Surrounded and bombarded by Russian troops, the ‘apocalyptic’ siege that defined the brutality of Putin’s war appears finally over

Cut off from the world and low on food and ammunition, many of the hundreds of defenders of the Azovstal steel plant in Mauripol were wounded, some missing limbs. Their capitulation had been inevitable for weeks.

That moment came late on Monday as more than 260 – bearded, filthy, emaciated, and including 51 severely injured – laid down their arms and were evacuated amid a wider concession of defeat after 82 days of fighting in the besieged port city.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Lucy Letby NHS trust chair says hospital bosses misled the board

Sir Duncan Nichol says board was told there was ‘no criminal activity…

MPs push and shove in Jordan parliament brawl – video

Scuffles broke out in Jordan’s parliament where lawmakers were discussing a proposed…

Hear me out: why Gentlemen Broncos isn’t a bad movie

Continuing our series of writers defending loathed films is an argument to…

EasyJet slumps to £1.3bn loss as Covid forces it to cut flights

Airline to run 20% of flights for rest of 2020 but says…