War in Ukraine, day 838 | Russia claims progress before two crucial summits for Ukraine

War in Ukraine, day 838 | Russia claims progress before two crucial summits for Ukraine
War in Ukraine, day 838 | Russia claims progress before two crucial summits for Ukraine

(Kyiv) Russia claimed new advances on the front on Monday, a few days before two crucial summits for Ukraine, whose forces are weakened for lack of recruits and sufficient deliveries of Western equipment.


Posted at 10:05 a.m.

Updated at 12:38 p.m.

Victoria LUKOVENKO

France Media Agency

Westerners are due to participate this week in a G7 meeting expected to result in an agreement on the use of frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine, as well as a “peace” conference in Switzerland where dozens of countries will be represented. , but not Russia.

A sign of a slow but constant progression of Russian units on the ground for several months, Moscow claimed Monday the capture of the village of Staromaïorské, in one of the rare sectors where the Ukrainian army had recorded territorial gains during its difficult counter-offensive last summer.

“Units of the Eastern group of troops continued to advance deep into the enemy defense and liberated the settlement of Staromayorské”, in the south of the eastern Donetsk region, the Russian Defense Ministry announced in its daily report.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky also underlined the same day that, across the entire front line, it was in the Donetsk region that the situation was “the most difficult”.

“A lot of losses”

Soldiers interviewed by AFP on Sunday in this part of Ukraine where most of the fighting is concentrated also expressed their concerns about the daily assaults.

Danylo Madiar, a 23-year-old soldier going by the nom de guerre “Macron”, admitted that the situation had been “quite tough” since the fall, after the failure of the Ukrainian counter-offensive and the Russians having regained the initiative . This notably led to the fall of the fortress town of Avdiïvka in February.

The enemy “strongly advanced” and, on the Ukrainian side, “there were a lot of losses, it was difficult to hold the lines,” he admitted. This drone operator noticed that pessimism was gaining on many of his comrades “after everything they saw”. “For many, it’s difficult to remain optimistic.”

For Oleksandre, a 36-year-old tanker, “the fiercest fighting takes place here”, around the towns of Pokrovsk and Chassiv Iar, two barriers currently blocking the advance of Russian troops in the eastern region of Donbass.

Russian President Vladimir Putin last week claimed the conquest of 880 km2 since the beginning of the year and around fifty localities by his army.

It also launched an offensive in the Kharkiv region (north-east) on May 10, seizing several villages before being slowed down by valuable reinforcements dispatched by Ukraine. Kyiv also fears a new assault in the neighboring region of Sumy, where an apparent Russian incursion was repelled on Monday.

New strikes on Kharkiv

In this regard, President Zelensky on Monday denied the fall of the village of Ryjivka, in the Sumy region, which had been announced a little earlier by Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, whose troops are fighting in Ukraine.

A push by Russian soldiers into this border sector would further stretch the Ukrainian military system that must defend a front more than 1000 km long.

“If acting from the village of Ryjivka, the occupier tried to carry out a propaganda operation there. Since this morning, the Russian flag (which was raised there) has been destroyed and there is no presence of the occupier,” Mr. Zelensky said.

According to him, the “(Ukrainian) forces are in total control of the situation” in this area which had been partially occupied at the start of the invasion in February 2022 and before the Russian retreat from northern Ukraine the following spring.

In addition, one man was killed and two others injured in a Russian bombing of the village of Dergatchiv, in the Kharkiv region, lamented its governor, Oleg Synegoubov.

And seven people were injured in new strikes on the eponymous city, Ukraine’s second largest, according to authorities.

“There were three attacks with guided bombs” dropped by planes, said its mayor Igor Terekhov.

On the Russian side, seven people were injured Monday in the border town of Chebekino: four jumped on a mine, including a Russian television cameraman, and three were victims of Ukrainian bombings, said Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov.

On the political level, a senior Ukrainian official responsible for the reconstruction of his country and well-known public figure, Moustafa Nayyem, announced his resignation, citing executive obstacles preventing him from fulfilling his mission.

He denounced “systemic obstacles” and “constant opposition” political and bureaucratic hampering the repair of infrastructure, at a time when Ukraine is facing major power cuts due to Russian bombing.

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