Blahodatne, Neskoutchne and Makarivka: Ukraine announced the reconquest, on Sunday June 11, of three villages in the eastern region of Donetsk. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had admitted “counter-offensive actions” the day before, without giving further details, while his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, had assured on Friday that the great Ukrainian counter-offensive had “begun “. According to Moscow, kyiv’s forces had “failed to achieve their objectives” after several days of fierce fighting.
“I am grateful to our soldiers for this day,” Volodymyr Zelensky said in his daily message on Sunday evening. THANKS ! Thank you for every step, for every fight, for every occupier destroyed! These are the first territorial gains announced in months by Ukraine, apart from the few hundred meters recently retaken on the outskirts of Bakhmout, a devastated city in the Donetsk region, which Moscow claimed to conquer in May.
For its part, the Russian Ministry of Defense assured that Ukraine had unsuccessfully attacked, on the night of Saturday to Sunday, a Russian warship which was patrolling the Black Sea. According to him, all the Ukrainian remote control boats were destroyed and the Russian building, the Priazovie, was not damaged.
The Ukrainian army first announced on Sunday the capture of the village of Blahodatne, in the Zaporizhia region. On the eastern front, “the glorious soldiers of the 68th brigade (…) liberated the locality of Blahodatne”, which had less than 1,000 inhabitants before the war, the Ukrainian ground forces said on Facebook. The announcement was accompanied by a video showing servicemen with a Ukrainian flag in a destroyed building. The Ukrainians said they captured two Russian soldiers and pro-Russian separatist fighters there.
Less than three hours later, the Ukrainian border guard service assured that a second village, that of Neskutchne, in the same region of Donetsk, was in turn “again under the Ukrainian flag”. Then, in the evening, Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar announced that a third small town, Makarivka, near Blahodatne, had fallen to Kiev troops.
Three dead in Russian fire on civilian evacuations
Meanwhile, three people were killed and at least 23 others injured in Russian fire on civilians being evacuated from flooded areas in southern Ukrainian territory, local authorities said. Some of them were on boats. The floods are due to the destruction of the Kakhovka hydroelectric dam earlier this week. A destruction for which both parties reject responsibility.
Seven people died and about thirty are still missing as a result of these floods in the territories under the control of kyiv. According to the latest figures provided on Sunday evening by Ukrainian Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko, 2,722 people, including 205 children, were evacuated from the southern region of Kherson and 982 others, including 167 children, from the neighboring province of Mykolaiv.
A total of 77 localities have been flooded, including 14 in the occupied territories, Klymenko said, adding that 162,000 people are also without running water upstream of the Kakhovka dam.
In areas in Russian hands, officials installed by Moscow reported this week eight dead and thirteen missing in connection with this same tragedy as well as more than 7,000 people evacuated.
In Kherson, the regional capital, the water has started to flow back in some neighborhoods, despite the rain, noted journalists from Agence France-Presse (AFP). The first inhabitants of this city have returned home. According to an employee of the Kherson meteorological center, Laura Moussian, the water level has decreased locally by 1.7 meters. “There could be heavy rain again, which could significantly slow the pace of the decline,” she added, however.
There are also concerns about possible contamination of the waters, which have engulfed at least three cemeteries, oil storage terminals and landfills, said Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin. Nearly 450 tonnes of turbine oil also spilled into the Dnieper and then into the Black Sea, he said.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for its part reiterated on Sunday, faced with divergent data, its request for access to the site where the water level of the tank used to cool the reactors of the Zaporizhia nuclear power plant, located 150 km upstream of the destroyed dam and occupied by the Russians.