MYRNOHRAD, Ukraine: Ukrainian civilians on Wednesday fled areas close to the front line as Russian troops steadily seized more territory across the eastern Donetsk region.
The Russian army has captured several towns and villages in recent days, even as Moscow scrambles to fight off a Ukrainian counterattack into its western Kursk region.
Civilians in Myrnograd — less than 10 kilometers (six miles) from the front line — told AFP that increased shelling had finally prompted some to leave, two and a half years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion.
“I need to leave, because the situation is really getting worse. Every day — not even every day, but every hour — is like an avalanche,” said Maksym, a 40-year-old mine worker.
A recent strike hit the nine-story block of flats where he lives, blowing out the windows.
“Thank God I wasn’t home but I decided to leave, because life is precious,” he said.
AFP reporters saw civilians watching as houses burned after a recent Russian shelling attack on the small town.
The remains of a half-destroyed residential building stood surrounded by rubble and a burnt-out car was crumbling by the side of the road.
Firefighters were tackling a blaze at another house hit in a recent barrage, as its owner stood outside, shirtless.
Russian troops are fighting to reach the key logistics hub of Pokrovsk, a strategically important city five kilometers west of Myrnograd.
Officials on Monday ordered families with children to evacuate Pokrovsk and the surrounding areas, where they said more than 50,000 people still live.
Asked whether he would return one day, Maksym said: “I’d like to believe so.”
Galyna, 74, on Wednesday was helping her granddaughter leave for the comparative safety of central Ukraine.
“My granddaughter is scared. I feel sorry for the children,” she said.
Regional officials said they had set up a temporary accommodation center for families forced to abandon their homes but with nowhere else to go.
Russia on Wednesday claimed its latest territorial advance, with the defense ministry saying its forces had captured the town of Zhelanne, around 20 kilometers to the southeast.
Moscow claims to have annexed the industrial Donetsk region, as well as three others in eastern and southern Ukraine, despite not having full control over any of them.
The Donetsk region has been at the center of the war between Russia and Ukraine since 2014, when Moscow-backed separatists tried to seize control of the Donbas region and secede from Kyiv.
Separately, Ukraine’s parliament voted on Wednesday to join the International Criminal Court (ICC), as Kyiv seeks to bring Russia to justice over war crimes it is alleged to have committed throughout its invasion.
Ukraine signed the Rome Statute that founded the court in 2000, but had not ratified it on fears Ukrainian soldiers could face prosecution.
Ukrainian military units disputed Russia’s claim that it had taken control of the town of New York, one of its key targets in recent months.
Moscow’s defense ministry said Tuesday its forces had seized it in a recent advance.
Kyiv might have hoped its shock border incursion into Kursk, now in its third week, would force Moscow to divert troops from other parts of the front line.
It claims to have captured dozens of settlements and more than 1,000 square kilometers of territory in the unprecedented cross-border assault.
So far there has been little sign that fighting on the front lines in Ukraine’s east has subsided, however.
Russia on Wednesday foiled an attempt by a group of Ukrainian fighters to cross the border into its western Bryansk region, which neighbors the Kursk region.
Regional governor Alexander Bogomaz wrote on Telegram that “during a battle, an attempt to break through was prevented by FSB border guards” who fired on the enemy fighters. He described the attackers as a “reconnaissance-sabotage group.”
The situation at the scene was now “under control,” the governor said.
Both countries also launched attempted overnight drone strikes aimed at Kyiv and Moscow.
Russia said it destroyed 45 drones — 11 of them headed for the Russian capital.
“This is one of the largest ever attempts to attack Moscow with drones,” Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
The Ukrainian air force said it detected 72 air targets over Ukraine and downed 50 drones and one missile, some of which were headed for Kyiv.
Ukraine civilians flee advancing Russian troops in east
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Ukraine civilians flee advancing Russian troops in east
- Russian troops are fighting to reach the key logistics hub of Pokrovsk, a strategically important city five kilometers west of Myrnograd
Tanzania opposition says 2,000 killed in election violence
- Opposition party Chadema’s deputy chairperson John Heche said Tanzania witnessed “mass killings of more than 2,000 people and over 5,000 injured in the space of just one week“
- The violence was carried out “with direct involvement of the state“
DAR ES SALAM: Tanzania’s main opposition party on Thursday said more than 2,000 people were killed in a week of election violence, calling for sanctions against officials it accused of crimes against humanity.
President Samia Suluhu Hassan was declared the winner of October 29 polls with 98 percent of the vote, but her government was accused of rigging the polls and overseeing a campaign of murders and abductions of her critics that sparked nationwide protests and riots.
Opposition party Chadema’s deputy chairperson John Heche told reporters that Tanzania witnessed “mass killings of more than 2,000 people and over 5,000 injured in the space of just one week.”
He said the violence was carried out “with direct involvement of the state” and that it amounted to “crimes against humanity.”
Previous opposition counts had put the deaths at more than 1,000. The government has not given a death toll.
Heche urged the international community to “impose sanctions on all individuals involved in planning and executing these acts of criminality and crimes against humanity.”
In a live online broadcast, he said those responsible should be subjected to travel bans, including restrictions on their families.
Heche also said the unrest triggered a surge of people fleeing the country, alongside “the abduction and enforced disappearance of hundreds of civilians.”
Chadema further accused security units of carrying out rapes, torture and “gruesome killings,” and of engaging in widespread looting and arbitrary arrests.
The party urged authorities to return the bodies of those killed so families could bury them.
Authorities have continued to stifle dissent, with planned protests earlier this week seeing empty streets and a significant security presence.
Hassan last week justified the killings, saying it was necessary to prevent the overthrow of the government.
“The force that was used corresponds to the situation at hand,” she said in a speech.
Hassan has formed an inquiry commission into the violence, which the opposition says includes only government loyalists, instead calling for an independent investigation.










