Zelensky: Russia taking advantage of slow arms delivery

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (R) and NATO Secretary General Jens StoltenbergImage source, EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Image caption,

Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg joined Volodymyr Zelensky in a joint media briefing

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky says Russia is taking advantage of the slow delivery of Western weapons to go on the offensive.

His comments come after the US agreed a $61bn (£49bn) package of mostly military aid for Ukraine.

Mr Zelensky said some of the aid had started to arrive, but added that it needed to be delivered faster.

He was speaking alongside Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg, who said "it's not too late for Ukraine to prevail".

The comments come after authorities in the Black Sea port of Odesa said a Russian missile attack had killed four people and injured 32.

Odesa's regional head Oleh Kiper said three women and one man had died, and the injured included a four-year-old and a 16-year-old, as well as a pregnant woman. Civilian houses and infrastructure had been damaged, he said.

Earlier on Monday, Russia said it had taken a second village in two days in the course of its offensive in eastern Ukraine.

At a joint press conference in Kyiv, President Zelensky said: "The Russian army is now trying to take advantage of a situation when we are waiting for supplies from our partners, especially from the United States of America.

"And that is exactly why the speed of deliveries means stabilising the front."

Media caption,

Watch: Ukraine’s "Harry Potter castle" hit in deadly Russian strike

He specifically singled out Ukraine's need for artillery shells and air defence systems.

"Our partners have all of these things and they should be working now here in Ukraine destroying the Russian terrorist ambitions.

"Russia's army is preparing for further offensive actions," said Mr Zelensky.

Mr Stoltenberg agreed that Kyiv needed weapons, saying that "Ukraine has been outgunned for months, forced to ration its ammunition".

The Nato chief said the six-month delay in US military aid had resulted in "serious consequences on the battlefield".

But Mr Stoltenberg added that he was optimistic that when the arms were delivered it would help turn the tide.

"Our allies are looking into what more they can do and I expect new announcements soon. So we are working hard to meet Ukraine's urgent needs," said the Nato chief.

Mr Stoltenberg also stressed that Ukraine would one day become a Nato member - a key strategic goal for Kyiv; but added that an official invitation at the alliance's Washington summit in July was unlikely.

Russia said it had captured the village of Semenivka, which lies north of Avdiivka which Moscow took in February. On Sunday, Russia said the nearby village of Novobakhmutivka had fallen to its forces.

Ukraine's commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrskyi has said the situation on the frontline has worsened in the face of multiple Russian attacks, and that Ukrainian forces had withdrawn from positions in the eastern Donetsk region.

Image source, Ukraine's National Police
Image caption,

Lidiya Stepanivna says she fell several times and had to rest on the ground during her escape

Also on Monday, Ukraine's interior ministry said a 98-year-old woman had walked more than 10km (six miles) with two sticks under shelling from the partially occupied by Russia eastern village of Ocheretyne to Kyiv-controlled areas.

"I survived that war [World War Two], and I am going through this war," the woman, named only as Lidiya Stepanivna, is heard saying in the footage at an aid centre. She said she fell several times and had to rest on the ground during her escape.

"This war is not like that one," she added. "Houses are burning and trees are being uprooted."

Earlier this month, the US finally approved billions of dollars in new military aid for Ukraine to help combat Russia's invasion, putting an end to six months of congressional deadlock and raising Kyiv's hopes that its dwindling supplies would be restocked.

Ukrainian forces have suffered from a shortage of ammunition and air defence systems in recent months. Officials have blamed delays in military aid from the US and other Western allies for the loss of lives and territory.