KYIV, Ukraine
Russia said Friday that it had finished pulling back its troops from Kherson in southern Ukraine, abandoning the only regional capital its forces had captured in nearly nine months of fighting.
An aerial view of the city of Kherson in Ukraine from where Russia said on November 11, 2022 that it had finished pulling back its troops. |
The Kremlin meanwhile insisted
that the city was still part of Russia and said it did not regret annexing the
urban hub and the Kherson region at a lavish ceremony in late September.
The announcement came hours
after Russian strikes battered a residential building in Mykolaiv, killing at
least seven people in the city near Kherson that Moscow's forces have been
battering for months.
"Today at 5 o'clock in
the morning Moscow time (0200 GMT), the transfer of Russian troops to the left
bank of the Dnipro River was completed. Not a single piece of military
equipment and weapons was left on the right bank," the Russian defence
ministry said in a statement on social media.
Ukrainian officials have
remained wary after Moscow announced this week that it would pull forces to
defensive positions on the east bank of the river in Kherson, in what would be
a major Russian setback in a region Vladimir Putin claimed to have annexed.
The Kremlin however on Friday
dismissed any suggestion the status of the region had changed after the
retreat.
"This is a subject of the
Russian Federation. There are no changes in this and there cannot be
changes," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
The region of Kherson was one
of four territories of Ukraine that Vladimir Putin annexed during a grand
ceremony in the Kremlin in late September, at the same time vowing to use all
available methods to defend it from Kyiv.
Asked by reporters whether
Russia now regretted annexing Kherson, Peskov said the Kremlin had "no
regrets" about the move.
Kherson was the first major urban hub to fall to Russian troops after President Vladimir Putin announced Moscow's "special military operation" in Ukraine, and it was the only regional capital his forces seized.
Its capture by Ukraine's
forces would be a political and symbolic blow to Putin, but it would open a
gateway for Ukraine's forces to the entire Kherson region with access to both
the Black Sea in the east and Sea of Azov in the West.
It would also disrupt an
important land bridge for Russia between its mainland and the Crimean Peninsula,
which Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014.
The announcement from Moscow
that it had finished retreating in Kherson came after a fatal Russian strike on
a residential building in the southern city of Mykolaiv.
Russian troops failed to
capture the Black Sea city from Ukraine in the early stages of their February
invasion but have been launching rockets and missiles on the embattled city for
months.
An AFP journalist at the scene
of the strike saw a gaping hole cut through a Soviet-style residential building
with emergency workers in yellow helmets on the site clearing rubble.
The Mykolaiv regional governor
Vitaliy Kim said on social media that the toll had risen to six after the
latest fatal attack on the city that has been battered for months by Russian
forces.
And President Volodymyr
Zelensky said the strike was a "cynical response to our successes at the
front."
He announced late Thursday
that as part of a counteroffensive since August that his forces had recaptured
more than 40 towns and villages in southern Ukraine.
And the United States
meanwhile announced a new $400 million security assistance package for Kyiv,
which will include defence systems and surface-to-air missiles as Ukraine is
reeling from massive recent Russian airstrikes targeting key infrastructure. - AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment