al Jazeera:
Ukraine’s Zelenskyy brings home Azovstal commanders from Turkey
Russia denounces the soldiers’ return, accuses Kyiv and Ankara of violating a prisoner exchange deal under which the men were supposed to remain in Turkey until the end of the war.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, centre, and other officials pose for a picture with commanders of defenders of the Azovstal Iron and Steel Works in Mariupol inside a plane as they return to Ukraine from Istanbul, Turkey July 8, 2023 [Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via Reuters]
Published On 8 Jul 20238 Jul 2023
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has returned home from a visit to Turkey with five commanders of Ukraine’s former garrison in Mariupol, a move Russia said violated the terms of a prisoner exchange deal engineered last year.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Saturday that Ankara had promised under the exchange agreement to keep the men in Turkey and complained Moscow had not been informed.
The five commanders, lionised as heroes in Ukraine, led last year’s defence of the southern port of Mariupol, the biggest city Russia captured in its invasion. Thousands of civilians were killed inside Mariupol when Russian forces laid the city to waste during a three-month siege.
Zelenskyy on Saturday posted a one-minute video showing himself and other officials shaking hands and hugging the smiling commanders before they boarded a Czech aeroplane together.
“We are returning home from Turkey and bringing our heroes home,” said Zelenskyy, who met Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for talks in Istanbul on Friday.
“Ukrainian soldiers Denys Prokopenko, Svyatoslav Palamar, Serhiy Volynsky, Oleh Khomenko, Denys Shleha. They will finally be with their relatives,” he said on the Telegram messaging app.
The Ukrainian defenders, who held out in tunnels and bunkers under a steel plant, were finally ordered by Kyiv to surrender in May last year. Russia freed some of them in September last year in a prisoner swap brokered by Ankara, under terms that required the commanders to remain in Turkey until the end of the war.
Zelenskyy gave no explanation for why the commanders were being allowed to return home now, and there was no immediate comment from Turkey.
Many Ukrainians hailed the news on social media.
“Finally! The best news ever. Congratulations to our brothers!” Major Maksym Zhorin who is fighting now in eastern Ukraine, said on the Telegram messaging app.
Mariupol one year on: The battle to rebuild
‘Direct violation’
The Kremlin, however, accused Ukraine and Turkey of violating agreements by releasing the commanders.
“The return of the leaders of the Azovites from Turkey to Ukraine is nothing more than a direct violation of the terms of the existing agreements. Moreover, in this case, the terms were violated by both the Ukrainian side and the Turkish side,” said Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman.
“No one informed us about this. According to the agreements, these ringleaders were to remain on the territory of Turkey until the end of the conflict,” he said.
Peskov added that the release was a result of heavy pressure from Turkey’s NATO allies ahead of next week’s summit of the military alliance at which Ukraine hopes to receive a positive sign about its future membership.
In a ceremony later alongside the men in the western city of Lviv, Zelenskyy thanked Erdogan for helping secure the soldiers release and pledged to bring home all remaining prisoners.
He said that before the outbreak of war, “many people in the world still did not understand what we are, what you are, what to expect from us and what our heroes are. Now everyone understands”.
Denys Prokopenko, one of the five commanders, told the gathering that his men “will have our word to say” in the counter-offensive launched by Ukrainian forces in the past month.
“The most important thing is that Ukraine has seized the strategic initiative and is advancing,” he said.
Analysts said the return of the soldiers could strain Turkey’s relations with Russia. Ankara has so far managed to maintain a delicate balancing act, even helping broker a deal with Russia last year that allowed the safe export of grain and fertiliser from Ukrainian ports.
“Turkey’s a member of NATO, which has been backing Zelenskyy and Ukraine in the war. But at the same time, Erdogan has maintained good relations personally with President Putin of Russia,” said Bulent Ali Riza, founding director of the Turkey Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
“Erdogan has not applied sanctions, unlike the other members of the Western alliance and he’s been able to do this successfully. Until now, he’s been able to broker the grain deal because he was connections with both sides. And yet with these most recent moves that he has made – hosting Zelenskyy, and then releasing the Azov fighters – is obviously going to be interpreted by Russia as heavily tilted to the other side,” Bulent told Al Jazeera.
US to give Ukraine widely banned cluster munitions despite fears
The repatriation of the commanders came as Ukraine marked the 500th day of the Russian invasion. In honour of the day, Zelenskyy released a video of him visiting Snake Island, a Black Sea outcrop that Russian forces seized on the day of the invasion last year and later abandoned.
Speaking from the island, Zelenskyy honoured the Ukrainian soldiers who fought for the territory and all other defenders of the country, saying that reclaiming control of the island “is a great proof that Ukraine will regain every bit of its territory”.
“I want to thank – from here, from this place of victory – each of our soldiers for these 500 days,” the Ukrainian leader said. “Thank you to everyone who fights for Ukraine!”
Antony Blinken, secretary of state of the United States, marked the 500 days by describing Russia as “the sole obstacle to a just and lasting peace” and promising to back Kyiv “for as long as it takes”.
France’s foreign ministry said the time frame “must bring Russia to the realisation that it is in an impasse and immediately stop its illegal war of aggression”.
The latest US pledge of support included plans to supply widely banned cluster munitions. Defence Minister Oleksiy Reznikov promised the munitions would not be used in Russia.
The general staff of Ukraine’s armed forces said Ukrainian forces on Saturday “continued offensive operations” in two sectors in the southeast.
Officials said that a Russian rocket strike on the town of Lyman killed eight civilians and wounded 13 others early on Saturday. Pavlo Kyrylenko, the governor of the eastern Donetsk region, posted images showing some of the dead, including a body lying under a bicycle and body fragments on the pavement next to a damaged vehicle, saying that “the Russian terrorists are continuing to strike civilians in Donetsk”.
Lyman is a few kilometers (miles) from the front line, where Russian troops have recently intensified fighting in the forests of Kreminna.
The British Ministry of Defense meanwhile said in its latest intelligence update that the eastern town of Bakhmut that was captured by the Russians in May has seen some of the most intense fighting along the front during the last week.
It said that Ukrainian forces have made steady gains to both the north and south of Bakhmut, noting that “Russian defenders are highly likely struggling with poor morale, a mix of disparate units and a limited ability to find and strike Ukrainian artillery”.
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Turkey, it's economy in shambles ,43 % inflation rate, has to face up to reality that it needs Europe and Wankee cooperation.
ReplyDeleteWhile Turkey stubbornly continues to deny Sweden NATO entry, it needs to trade something meaningful in favour of Ukraine.
The Swedish NATO entry Will happen, eventually
Max Wünsche Adjutant (Schutzstaffel) 1938–41
ReplyDeleteNicolaus von Below Adjutant (Luftwaffe) 1937–45
Otto Günsche Adjutant (Schutzstaffel) 1940–45
Otto Johann Anton Skorzeny
German SS-Obersturmbannführer (Waffen-SS)
1908-1975
Know who r they?
Then cf that comedian president's salvaged inhuman evil team from Turkey!