President Vladimir Putin on
Monday ordered Russian troops to press their offensive deeper into the Donbas
region of eastern Ukraine after Moscow’s forces seized the strategic city of
Lysychansk.
Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu told Putin at a meeting that Moscow’s
forces were now in full control of the Lugansk region.
In a sign there would be no let-up in the fighting and that Russia now had
its eyes on the entire Donetsk region, Putin told Shoigu that troops
stationed there must continue their operations.
“Military units, including the East group and the West group, must carry out
their tasks according to previously approved plans,” Putin said.
“I hope that everything will continue in their direction as has happened in
Lugansk so far.”
The Ukrainian army said on Sunday it was retreating from Lysychansk to
preserve the lives of its troops who were outnumbered and outgunned by
Russian forces.
“The enemy continues to terrorise the border areas of the Sumy region, the
city of Kharkiv and the (Donbas) region,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky said in his nightly address, describing Russia’s intensifying
offensive.
“We need to break them. This is a difficult task, it requires time and
superhuman efforts. But we have no alternative.”
With the war now well into its fifth month, Ukraine told a reconstruction
conference in Switzerland on Monday that it would already cost $750 billion
to rebuild the country.
“The key source of recovery should be the confiscated assets of Russia and
Russian oligarchs,” Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal told leaders of dozens of
countries in Lugano.
In a video address, Zelensky described rebuilding Ukraine as the “common task
of the whole democratic world” and the “biggest contribution to the support
of global peace.”
– ‘Most modern weapons’ –
The loss of Lysychansk over the weekend prompted Zelensky to step up calls
for an increased supply of weapons from the West so Kyiv can keep up the
resistance and regain lost territories.
After giving up on its initial war aim of capturing Kyiv following tough
Ukrainian resistance, Russia has focused its efforts on securing control of
the Donetsk and Lugansk areas which make up the Donbas region.
Moscow’s capture of Lysychansk — one week after the Ukrainian army also
retreated from the neighbouring city of Severodonetsk — frees up Russian
forces to advance on Kramatorsk and Sloviansk in Donetsk.
Lugansk region governor Sergiy Gayday said on Telegram that there was still
fighting in the town of Bilogorivka outside Lysychansk.
“We keep defending a small part of the Lugansk region so that our army could
build protective redoubts,” he added.
In his address late Sunday, Zelensky vowed Kyiv would fight on and ensure the
military had “the most modern weapons”.
“Ukraine will reach the level when the fire superiority of the occupiers will
be levelled.”
In a symbolic boost, the Ukrainian flag was raised on Snake Island, an rocky
outcrop in the Black Sea, after Russia withdrew from the strategically
important Ukrainian territory last week.
In Sloviansk, about 75 kilometres (45 miles) west of Lysychansk, there were
few people on the streets on Monday, the day after Russian strikes that left
at least six dead, among them a nine-year-old girl, and 19 injured.
In the large downtown market largely ravaged by a fire caused by a Russian
strike, a few vendors offered basic goods while others cleared charred
debris.
Vendors and residents who spoke to AFP, some still in shock, expressed
concern for the days and weeks to come, as sounds of shelling were heard
again.
The city of Siversk, 30 kilometres west of Lysychansk, also saw overnight
shelling, residents and an official told AFP.
– Reconstruction –
But Zelensky’s address Sunday evening was defiant, predicting Ukrainian
troops would “win back” territory in the Donbas just has they had in other
regions earlier in the war.
On Monday, leaders from dozens of countries and international organisations
met in the Swiss city of Lugano with the aim of hashing out a roadmap for
Ukraine’s reconstruction.
Lugano is not a pledging conference but will instead attempt to lay out the
principles and priorities for a rebuilding process aimed to begin even as the
war rages.
“Ukraine can emerge from this on a path towards a stronger and more modern
country,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said.
But for residents in Bucha — a Ukrainian town synonymous with war crimes
blamed on Moscow’s forces after their retreat in April — fear remains even
as talk begins of reconstruction.
“We’re going to bed without knowing if we’ll wake up tomorrow,” said Vera
Semeniouk, 65.
“Everyone has come back, is starting to repair houses, many are putting in
new windows. It would be terrible if it started again, and we had to leave
everything again.”
Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson, making her first visit to
Ukraine, visited Bucha on Monday.BSS/AFP