Russia-Ukraine war: what we know on day 57 of the
invasion
Ukrainian officials offer special negotiations in
Mariupol as west warns of Russian cyberattacks against Ukraine’s allies
Samantha
Lock
@Samantha__Lock
Thu 21 Apr
2022 03.16 BST
Ukraine is ready to offer unconditional talks on
Mariupol and has proposed a “special round” of negotiations with Russia in the
besieged city, the Ukrainian negotiator and presidential aide Mykhailo Podolyak
tweeted. Another key Ukrainian negotiator, David Arakhamia, said he and
Podolyak were ready to arrive in Mariupol to hold talks and “a proposal was put
forward to hold direct negotiations, on site, on the evacuation of our military
garrison”.
Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said the situation in
Mariupol is deteriorating with roughly 1,000 civilians remaining trapped in the
Azovstal steel plant with the remaining fighters who are heavily outnumbered.
The Ukrainian president said 120,000 people were being kept in Mariupol and
that “crimes that are happening there are far more scary and large scale than
in Borodyanka”, referencing another devastated Ukrainian town.
Ramzan Kadyrov, an ally of Vladimir Putin, said
he believed Russian forces would be in complete control of the Azovstal steel
plant in Mariupol “before lunchtime, or after lunch” on Thursday.
Finance ministers from the UK, US, Canada and
France walked out of Wednesday’s G20 meeting as Russian representatives spoke,
amid divisions over Russia’s continued presence in the body.
Intelligence indicates Russia is poised to launch
powerful cyber-attacks against rivals supporting Ukraine, members of the “Five
Eyes” intelligence sharing network – the US, Britain, Canada, Australia and New
Zealand – have warned.
Ukraine is working to convince western allies to
shift Russia’s shipments of natural gas from the Nord Stream 1 pipeline to
Ukraine’s pipeline, increasing Kyiv’s leverage, energy officials told Reuters.
Italy has signed a deal with Angola to ramp up
gas supplies in a bid to break away from Russian gas. In an interview with the
Corriere della Sera, Italy’s prime minister, Mario Draghi, said: “We do not
want to depend on Russian gas any longer, because economic dependence must not
become political subjection.”
The US defence department has retracted its claim
that Ukraine had been supplied with more aircraft, instead saying only parts
had been delivered to enable Kyiv to put more jets into action. A senior US
defence official said 14 US howitzers were being delivered, along with their
ammunition.
Germany has defended itself against criticism of
its delay in authorising the delivery of heavy weapons to Ukraine. The Bild
newspaper reported the government dropped armoured vehicles and tanks from a
list that German arms manufacturers were offering to make available to Ukraine
– slashing the catalogue from 48 to 24 pages.
Zelenskiy spoke of his “cautious optimism” that
Ukraine’s partners now better understand the needs of his country, seemingly in
reference to supplying weapons and intensifying sanctions on Russia.
Ukraine can develop “maximum speed” in joining
the EU, Zelenskiy said in a national address on Wednesday evening after meeting
the president of the European Council, Charles Michel. He called it a “historic
moment”.
Russia said it had test-launched its Sarmat
intercontinental ballistic missile, a new addition to its nuclear arsenal. The
Pentagon said the test was “routine” and not considered a threat.
The UK prime minister, Boris Johnson, likened
Vladimir Putin to a crocodile, saying he is not optimistic that the Russian
leader can be negotiated with. “How can you negotiate with a crocodile when it
has your leg in its jaws, that is the difficulty that Ukrainians face. It is
very hard to see how the Ukrainians can negotiate with Putin now given his
manifest lack of good faith.”
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