Zelenskyy says Ukraine needs allies to speed up weapons deliveries
CBC
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Tuesday that his country needed "a significant acceleration" in deliveries of weaponry from its partners to enable its troops to face advancing Russian troops in several sectors of the front line.
Zelenskyy, looking stern, made his comments in his nightly video address amid an acknowledgement from his top commander that Ukraine's forces have pulled back from villages in some of the most hotly contested sectors in the two-year-old war.
"We need a significant acceleration of supplies to enhance tangibly the capabilities of our soldiers," Zelenskyy said.
He pointed specifically to deliveries of U.S. weapons, after a six-month slowdown in supplies, as critical in righting the situation at key points along the 1,000-kilometres front line.
"We are very much counting on prompt deliveries from the United States," he said.
"These supplies must make themselves felt in disrupting the logistics of the occupiers, in making them afraid to base themselves anywhere on occupied territory and in our strength."
As he listed areas in the east and northeast where fighting remains intense, Zelenskyy said: "That is, anywhere where Russia is pressing and where we must push them out. And where new assault threats may arise."
The United States says supplies are beginning to reach Ukraine after sharp reductions owing to months of congressional wrangling.
Russia has said its forces have captured several villages in the east after its capture in February of the town of Avdiivka.
Top Ukrainian commander Oleksander Syrskyi has said Russian forces had set a goal of capturing the key town of Chasiv Yar — northeast of Avdiivka — to coincide with Russia's May 9 commemoration of the Soviet victory in the Second World War.
In Kharkiv on Tuesday, officials said Russian guided bombs targeting a railway killed at least one person and damaged civilian infrastructure.
Two districts of the city came under attack, regional Gov. Oleh Synehubov said on Telegram, adding that at least nine people had been injured.
Ukraine's state railway company said one of its employees who was in his twenties had been killed.
"This is another targeted strike by the enemy on the civilian railway infrastructure," Ukrainian Railways said on Telegram. It gave no details of the infrastructure damage.
Every night for half of her life, Ghena Ali Mostafa has spent the moments before sleep envisioning what she'd do first if she ever had the chance to step back into the Syrian home she fled as a girl. She imagined herself laying down and pressing her lips to the ground, and melting into a hug from the grandmother she left behind. She thought about her father, who disappeared when she was 13.