'Extremely difficult' situation in Lysychansk: governor
The situation in Lysychansk, a city in eastern Ukraine under Russian attack, is "extremely difficult" with relentless shelling making it impossible to evacuate civilians, the regional governor of Lugansk said Thursday.
- World
- Published Date: 08:48 | 30 June 2022
- Modified Date: 08:49 | 30 June 2022
"There is a lot of shelling and from multiple directions. The Russian army is approaching from different directions towards Lysychansk," Sergiy Gaiday said in a video posted on Telegram. Russia's forces remain at the outskirts of the city where there is currently no street fighting, he said.
Russia's forces remain at the outskirts of the city where there is currently no street fighting, he said.
Gaiday dismissed claims by pro-Russian separatists fighting alongside Moscow's forces who claim to control half of the city situated across the river from neighbouring Severodonetsk, which was captured by the Russian army last week.
He said that the shelling on Lysychansk was "very powerful... meaning it is no longer possible to evacuate" the remaining 15,000 civilians still in the city, which had a population of around 100,000 before the war.
"It's very dangerous," he said, pointing out that the city's geographical position nevertheless made it easier to defend than Severodonetsk.
"We can simply say that the Russians are very numerous and are arriving from all sides. There's an incredible number of vehicles and artillery."
Lysychansk is the last major city the Russians need to take over in the Lugansk region, one of two provinces in the large Donbas region that Moscow wants to control completely.