Extract from ABC News
Ukraine has announced the recapture of the village of Urozhaine from Russian troops in the south-east, but warned the situation on the north-eastern front is deteriorating amid Russian counterattacks.
Key points:
- The village's recapture would indicate Ukraine is pressing ahead with an offensive drive south towards the Sea of Azov
- A Ukrainian official says the situation in the north-eastern region of Kharkiv is growing more difficult
- Kyiv says its counter-offensive is progressing slower than it wanted because of vast Russian minefields
Urozhaine, on the edge of Donetsk region, is the first village Kyiv says it has retaken since July 27, a sign of the challenge Ukraine faces advancing through heavily mined Russian defensive lines without powerful air support.
"Urozhaine is liberated," Defence Minister Hanna Maliar said on the Telegram messaging app.
"Our defenders are entrenched on the outskirts."
The village is one of several small rural settlements near the Mokri Yaly river that Ukraine has declared liberated since early June, when it launched a long-touted counteroffensive against Russian troops who occupy swathes of the nation's south and east.
Its recapture brings Kyiv closer to threatening the village of Staromlynivka, several kilometres to the south, which military analysts say is a Russian stronghold in the area.
Russia's Defence Ministry did not confirm losing Urozhaine in a statement on Telegram but said its artillery and warplanes were attacking Ukrainian forces in the Urozhaine area.
The village's recapture indicates Ukraine is pressing ahead with an offensive drive south towards the Sea of Azov that aims to cut Russian occupying forces in half.
Urozhaine lies just over 90 kilometres from the Sea of Azov.
Pressure builds in the north-east
Hours after the Urozhaine announcement, Oleksandr Syrskyi, one of Ukraine's top generals, said the situation on the Kupiansk front in the north-eastern region of Kharkiv was growing more difficult.
Kupiansk, a town with a pre-war population of around 27,000, was seized by Russia in the early days of the February 2022 invasion before Ukrainian troops recaptured it in a lightning offensive last September that embarrassed Moscow.
"Due to the complication of the situation in the Kupiansk direction, I worked most of the day with units that lead the defence on the approaches to the city," Mr Syrskyi was quoted as saying by Ukraine's Military Media Centre.
"The enemy is trying to break through the defences of our troops every day, in different directions, with assault squads consisting mainly of convicts, with the aim of blockading and then capturing Kupiansk," he said.
Losing Kupiansk a second time would be a major blow to Kyiv's battlefield momentum at a time when its summer counter-offensive has so far failed to deliver significant territorial gains, except for villages such as Urozhaine.
"Our house is the only one standing, there are no other houses left intact around ours," said Oleh Yanytskyi, a resident of the village of Kurylivka who was evacuated by the Ukrainian Red Cross this week.
Kyiv says its counter-offensive is progressing slower than it wanted because of vast Russian minefields and prepared Russian defensive lines.
Russia controls nearly a fifth of Ukraine, including the peninsula of Crimea, most of Luhansk region and large tracts of the regions of Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson.
Reuters
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