KYIV —
Russia and Ukraine agreed to open more
humanitarian corridors on Wednesday to evacuate terrified civilians from
bombarded cities, while new concerns emerged over the Chernobyl nuclear plant
after a power cut.
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As fighting raged on the 14th day of the invasion, safe
routes were opening out of five Ukrainian areas including suburbs of the
capital Kyiv that have been devastated by Russian shelling and air strikes.
Russian troops were seen by AFP Wednesday pushing closer to
the capital Kyiv, while Moscow accused the
US of waging "economic
war" through a barrage of sanctions.
With Ukrainian cities still being pummeled, President
Volodymyr Zelensky urged Western powers to decide on a Polish offer to supply
his country with fighter jets, after Washington rejected an initial plan.
"We ask you again to decide as soon as possible. Send
us planes," he said.
Russia's war has sent around 2.2 million refugees across
Ukraine's borders in what the UN has called Europe's fastest-growing refugee
crisis since World War II, and sparked fears of wider conflict.
Fears are mounting that Russia will encircle Kyiv, where an
orchestra performed in the city's famous Maidan Square in a morale-boosting
concert that included the
EU anthem "Ode to Joy".
'Columns of Russian tanks'
Moscow had vowed to respect a 12-hour truce starting at 9am
to allow civilians to flee six areas that have been heavily hit by fighting,
Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said.
For the first time the corridors included Irpin, Bucha, and
Gostomel, a cluster of towns on the northwestern outskirts of Kyiv that have
been largely occupied by
Russian forces.
Another evacuation route is from Sumy, where some 5,000
civilians were able to escape on Tuesday as some 60 buses left the stricken
town east of Kyiv near the Russian border.
Vereshchuk said Ukraine has had a "negative
experience" of ceasefires not being respected, adding that residents had
asked Russia to "keep its promises".
But Russian forces had made rapid advances towards
Kyiv,
approaching Brovary, the large eastern suburbs of the capital, AFP journalists
saw.
While the front line was five days ago near Chernihiv, about
100km north of Brovary, columns of Russian tanks were only about 15km away on
Wednesday, according to the AFP journalists who could hear the fighting a few kilometers
away.
Chernobyl 'fully disconnected'
A corridor was also agreed for the port town of Mariupol,
where several previous evacuations have failed, leaving thousands of people
without water or power since Friday in what the
International Committee of theRed Cross (ICRC) called "really apocalyptic".
Violence raged in other areas, with at least 10 people
killed in a Russian military attack on homes and other buildings in the eastern
Ukrainian town of Severodonestk on Tuesday, a local official for the Lugansk
region said in a statement on Telegram.
The invasion has also raised nuclear concerns, with Ukraine
saying on Wednesday that power has been cut to Chernobyl, site of the world's
worst nuclear disaster in 1986, which has been seized by Russian forces.
The defunct plant, housing decommissioned reactors and
radioactive waste facilities seized by Russia at the start of the war,
"was fully disconnected from the power grid," Ukraine's energy
operator Ukrenergo said.
The UN atomic watchdog, the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said that while the development violated a "key safety
pillar," it saw "no critical impact on safety" at Chernobyl.
Russia also attacked and seized Europe's largest atomic
power plant, Zaporizhzhia, last week, drawing accusations of "nuclear
terror" from Kyiv.
'Economic war on Russia'
Western allies have hit Russia with unprecedented sanctions,
with the US on Tuesday announcing sanctions on the oil imports that help
bankroll
Moscow's war machine.
The spike in energy prices caused by Russia's war in Ukraine
will produce effects comparable to the 1973 oil shock, French Economy Minister
Bruno Le Maire warned on Wednesday.
The EU on Wednesday agreed to add more Russian oligarchs to
the sanctions blacklist, and to cut three
Belarusian banks from the global
SWIFT payments system over Minsk's support for the Kremlin's attack.
The Kremlin, scrambling to impose measures to limit the
economic fallout, hit back by accusing the US of having "declared economic
war on Russia".
But Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman
Maria Zakharova
said that "some progress has been made" in three rounds of
negotiations with officials from Kyiv, adding that Moscow's troops were not
trying to "overthrow" the Ukrainian government.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin has vowed the "neutralization"
and "denazification" of pro-Western Ukraine, and raised Russia's
nuclear alert.
Western governments have baulked at the Ukranian president's
calls for a no-fly zone to defend Ukraine's skies, fearing it would trigger a
conflict with nuclear-armed Russia.
US Vice President Kamala Harris was travelling to Poland on
Wednesday after the Pentagon rejected the "not tenable" Polish plan
to deliver MiG-29 fighter jets to a US air base in
Germany.
"The prospect of fighter jets ... departing from a
US/
NATO base in Germany to fly into airspace that is contested with Russia over
Ukraine raises serious concerns for the entire NATO alliance," spokesman
John Kirby said.
The West has instead relied on funneling weapons and aid
into Ukraine.
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