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People gather at an apartment building in Kursk, Russia, damaged by Ukrainian shelling. AP

Putin orders army to 'dislodge' Ukraine as over 120,000 flee border

Kyiv’s forces pierced deep into Russia’s Kursk border region, deploying thousands of troops to the surprise operation.

LAST UPDATE | 12 Aug

VLADIMIR PUTIN HAS ordered his army to “dislodge” Ukrainian troops who have entered Russian territory as authorities said over 120,000 people had been evacuated away from the fighting.

Kyiv launched a surprise offensive into Russia’s western Kursk region last Tuesday, capturing over two dozen settlements in the most significant cross-border attack on Russian soil since World War II.

Ukraine’s military chief Oleksandr Syrsky told President Volodymyr Zelensky in a video posted today that his troops now control about 1,000 square kilometres of Russian territory and are continuing “offensive operations”.

Putin told a televised meeting with government officials that “one of the obvious goals of the enemy is to sow discord” and “destroy the unity and cohesion of Russian society”.

“The main task is, of course, for the defence ministry to dislodge the enemy from our territories,” he said.

Zelensky told the nation in his evening address that the cross-border offensive was “purely a security issue”, capturing “areas from which the Russia army struck at our Sumy region”.

Some 121,000 people have fled the Kursk region since the start of the fighting, which has killed at least 12 civilians and injured 121 more, regional governor Alexei Smirnov told the meeting with Putin.

Authorities in Kursk announced today that they were widening their evacuation area to include a district with some 14,000 residents. The neighbouring Belgorod region also said it was evacuating a new border district.

Ukraine has pierced into the region by at least 12km and has captured 28 towns and villages, with the new front 40km long, Smirnov said.

But Syrsky said that “as of now, about 1,000 square kilometres of Russian territory are under control,” suggesting the area captured is more than twice as large.

He said that fighting was ongoing along almost the whole front and “the situation is under our control”.

Putin said Russia would respond by showing “unanimous support for all those in distress” and claimed there had been an increase in men signing up to fight.

“The enemy will receive a worthy riposte,” he said.

‘Maximum losses’

The assault appeared to catch the Kremlin off guard. Russia’s army rushed in reserve troops, tanks, aviation, artillery and drones in a bid to quash it.

But it conceded on Sunday that Ukraine had penetrated up to 30km into Russian territory in places.

A Ukrainian security official told AFP, on condition of anonymity over the weekend, that “the aim is to stretch the positions of the enemy, to inflict maximum losses and to destabilise the situation in Russia as they are unable to protect their own border”.

The Ukrainian official said thousands of Ukrainian troops were involved in the operation.

Russia’s defence ministry said on Monday that its air defence systems had destroyed 18 Ukrainian drones – including 11 over the Kursk region.

‘It’s scary’

Smirnov said Monday that more than 46,000 residents in the Kursk region have applied for financial assistance.

Russia’s rail operator has meanwhile organised emergency trains from Kursk to Moscow, around 450km away, for those fleeing.

“It’s scary to have helicopters flying over your head all the time,” said Marina, who arrived by train in Moscow on Sunday, declining to give her surname. “When it was possible to leave, I left.”

Across the border in Ukraine’s Sumy region, AFP journalists on Sunday saw dozens of armoured vehicles daubed with a white triangle – the insignia apparently being used to identify Ukrainian military hardware deployed in the attack.

At an evacuation centre in the regional capital of Sumy, 70-year-old retired metal worker Mykola, who fled his village of Khotyn some 10km from the Russian border, welcomed Ukraine’s push into Russia.

“Let’s let them find out what it’s like,” he told AFP. “They don’t understand what war is. Let them have a taste of it.”

Analysts think Kyiv may have launched the assault to relieve pressure on its troops in other parts of the frontline.

Russia’s defence ministry said troops had “accelerated the speed of advance” in the eastern Donetsk region and taken the hamlet of Lysychne in their push towards the city of Pokrovsk.

The Ukrainian official said Kyiv’s troops “are not pulling back troops from the (Donetsk) area,” while “the intensity of Russian attacks has gone down a little bit”.

The Ukrainian official said he expected Russia would “in the end” stop the Kursk incursion.

Ukraine was bracing for a large-scale retaliatory missile attack, including “on decision-making centres” in Ukraine, the official said.

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