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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy ABACA/PA Images

EU chief visits Ukraine as fierce fighting continues in east of country

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that serious battles were ongoing in Severodonetsk, a city in the east.

LAST UPDATE | 11 Jun 2022

EUROPEAN COMMISSION PRESIDENT Ursula von der Leyen has visited Ukraine today to discuss the country’s hopes of joining the EU.

Von der Leyen’s visit, her second since the start of the invasion, came as fierce battles continued in the east and south of Ukraine. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his country’s forces are “doing everything” to stop the Russian offensive, with fierce battles in the east and the south.

Kyiv said yesterday it had launched new air strikes in the captured southern region of Kherson, one of the first areas to be taken by Russia after the 24 February invasion.

But Zelenskyy said that “very difficult battles” were ongoing, including in the eastern Donbas region where Moscow has concentrated its firepower, especially around the eastern industrial city of Severodonetsk.

“Ukrainian troops are doing everything to stop the offensive of the occupiers,” Zelenskyy said in an address yesterday.

“As much as the heavy weapons, modern artillery — all that we have asked and continue to ask our partners for — allow them to.”

“With President Zelensky I will take stock of the joint work needed for reconstruction and of the progress made by Ukraine on its European path,” she tweeted on arrival in Kyiv.

Ukraine has been pushing for rapid admission into the European Union, but officials and leaders in the bloc have cautioned that membership could take years or even decades.

Von der Leyen told reporters the discussions “will feed into our assessment” of Ukraine’s readiness to be considered a candidate country to begin lengthy negotiations, including on reforms. 

Ahead of a June 23-24 EU leaders’ summit that will likely take up the matter, Zelensky questioned why some member states were still hesitant.

“The European system could lose if words are not accompanied by deeds,” he told the 2022 Copenhagen Democracy Summit on Friday.

He later urged the world not to lose sight of what was happening in Ukraine, after more than three months of war that has left thousands dead and sent millions of Ukrainians fleeing.

He said Ukraine must “not allow the world to divert its attention away from what is happening on the battlefield”.

Fighting

 

In the Mykolaiv region near the front line in the south, the regional governor stressed the urgent need for international military assistance.

“Russia’s army is more powerful, they have a lot of artillery and ammo. For now, this is a war of artillery… and we are out of ammo,” Vitaliy Kim said.

“The help of Europe and America is very, very important because we just need ammo to defend our country.”

Zelenskyy said that Ukraine must “not allow the world to divert its attention away from what is happening on the battlefield”.

In the town of Lysychansk, located just across a river from Severodonetsk, people told AFP about their stark choice: stay and brave the shelling, or flee and abandon their homes.

Yevhen Zhyryada, 39, said the only way to access water was by heading to a water distribution site in the town.

“We have to go there under shelling, and under fire,” he said.

“This is how we survive.”

‘Victory for Ukraine’

Shockwaves from the conflict have reverberated around the world, with fears mounting of a global food crisis — Ukraine is an agricultural powerhouse and a major grain exporter.

An adviser to French President Emmanuel Macron said France was ready to assist in an operation to allow safe access to Ukraine’s Black Sea port of Odessa.

It has been subject to a de facto blockade by Russia, with grain waiting to be shipped.

France wants “victory for Ukraine”, the advisor added, after Macron sparked controversy recently by suggesting Russia should not be humiliated.

Moscow poured its troops across the border into Ukraine on 24 February after weeks of warnings from the United States and its allies that Russia was planning an invasion.

US President Joe Biden said yesterday that Zelenskyy had brushed off those warnings.

“There was no doubt and Zelenskyy didn’t want to hear it nor did a lot of people,” Biden said at a fundraiser. “I understand why they didn’t want to hear it.”

The war has devastated Ukrainian cities and displaced millions, while putting European nations on edge.

Nine of them — Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Slovakia — urged NATO on Friday to beef up its eastern flank.

‘Shocking’ death sentences

Western countries reacted this week with fresh outrage after the pro-Kremlin separatist authorities in the Donetsk region of the Donbas sentenced to death Britons Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner, and Saadun Brahim of Morocco.

Germany’s foreign ministry said the “shocking” sentences show “once more Russia’s complete disregard for international humanitarian law”.

The United Nations warned that unfair trials of prisoners of war amounted to war crimes.

Zelenskyy separately praised British leadership and its support for Kyiv’s fight against Russia during an unannounced visit from UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace.

“Weapons, finance, sanctions — on these three issues, Britain shows leadership,” Zelenskyy said in a video statement.

Kyiv has been critical of countries — including Germany and France — for the slow delivery of aid and for giving too much credence to negotiations with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin.

Not ‘artificially created’

Russia has repeatedly cautioned the West against getting involved in the conflict, with some officials warning of the risk of nuclear war.

The world’s chemical weapons watchdog said yesterday it was keeping a close eye on Ukraine to monitor “threats of use of toxic chemicals as weapons”.

Putin has said that what Russia calls its special military operation is meant to “de-Nazify” Ukraine, suggesting he is merely taking territory back.

But speaking to British university students via video link, Zelenskyy said that Russia’s claim that Ukraine was “artificially created” was as preposterous as stating Ukrainians were “not humans but a variety of plants or a species of animals”.

© AFP 2022

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