'Ukrainian commander requests international evacuation effort at Mariupol plant as situation is "critical"
[...] "I have a statement to the world," [...] "It may be my last statement, because we have only a few days, or even hours, left. We appeal to world leaders to apply the extraction procedure to the military of the Mariupol garrison, to the civilians who are with us here at the plant. We ask you to take us to the territory of a third country and provide us with security."
[...] "hundreds of civilians" [...]
[...] '"We are completely surrounded," [...] "[...] very difficult to provide [...] medical care. They literally rot. [... the Russians] use heavy aircraft bombs against us and strike with artillery."'
(6) Ukrainian commander requests international evacuation effort at Mariupol plant as situation is "critical" (cnn.com)
'Despair in Mariupol's last stronghold: "They're bombing us with everything"
[...] "Our only plan is for the blockade to be broken by our forces so that we can get out of here."
[...]
The holdouts in the underground fortress represent the last stand of a strategic city that has endured a relentless siege by Russian forces. The remaining defenders' ordeal has captured global attention as they have held off the enemy for weeks, in what has been likened to a Ukrainian Alamo.
With ammunition and supplies sparse, the men who were interviewed said they were carrying on the fight and refusing to acquiesce to the Kremlin's demand's for capitulation. But they acknowledged that they were running out of time and increasingly found it difficult to leave the protection of their shelter because of the heavy bombing.
[...]
The Azovstal plant where the men are likely sheltered makes for a formidable fortress, an immense industrial complex of thick concrete and walls, steel doors and reinforced underground warrens.
[...] the steel factory was designed to withstand a nuclear war.
"It is basically a city under a city," [...] Russian campaign to seize the plant had been significantly hampered by the sophisticated network of passages, rooms and communication systems connecting the basement levels of the plant.
[...] "I assume the Russians are going to throw everything they have at this, to eliminate this pocket," but he added that doing so could cost them dearly. "You'd be surprised at how well people can survive big bombs in a facility like that," [...]
"Ever since the first invasion, we've kept the bunkers in good order and supplied with food and water," [...] the shelters can house up to 4,000 people and are stocked with enough food and water to last three weeks.
[...] network of underground passages and rooms, which is now pivotal to the survival of the holed-up soldiers and civilians
[...]
[...] Ukraine's intelligence service wrote [...] Russians were preparing to use three-ton bombs on the plant in an effort to raze it completely. [...]
[...] If Russia succeeds in flattening the complex's buildings, it is not clear how many people hunkered underground might survive. Eventually, though, they would run out of provisions, and the Ukrainians have warned repeatedly that the Russians might use chemical weapons to force them out or kill them.
[...] Ukrainian Army had arranged two operations over the past two weeks to take food to the plant; he did not say how that was accomplished. But the situation will probably grow more dire[...] as Russian troops have blocked anyone, including civilians, from entering or leaving the city.'
Ukraine-Russia War Live News and Latest Updates - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 20 April 2022 - 12:38 AM