Russia will provide a way out for civilians at the Azot fertilizer factory in the contested Donbass city of Severodonetsk, but will use a different plan to that requested by Kiev, the Russian military said on Tuesday. The Ukrainian proposal may have been an attempt to extract its soldiers from the blockaded plant, a statement claimed.
Moscow said civilians in the Azot plant were being used as a “human shield” by Ukrainian troops who took cover at the facility. Hundreds of non-combatants were allegedly forced to move to the Ukrainian forces' last stronghold in the city as Russian and allied troops captured residential areas in Severodonetsk. The city is claimed by the Lugansk People’s Republic (LPR) as part of its territory.
“The Ukrainian side considers the position of its military units as hopeless, so we consider the request to save the civilians as an attempt to extract the surviving troops out of the blockade,” said Colonel General Mikhail Mizintsev.
The Russian military noted the situation is not unlike what happened in the city of Mariupol, where Ukrainian troops remained blockaded at the Azovstal plant for weeks before surrendering to Russian and allied troops.
Mizintsev urged Ukrainian officials to order their soldiers in Severodonetsk to lay down their arms and surrender too. In the meantime, Russia is willing to grant civilians safe passage to territory controlled by the Lugansk People’s Republic (LPR), provided the Ukrainian troops let them go, the statement said.
Severodonetsk is one of just a handful of places in LPR territory where Ukrainian troops are still present. Last week, Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu said his country’s troops and local militias were in control of 97% of the republic’s land.