilian deaths also since the war began, though they concede the actual toll is likely much higher. The UN says more than 3.3 million people have fled Ukraine as refugees. Evacuations from the Mariupol and the other besieged cities proceeded along eight of the 10 humanitarian corridors, Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said, and a total of 6,623 people left.