Russian logistics hub ablaze, Moscow blames Ukraine
A fuel depot was ablaze at one of Russia's
main logistics hubs for its Ukraine war effort on Friday, after what Moscow described
as a cross-border air raid by Ukrainian helicopters, the first of its kind in
the five week war.
Ukraine said it would neither confirm nor
deny responsibility for the huge fire at the fuel depot in Belgorod, a Russian
city near the border which has served as a logistics hub for Russian troops
fighting in nearby eastern Ukraine.
Security camera footage of the depot, from a
location verified by Reuters, showed a flash of light from what appears to be a
missile fired from low altitude in the sky, followed by an explosion on the
ground. The regional governor said two Ukrainian helicopters had been involved
in the raid.
Inside Ukraine, Ukrainian forces were moving
into territory abandoned by withdrawing Russian troops in the north as peace
talks resumed on Friday. But in the southeast, which Russia now says is the
focus of its operation, the Red Cross said it had been barred from bringing aid
to the besieged city of Mariupol.
A Russian threat to cut off gas supplies to
Europe unless buyers paid with roubles by Friday was averted for now, with
Moscow saying it would not halt supplies until new payments are due later in
April.
Hours after the reported attack on the oil
depot, an eyewitness reached by telephone in Belgorod, who asked not to be
identified, said aircraft were flying overhead and there were continuous
explosions from the direction of the border.
"Something is happening. There are
planes and constant explosions in the distance."
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said
authorities were doing everything possible to reorganise the fuel supply chain
and avoid disruption of energy supplies in Belgorod. The incident did not
create comfortable conditions for the peace talks, he said.
Ukrainian defence ministry spokesperson
Oleksandr Motuzyanyk said he would neither confirm nor deny a Ukrainian role.
"Ukraine is currently conducting a
defensive operation against Russian aggression on the territory of Ukraine, and
this does not mean that Ukraine is responsible for every catastrophe on
Russia's territory," he said.
After failing to capture a single major
Ukrainian city in five weeks of war, Russia says it is pulling back from
northern Ukraine and shifting its focus to the southeast.
Russia has painted its draw-down in the north
as a goodwill gesture for peace talks, but Ukraine and its allies say the
Russian forces have been forced to regroup after taking heavy losses due to
poor logistics and tough Ukrainian resistance.
Regional governors in Kyiv and Chernihiv said
Russians were pulling out of areas in both those provinces, some heading back
across borders to Belarus and Russia.
In Irpin, a commuter suburb northwest of Kyiv
that had been one of the main battlegrounds for weeks, now firmly back in
Ukrainian hands, volunteers and emergency workers carried the dead on
stretchers out of the rubble. About a dozen bodies were zipped up in black
plastic body bags, lined up on a street and loaded into vans.
Lilia Ristich was sitting on a metal
playground swing with her young son Artur. Most people had fled; they had
stayed.
"We were afraid to leave because they
were shooting all the time, from the very first day. It was horrible when our
house was hit. It was horrible," she said. She listed off neighbours who
had been killed - the man "buried there, on the lawn"; the couple with
their 12-year-old child, all burned alive.
"When our army came then I fully
understood we had been liberated. It was happiness beyond imagination. I pray
for all this to end and for them never to come back," she said. "When
you hold a child in your arms it is an everlasting fear."
Kyiv regional governor Oleksandr Pavlyuk said
Russian forces had also withdrawn from Hostomel, another northwestern suburb
which had seen intense fighting, but were still dug in at Bucha, between
Hostomel and Irpin.
Further north, Russian forces have withdrawn
from the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, although Ukrainian officials
said some Russians were still in the radioactive "exclusion zone"
around it.
Britain's Ministry of Defence said Ukrainian
forces had recaptured several villages linking Kyiv with the besieged northern
city of Chernihiv.
But Kyiv's Mayor Vitaliy Kiltschko said it
was not yet time for those who fled Kyiv to hurry home. "Huge"
battles were still being fought to the north and east.
"The risk of dying is pretty high, and
that's why my advice to anyone who wants to come back is: Please, take a little
bit more time," he said.
Friday's peace talks, by video link, picked
up from a meeting in Turkey on Tuesday, where Ukraine offered to accept neutral
status, with international guarantees for its security.
"We are preparing a response. There is
some movement forward, above all in relation to the recognition of the
impossibility of Ukraine" joining NATO, Russia's Lavrov said on Friday.
Putin sent troops on Feb. 24 for what he
calls a "special military operation" to demilitarise Ukraine. Western
countries call it an unprovoked war of aggression and say Putin's real aim was
to topple Ukraine's government.
Russia now says it has turned its focus to
the Donbas, a southeastern area where it has backed separatists since 2014.
Russia's biggest target in that area is Mariupol, where the United Nations
believes thousands of civilians have died under a month-long siege, suffering
relentless bombardment without access to food and water supplies, medicine or
heat.
The International Committee of the Red Cross
said a convoy it had organised had been denied permission to bring aid into
Mariupol. It did not say who had refused permission.
Spokesperson Ewan Watson said the convoy of
buses had set off for Mariupol on Friday without the aid supplies, in the hope
of reaching the city to evacuate trapped civilians. Ukraine has blamed Russia
for refusing to allow any aid to reach the city.
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