International
Ukraine retakes territory in Kharkiv region as Russian front crumbles
Ukraine retakes territory in Kharkiv region as Russian front crumbles
September 10, 2022 | 01:03 AM
Ukrainian forces were seizing an expanding area of previously Russian-held territory in the east in a “very sharp and rapid” advance, a Russian-installed regional official said yesterday, in a breakthrough that may mark a turning point in the war.After keeping silent for a day, Russia effectively acknowledged that a section of its frontline had crumbled southeast of Ukraine’s second-largest city Kharkiv.“The enemy is being delayed as much as possible, but several settlements have already come under the control of Ukrainian armed formations,” Vitaly Ganchev, head of the Russian-backed administration in the Kharkiv region, said on state television host Vladimir Solovyov’s daily livestream.Ganchev earlier said his administration was trying to evacuate civilians from cities including Izium, Russia’s main stronghold and logistics base in the province near the front in eastern Ukraine.Russia has taken control of around a fifth of Ukraine since starting its invasion in late February.The Russian defence ministry released video of military vehicles speeding along a highway, saying they showed reinforcements rushing to defend the area.The Kremlin has declined to comment on the Ukrainian advance.Ukrainian officials released a parade of videos showing soldiers raising flags and posing in front of street signs in villages and towns across part of previously Russian-held territory.One viral image showed troops holding up a Ukrainian flag at a highway welcome sign for Kupiansk, previously more than 50km inside Russia’s front line.The city is an important target as the junction of several of the main railway lines supplying Russian troops at the front.Ukraine kept independent journalists out of the area and Reuters could not confirm the images, but President Volodymyr Zelensky said troops had “liberated dozens of settlements” and reclaimed more than 1,000 square km in the eastern Kharkiv and southern Kherson regions.Western military analysts said the advance could shut the supply lines Moscow has relied on to sustain its force in eastern Ukraine, and potentially leave thousands of Russian troops encircled.Such rapid advances have largely been unheard of since Russia abandoned its assault on the capital Kyiv in March, shifting the war mainly into a relentless grind along entrenched front lines.“We see success in Kherson now, we see some success in Kharkiv and so that is very, very encouraging,” US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin told a news conference with his Czech counterpart in Prague.The Ukrainian general staff said early yesterday that retreating Russian forces were trying to evacuate wounded personnel and damaged military equipment near Kharkiv.“Thanks to skilful and co-ordinated actions, the Armed Forces of Ukraine, with the support of the local population, advanced almost 50km in three days.”Tens of thousands of people have been killed, millions have been driven from their homes and Russian forces have destroyed entire cities since Moscow began what it calls a “special military operation” to “disarm” Ukraine.The Kyiv government and its Western allies accuse Russia of an imperial-style war of aggression.In the latest reported strike on civilians, Ukrainian officials said Russia had fired across the border, hitting a hospital in the northeastern Sumy region yesterday morning, destroying the building and wounding people.Reuters could not independently confirm the report. Russia denies intentionally targeting civilians.The centre of Kharkiv, which has been regularly bombarded by Russia, was hit by Russian rocket fire, wounding 10 people, including three children, Governor Oleh Synehubov said.Rockets hit a children’s arts centre and a school, as well as private homes, mayor Ihor Terekhov wrote on Telegram.The Ukrainians broke through in the east a week after Kyiv announced the start of a long-awaited counter-offensive hundreds of kilometres away at the other end of the front line, in the southern province of Kherson.
September 10, 2022 | 01:03 AM