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Intense Russian shelling kills 5 including women in tough eastern Ukraine combat

Ukraine's President asks IOC not to permit Russian athletes to compete

Russia Kherson attack Ukrainian servicemen remove a grad rocket in a damaged house after an attack, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine in Kherson | Reuters

Russian shelling killed at least five people and wounded 13 others during the previous 24 hours, Ukrainian authorities said Monday as the Kremlin's and Kyiv's forces remained locked in combat in eastern Ukraine.

The casualties included a woman who was killed and three others who were wounded by the Russian shelling of Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city in the country's northeast, according to regional Governor Oleh Syniyehubov.

The Guardian quoted Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy saying, “Today, the Russian army has been shelling Kherson atrociously all day. Two women, nurses, were wounded in the hospital. As of now, there are reports of six wounded and three dead.”

“The International Olympic Committee's attempt to get Russian athletes back to compete and participate in the Olympics is an attempt to tell the world that terror can allegedly be something acceptable. As if it is possible to turn a blind eye to what Russia is doing to Kherson, to Kharkiv, to Bakhmut and Avdiivka,” Zelenskyy said. He added, “As we prepare for the Paris Olympics, we must be sure that Russia will not be able to use it or any other international sporting event to promote aggression or its state chauvinism.”

Moscow's troops seized large areas of the northeastern Kharkiv region in the months following its invasion of its neighbour last February. 

But Ukrainian counteroffensives that began in August snatched back Russian-occupied territory, most notably in Kharkiv.

Those successes lent weight to Ukraine's arguments that its troops could deliver more stinging defeats to Russia if its Western allies provided more weaponry. Kyiv last week won promises of tanks from the United States and Germany to help its war effort.

Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki on Monday hinted at the prospect of more upcoming pledges, saying that any activity aimed at strengthening Ukraine's defence powers is under consultation with our NATO partners.

Military analysts say more aid for Ukraine is crucial if Kyiv is to block an expected Russian offensive in the spring and launch its own effort to push back the Russian forces.

“The pattern of delivery of Western aid has powerfully shaped the pattern of this conflict,” the Institute for the Study of War, a U.S.-based think tank, said late Sunday.

But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisted that supplies of Western weapons won't stop Russia.

“Ukraine keeps demanding new weapons and the West is encouraging those demands,” Peskov said in a conference call with reporters Monday. “It's a deadlock, it results in a significant escalation and makes NATO countries increasingly involved in the conflict.”

Ukraine's presidential office said the eastern Donetsk region, which has been the scene of intense fighting for months, remains invariably hard.

Heavy fighting continued to rage around Bakhmut and Vuhledar, with regional Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko saying that 15 towns and villages in the region came under shelling Sunday.

Russian forces have been trying for months to capture Bakhmut, with the effort being led by the Wagner Group, a private military company led by a rogue millionaire with longtime links to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Ukrainian troops last week said they conducted an organised retreat from Soledar, a few kilometres (miles) from Bakhmut, amid pressure from Wagner, which is believed to have a large number of convicts in its ranks.

Ukrainian authorities said the southern city of Kherson also has come under Russian shelling. The bombardment damaged residential buildings, a hospital, a school, a bus station, a bank and a post office.

Two foreign vessels were damaged in the port of Kherson, the presidential office added without elaborating.

(With PTI inputs.)

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