HomeNewsWorldMariupol mass evacuation falters as Red Cross judges it too dangerous

Mariupol mass evacuation falters as Red Cross judges it too dangerous

The suspended Red Cross evacuation in Mariupol, a city that has come to symbolize the horrors of the war in Ukraine, was among several developments painting a mixed picture Friday as one of the biggest armed conflicts to convulse Europe in decades rumbled into its sixth week.

April 02, 2022 / 08:36 IST
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In Russia itself, people took to the streets to voice their opposition to war. Police detained many people at anti-war protests that occurred in Russian cities. Thousands of Russians marched through Prague on March 26, waving the white-blue-white flag that has become a symbol of protests against Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians lived in the Czech Republic - making them the biggest foreign community - before Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24. Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians lived in the Czech Republic - making them the biggest foreign community - before Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24. (Image: Reuters)
In Russia itself, people took to the streets to voice their opposition to war. Police detained many people at anti-war protests that occurred in Russian cities. Thousands of Russians marched through Prague on March 26, waving the white-blue-white flag that has become a symbol of protests against Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians lived in the Czech Republic - making them the biggest foreign community - before Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24. Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians lived in the Czech Republic - making them the biggest foreign community - before Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24. (Image: Reuters)

The most ambitious effort yet to evacuate desperate civilians from Ukraine’s devastated port of Mariupol, besieged by Russian forces for weeks, was upended by disruptions Friday, with thousands of residents managing to flee but many more still stuck after the Red Cross judged the exodus too dangerous.

The suspended Red Cross evacuation in Mariupol, a city that has come to symbolize the horrors of the war in Ukraine, was among several developments painting a mixed picture Friday as one of the biggest armed conflicts to convulse Europe in decades rumbled into its sixth week.

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New signs emerged that Russian forces, stymied by their own botched planning and fierce Ukrainian resistance, were retreating from areas outside Kyiv, the capital, and moving north. Ukrainians asserted that they had retaken control of more than two dozen suburban towns and hamlets.

Ukrainian helicopter gunships struck an oil terminal inside Russia, Russian officials said — which, if confirmed, would be the first known Ukrainian airstrike in Russian territory since the Feb. 24 invasion.