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Ukraine rejects Russian demand for surrender in Mariupol

Ukraine rejects Russian demand for surrender in Mariupol

Ukraine rejects Russian demand for surrender in Mariupol

Ukrainian officials challenged rejecting Russian requests that their troops in Mariupol lay their arms and increased the white flag Monday with a safe road compensation from the surrounded port city.

When Russia intensified its efforts to grow Mariupol into submission, the land that mentioned in other parts of Ukraine became jammed. Western officials and analysts said the conflict turned into a grinding war, with Russia bombarding the city.

In the capital, Kyiv, a shopping center in the densely populated podil district near the city center was the destruction of smoking after being hit by Sunday night with a shooting that killed eight people, according to emergency officials. The attack destroyed each window in a high-rise neighboring country.

The Ukrainian authorities also said Russia opened fire on a chemical plant in Northeast Ukraine, sending poisonous ammonia that leaked into the air, and crashed into a military training base in the west with roaming missiles.

Southern City Mariupol managed in Sea Azov has seen some of the worst war horrors, under Russian pounding for more than three weeks, in what Ukrainian and Western officials emit war crimes.

Hours before Russian offers to open the corridor out of the city in return for the capitulation of the defenders, the art school of art where around 400 people took refuge in Ukrainian officials.

“They are under debris, and we don’t know how many of them survived,” said President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelskyy. In the video address, he vowed that Ukraine would “shoot the pilot that dropped the bomb.”

Russian Col. General Mizintsev has offered two corridors – one to the east to Russia, the other west to other parts of Ukraine – in return for the submission of Mariupol. He did not say what Russia would do if the offer was rejected.

The Russian Ministry of Defense said the authorities in Mariupol could face a military court if they sided with what was described as “bandits,” Russian state news agency Ria Novosti reported.

Ukrainian officials rejected the proposal even before the Russian time limit of 5 in the morning Moscow time for response came and left.

“There was no talk about surrender, putting the arm,” Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine Irina Vereshchuk told Ukraine Pravda news outlets.

The strike at the art school was the second time in less than a week that officials reported attacks on public buildings where the Mariupol resident had sheltered. On Wednesday, an air strike destroyed the theater where more than 1,000 people were believed to be protected. At least 130 people were reported to have saved Friday, but there was no update since then.

Mariupol officials said at least 2,300 people had died in siege, with some buried in bulk graves.

City officials and aid groups said Russian bombings had cut electricity, water and mariupol food supplies and decided their communication with the outside world, dropping residents left into a chaotic battle to survive.

“What happens at Mariupol is a massive war crime,” said UE Foreign Policy Head Josep Borrell.

Mariupol has a predicted population of around 430,000. About a quarter is believed to have gone on the opening days of war, and tens of thousands came out over the past week by means of humanitarian corridors, although other efforts have been thwarted by bombings.

In the Odesa Black Sea port city, the authorities said Russian troops damaged civilians in a Monday attack. The city council said no one was killed.

The Russian invasion has pushed nearly 3.4 million people from Ukraine, according to the United Nations. U.n. Has confirmed more than 900 civilians but said that the real victim might be much higher. The estimated Russian death varies, but even conservative numbers are in thousands of low.

Some can escape from Mariupol’s relatives who were hugged by hugging because they arrived by the week’s train in Lviv in West Ukraine.

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