March 28, 2022
By Pavel Polityuk and Oleksandr Kozhukhar
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy attends an interview
with some of the Russian media via videolink, as Russia's attack on Ukraine
continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine March 27, 2022. Ukrainian Presidential Press
Service/Handout via REUTERS
·
Summary
·
Ukraine intelligence
chief predicts guerrilla warfare
·
Russia-backed region
signals possible referendum
·
Blinken says U.S. has
no regime change strategy in Russia
LVIV, Ukraine, March
28 (Reuters) - With peace talks between Russia and Ukraine set to take place in
Turkey this week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has insisted on the
territorial integrity of his country after earlier suggesting he was ready for
a compromise.
Zelenskiy said in a
video address to the Ukrainian people late on Sunday that in talks due to take
place in Istanbul his government would prioritise the "territorial
integrity" of Ukraine.
But in comments made
to Russian journalists earlier in the day, Zelenskiy adopted a different tone,
saying Ukraine was willing to assume neutral status and compromise over the
status of the eastern Donbas region as part of a peace deal.
In the video call that
the Kremlin pre-emptively warned Russian media not to report, Zelenskiy said
any agreement must be guaranteed by third parties and put to a referendum. read more
"Security
guarantees and neutrality, non-nuclear status of our state. We are ready to go
for it," he added, speaking in Russian.
Even with talks
looming, Ukraine's head of military intelligence, Kyrylo Budanov, said Russian
President Vladimir Putin was aiming to seize the eastern part of Ukraine.
"In fact, it is
an attempt to create North and South Korea in Ukraine," he said, referring
to the division of Korea after World War Two.
Zelenskiy has urged
the West to give Ukraine tanks, planes and missiles to help fend off Russian
forces.
In a call with Putin
on Sunday, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan agreed to host the talks and called
for a ceasefire and better humanitarian conditions, his office said. Ukrainian
and Russian negotiators confirmed that in-person talks would take place. read more
Top American officials
sought on Sunday to clarify that the United States does not have a policy of
regime change in Russia, after President Joe Biden said at the end of a speech
in Poland on Saturday that Putin "cannot remain in power".
U.S. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken said Biden had simply meant Putin could not be
"empowered to wage war" against Ukraine or anywhere else. read more
After more than four
weeks of conflict, Russia has failed to seize any major Ukrainian city and
signalled on Friday it was scaling back its ambitions to focus on securing the
Donbas region, where Russian-backed separatists have been fighting the
Ukrainian army for the past eight years.
REFERENDUM IDEA
DISMISSED
A local leader in the
self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic said on Sunday the region could soon
hold a referendum on joining Russia, just as happened in Crimea after Russia
seized the Ukrainian peninsula in 2014.
Crimeans voted
overwhelmingly to break with Ukraine and join Russia - a vote that much of the
world refused to recognise.
Budanov predicted
Ukraine's army would repel Russian forces by launching a guerrilla warfare
offensive.
"Then there will
be one relevant scenario left for the Russians, how to survive," he said.
Ukraine's foreign
ministry spokesperson also dismissed talk of any referendum in eastern Ukraine.
"All fake
referendums in the temporarily occupied territories are null and void and will
have no legal validity," Oleg Nikolenko told Reuters. read more
Moscow says the goals
for what Putin calls a "special military operation" include
demilitarizing and "denazifying" its neighbour. Ukraine and its
Western allies call this a pretext for unprovoked invasion.
Ukraine has described
previous negotiations, some of which have taken place in Russian ally Belarus,
as "very difficult".
The invasion has
devastated several Ukrainian cities, caused a major humanitarian crisis and
displaced an estimated 10 million people, nearly a quarter of Ukraine's
population.
In his Sunday
blessing, Pope Francis called for an end to the "cruel and senseless"
conflict. read more
HUMANITARIAN CORRIDORS
Russia has continued
to move additional military units to the Ukraine border and is launching
missile and air strikes on Ukrainian forces and military infrastructure,
including in the city of Kharkiv, the Ukrainian military said on Sunday night.
Ukraine's General
Staff said on Monday Kyiv defence forces were holding back Russian troops
trying to break through from the northeast and northwest and take over key
roads and settlements. In the south of the country, Ukrainian forces were
focused on defending Krivy Rih, Zaporizhzhia and Mykolayiv.
It said that Ukraine
had downed four Russian aircraft, one helicopter, two drones and two cruise
missiles over the past 24 hours.
Ukraine raised
concerns about the safety of the Russian-occupied defunct nuclear power plant
at Chernobyl, the site of the world's worst civil nuclear accident in 1986.
Russian forces have
created a risk of damaging the containment vessel constructed around the
station's wrecked fourth reactor, said Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna
Vereshchuk. She urged the United Nations to dispatch a mission to assess the
risks. read more
The mayor of
Slavutych, the town created and built to house the plant's staff in the
aftermath of the 1986 accident, said early on Monday that Russian forces that
took over the town at the weekend had now left.
Yuri Fomichev said in
an online video post that the troops "completed the work they had set out
to do" and were gone. He originally said three people had been killed in
clashes.
The United Nations has
confirmed 1,119 civilian deaths and 1,790 injuries across Ukraine but says the
real toll is likely to be higher. Ukraine said on Sunday 139 children had been
killed and more than 205 wounded so far in the conflict.
Reporting by Reuters
journalists in Mariupol, Natalia Zinets and Maria Starkova in Lviv, Jarrett
Renshaw in Warsaw and Lidia Kelly in Melbourne; Guy Faulconbridge in London and
Matthias Williams; Writing by Aidan Lewis, Crispian Balmer, Lincoln Feast and
Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Stephen Coates
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/ukraine-insists-territorial-integrity-talks-loom-2022-03-28/
No comments:
Post a Comment