Russia evacuates second region amid Ukrainian incursion | World | News
Vladimir Putin has been dealt a fresh, massive blow as Moscow was forced to partially evacuate a second region on August 12, as Ukrainian forces continue to advance into Russia.
Citizens in the Krasnaya Yaruga district part of Belgorod, a Russian region bordering Ukraine, were being moved on Monday to “safer places” amid the threat of “enemy activity on the border”, the local governor Vyacheslav Gladkov announced.
Ukrainian forces launched an incursion into Russia on Tuesday last week, the first foreign invasion into Russia since the end of World War 2.
The Ukrainian attack initially focused on the Kursk region, and has so far forced the evacuation in the area of some 76,000 people.
Over the days that followed, Ukraine reportedly captured Russian soldiers on their own territory and captured a number of settlements.
The Russian territory bordering Ukraine has suffered several incursions since the beginning of the unlawful invasion ordered by Putin in February 2022. However, these were reportedly carried out by sabotage groups supporting Kyiv.
On the other hand, this massive operation marks the biggest coordinated attack on Russian territory by conventional forces since the beginning of the war.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky directly acknowledged the attack for the first time on the weekend, saying it involved some 2,000 people.
In his evening address to the war-torn country delivered on August 10, he said: “Artillery, mortars, drones. We also record missile strikes, and each such strike deserves a fair response.”
Ukraine‘s forces are believed to have advanced up to 30km into Russia as of Sunday.
Maria Zakharova, speaking for the Moscow’s foreign ministry, has levelled accusations at Kyiv for “intimidating the peaceful population of Russia“.
Soldiers were seen taking down the Russian flag at an administrative building in Guevo, a village roughly 3km within Russian territory.
Footage has also surfaced showing Ukrainian forces taking control of government buildings in both Sverdlikovo and Poroz, with news of fierce combat erupting in Sudzha, a settlement housing close to 5,000 residents.
Adding to their advances, Ukrainian units have captured video evidence of themselves just outside Sudzha at a significant gas facility pivotal for the transit of natural gas from Russia to the EU via Ukraine, operations which persist amidst the conflict.