Zelenskiy says Russia’s position in negotiations
is becoming ‘more realistic’ as fears deepen for Mariupol
Ukrainian PM says more time is needed for negotiations
to bear fruit as he prepares to address US Congress
Isobel
Koshiw in Kyiv, Jon Henley in Paris and Julian Borger in Washington
Wed 16 Mar
2022 04.33 GMT
Ukrainian
president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said he sees possible room for compromise in
talks with Russia ahead of a fresh round of discussions, despite Moscow’s
stepped up bombardment Kyiv and as fears for the port city of Mariupol
deepened.
“The
meetings continue, and, I am informed, the positions during the negotiations
already sound more realistic. But time is still needed for the decisions to be
in the interests of Ukraine,” Zelenskiy said in a video address early on
Wednesday.
“Efforts
are still needed, patience is needed,” he said. “Any war ends with an
agreement.”
Top
Ukrainian negotiator, presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak, said there were
“fundamental contradictions” between the two sides but added that “there is
certainly room for compromise.” Another aide to Zelenskiy, Ihor Zhovkva, said
the negotiations had become “more constructive” and that Russia had softened
its stand by no longer airing its demands that Ukraine surrender. Talks were
set to resume via video link on Wednesday.
As the war
approached its third week and heavy shelling of Ukraine’s cities continued, US
president Joe Biden signed off on $13.6bn in aid. Zelenskiy thanked president
Joe Biden and “all the friends of Ukraine” for the new support.
An update
from the Ukraine ministry of defence on Wednesday said the “worst situation
remains in the area of Mariupol, where the opponent tries to block the city in
the western and eastern outskirts of the city.” It came as the Associated Press
reported Russian troops had seized a hospital in Mariupol and took about 500
people hostage during another assault on the southern port city late Tuesday,
regional leader Pavlo Kyrylenko said.
The
Ukrainian president is due to address US Congress on Wednesday and Nato
military commanders will also meet in Brussels to draw up plans for new ways to
deter Russia, including more troops and missile defences in eastern Europe,
officials and diplomats said.
Ministers
will hear from their Ukrainian counterpart Oleksii Reznikov, who is expected to
plead for more weapons from individual Nato countries, as Russian attacks on
Ukraine’s cities continue.
Earlier,
Zelenskiy acknowledged that Ukraine will not become a Nato member, in a
significant concession on a day when the invading force tightened its grip on
the capital.
Leaders of
three European Union countries — Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovenia — met
in Kyiv on Tuesday, arriving by train in a bold show of support amid the
danger.
In a press
conference after the meeting Czech prime minister Petr Fiala told Ukrainians
“Europe stands with you”.
“The main
goal of our visit and the main message of our mission is to say to our
Ukrainian friends that they are not alone,” Fiala said.
In other developments:
The US
senate passed a unanimous resolution condemning Russian president Vladimir
Putin as a war criminal.
The leader
of Poland’s ruling party Jaroslaw Kaczynski said an international peacekeeping
mission should be sent to operate in Ukraine.
The
fast-moving developments on the diplomatic front and on the ground came as
Moscow’s forces stepped up their bombardment of Kyiv, and an estimated 20,000
civilians fled the desperately encircled port city of Mariupol by way of a
humanitarian corridor.
At least
five people were killed in the latest artillery barrage on Kyiv, prompting its
city hall to impose a 35-hour curfew from Tuesday night amid further signs that
the focus of the Russian campaign has shifted to the destruction of residential
areas and civilian infrastructure.
After
repeated bombardments and almost encircled by Russian forces, about half of
Kyiv’s 3.5 million prewar residents have fled, officials have said, with many
of those who remain spending their nights sheltering in underground stations.
Kyiv’s
mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said the city faced “a difficult and dangerous moment”
but promised it would not surrender.
“The
capital is the heart of Ukraine, and it will be defended,” he said. “Kyiv,
which is currently the symbol and the forward operating base of Europe’s
freedom and security, will not be given up by us.”
The series
of four heavy pre-dawn explosions rocked residential districts of Kyiv on
Tuesday, hours before talks between Ukraine and Russia were set to resume.
“Streets
have been turned into a mush of steel and concrete,” said the head of the
capital region, Oleksiy Kuleba. “People have been hiding for weeks in
basements.”
One strike
on Kyiv hit a 16-storey housing block, where fire raged and smoke billowed from
the shattered skeleton of the building, as emergency services and stunned
locals navigated an obstacle course of glass, metal and other debris littering
the road.
Residents
in Kyiv’s northern Podil district, which is close to Russian positions, told
the Guardian that they had heard an increase in shelling between the two sides
over the past two days.
On Tuesday
morning Daria Kloichko came home to her flat in north Kyiv city, which was all
but destroyed by a rocket at 5am. Kloichko’s flat was strewn with glass and
little was salvageable. There was hardly a flat in the block untouched by the
attack.
A refugee
from the 2014 war in eastern Ukraine against Russian proxy forces, she and her
husband hugged and cried as they took pictures off the wall - the only objects
which somehow survived the attack.
“Luckily,
we weren’t here,” Kloichko said with a tear-stained face.
Another
man, Andriy, who lived in the block but declined to give his surname, said the
blast somehow jammed the door to his child’s bedroom and he had to break the
door down.
In the
east, the airport in Dnipro also sustained massive damage overnight, while
Russian forces launched more than 60 strikes on Ukraine’s second-largest city,
Kharkiv, according to the regional administration chief, Oleh Sinehubov. The
strikes hit the city’s historic centre, including the main marketplace.
The UN said
that nearly 1.4 million children – almost one every second – had left Ukraine
since the invasion began on 24 February. According to the UN refugee agency
(UNHCR), 3,000,381 people have now fled Russia’s onslaught in what NGOs have
called Europe’s biggest refugee crisis since the second world war. The
UNHCR expects the refugee total to reach 4 million.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário