Fear of Conflict Escalating Into Broader War
KYIV (Dispatches) -- Ukraine on Wednesday told residents of the country’s eastern regions to evacuate “now” or “risk death” due to a feared Russian attack.
“The governors of the Kharkiv, Lugansk and Donetsk regions are calling on the population to leave these territories and are doing everything to ensure that the evacuations take place in an organized manner,” deputy prime minister Iryna Vereshchuk wrote on Telegram.
The call for urgent evacuations comes as Ukraine says Russian forces are regrouping to launch a fresh offensive in the country’s east after retreating from the Kyiv region.
Vereshchuk asked residents to cooperate with authorities, saying Kyiv will “not be able to help” them after an attack.
“It has to be done now because later people will be under fire and face the threat of death. There is nothing they will be able to do about it, nor will we be able to help,” she said.
“It is necessary to evacuate as long as this possibility exists. For now, it still exists,” she added.
The Kremlin has declared that Ukraine’s Donbas is now a priority for the Russian army.
NATO believes Moscow aims to take control of the whole Donbas region in eastern Ukraine with the aim of creating a corridor from Russia to annexed Crimea.
Russian artillery pounded key cities in Ukraine on Wednesday, as its president urged the West to impose new and tougher sanctions against Russia.
The United States announced a new round of sanctions targeting Russian banks as well as Kremlin officials and their family members. The head of the European Commission signaled further moves – including examining energy imports – on top of sanctions unveiled by the bloc on Tuesday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the West needed to act decisively in taking “more rigid” steps against Russia.
“I can’t tolerate any indecisiveness after everything that Russian troops have done,” Zelensky told Irish lawmakers by videolink.
Some Western leaders “still think that war and war crimes are not something as horrific as financial losses”, he added.
But a crack in a unified EU front emerged, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban saying his government was prepared to accede to Russia’s demand to pay in rubles for Russian gas.
Moscow last week demanded payments for gas in rubles from countries it deemed “unfriendly”, but Brussels said those with euro or dollar contracts should stick to them.
Germany, Europe’s largest economy which relies on Russian gas for