4 Jun 2022

Ukrainians hold out as Russia storms eastern city on war's 100th day

9:20 am on 4 June 2022

Russian forces advanced deep into the ruined eastern factory city of Sievierodonetsk where Ukrainian troops were holding out, as Russia's assault on Ukraine reached its 100th day on Friday.

Shops and apartments in Sievierodonetsk damaged after shelling by Russian troops, in March.

Shops and apartments in Sievierodonetsk damaged after shelling by Russian troops, in March. Photo: AFP

Ukraine's defence minister said his troops were already training in Europe to operate new, advanced missile systems pledged this week by the United States and Britain, which Kyiv hopes will help swing the battle in its favour.

A war that Western countries believe Russia planned to win within hours has ground on for more than three months, with Moscow having been driven back from the capital but launching a huge new assault in the east.

Reuters reached Sievierodonetsk on Thursday and was able to verify that Ukrainians still held part of the city.

Troops drove towards a plume of black smoke at high speed over roads littered with wrecked armoured vehicles. One soldier sat in the back seat, his face streaked with blood from injuries.

At another location in the city, Ukrainian troops, including foreign volunteers, were unloading weapons from a truck.

"We're gonna push the Russians back. It will take a day, a month, or a year, it does not ... matter. We are on the right side of history," said Zurab Kakalidze, a Georgian who described himself as "just a 22-year-old kid".

The past weeks have seen Russia pour its forces into the battle for Sievierodonetsk, known for its large chemicals factory, and which Russia must capture to achieve its stated aim of holding all of Luhansk province. Both sides have been taking punishing losses there in a street-by-street battle that could set the trajectory for a long war of attrition.

"I regret to say that the Russian army succeeded in making its way deep into the city... they control most of the city," regional governor Serhiy Gaidai said in televised comments overnight.

He said about a fifth of the city was now a contested "grey zone." Ukrainian fighters were holding out in one area and were still able to clear Russians out of some streets. They had captured six Russian prisoners the previous day, he said.

"So I would tell sceptics not to write off Sievierodonetsk. It's too early to do that. The city is holding on."

Defence Minister Oleskiy Reznikov also said Ukrainian forces had some success in the city overnight, though he said it was too early to give details.

In neighbouring Donetsk province, also a central target of Moscow's eastern offensive, Russian troops were poised just 15km outside the city of Sloviansk, regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said.

Donetsk will not fall quickly, but it needs more weapons to keep the attackers at bay, Kyrylenko said.

"The world must do even more. I am sorry for this word, but it must," said the 36-year-old.

Speaking by video link to a security conference in Bratislava, defence minister Reznikov said Ukrainian artillery crews were training to operate new HIMARS and MLRS rocket systems.

Washington said this week it expected Ukrainians would need three weeks of training before they could use the rockets, which have a range of up to 80km and could hit Russian rear supply lines and help negate Russia's artillery fire-power advantage at the front.

Slow but steady progress

Despite being driven from the north of Ukraine in March after a failed assault on the capital, Russia still controls around a fifth of the country, about half seized in 2014 and half captured since launching its invasion on 24 February.

The massive Russian assault in the east in recent weeks has been one of the deadliest phases of the war for both sides. Moscow has made slow but steady progress, squeezing Ukrainian forces inside a pocket in Luhansk and Donetsk provinces, but has so far failed to encircle them.

Kyiv hoped the Russian advance would leave Moscow's forces so depleted that Ukraine can launch counter-offensives and recapture territory in months to come.

Resnikov said he hoped it was "absolutely realistic" to drive Russian forces out of eastern Ukraine this year, but said he did not hold "tarot cards" to tell exactly when.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said in an overnight address that Kyiv was expecting more "good news" on foreign weapons, after the latest $US700 million weapons package for Ukraine.

President Joe Biden's administration said Ukraine had promised not to use the new rockets to hit targets in Russia.

Moscow, which has called its invasion a "special military operation" to disarm Ukraine and rid it of dangerous nationalists, said the Western weapons would pour "fuel on the fire".

Famine, destabilisation

The war has had a devastating impact on the global economy, especially for poor countries that import food. Ukraine was one of the world's leading sources of grain and cooking oil, but those supplies were cut from the market by the closure of its Black Sea ports.

"Failure to open those ports will result in famine," UN crisis coordinator Amin Awad said in Geneva. A grain shortage could affect 1.4 billion people and trigger mass migration, he said.

Kyiv and its allies blamed Moscow for blockading the ports, which Ukraine had mined to prevent a Russian amphibious assault. Moscow said Western sanctions were to blame.

Turkey, a NATO member with good relations with both Kyiv and Moscow and control of the straits into the Black Sea, had offered to facilitate the reopening of Ukrainian ports.

A senior Turkish official told Reuters that Ankara was expecting progress on a deal when Russia's foreign minister visits Turkey next week.

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin met the head of the African Union, Senegalese President Macky Sall, who said Putin had expressed a willingness to ease exports of Ukrainian cereals. Earlier, the Kremlin said "no one on the Russian side is blocking the ports".

Germany's foreign ministry contradicted Moscow's line, and said the "risk of famine in parts of the world" was "a consequence of the Russian war of aggression and not of western sanctions".

-Reuters

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