Sunday, March 20, 2022

School where hundreds were believed to be sheltering is bombed in Mariupol as fighting rages for key port city

 


An adviser to the mayor of Mariupol has said officials in the besieged Ukrainian city are struggling to find out exactly how many people have survived after an art school was bombed by Russian forces on Sunday morning.

Petro Andrushenko's social media post on the building that the city council said earlier was acting as a shelter for an estimated 400 people.

"So far, there is no exact operational data on how many people were hiding in the shelter or the number of casualties. I expect we will have it later today. But the situation is difficult and there is nowhere to get the data from."

The information black hole reflects a similar lack of clarity about how many people survived an attack four days ago on a theater in Mariupol that was also being used as a shelter, possibly for up to 1,300 people.

The number of people reported to have survived that bombing -- put at 130 -- has been unchanged for several days.

It is indicative of the almost total collapse of basic services and communications in a city that is increasingly bearing the brunt of Russia's fierce assault on the country. 

A local resident is seen in the cellar of a house in Mariupol, Ukraine on March 18, 2022.


 

Residents leave the city of Mariupol which has seen intense fighting in recent weeks.


 

"The city continues to be shelled both from the sky and the sea," Andrushenko wrote on his Telegram channel Sunday.

"It seems the occupiers are so eager to wipe out Mariupol that they are ready to cover themselves with fire."

He also said people trying to flee the city in their cars were being shot at by Russian forces.

"Evacuation is difficult -- difficult but moving. The Russians are doing everything to complicate things. Last night, cars trying to drive towards the village of Melekine [6 miles west of the city center] were fired upon." 

Other residents looking to flee were having their cars seized from them at a checkpoint just outside Mariupol, he said. 

*Assessments by the Institute for the Study of War show that Russian forces have operated in or launched attacks in these areas, but they do not control them.

Note: Data as of March 18, 2022 at 3 p.m. ET

Sources: The Institute for the Study of War with AEI’s Critical Threats Project (Russian-occupied areas and advances); LandScan HD for Ukraine, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (population)

Graphic: Renée Rigdon and Daniel Wolfe, CNN


 

Despite the dangers, Ukraine's government announced the evacuation corridor linking Mariupol to Zaporizhzhia, outside Russian-occupied territory, had been agreed for Sunday.

A council official reported that a column of 11 buses carrying almost 800 people had completed the second part of the journey, from Berdiansk to Zaporizhzhia, by midday Sunday.

Meanwhile, Mariupol City Council said in a statement on Saturday night that residents of the city were being taken to Russian territories against their will by Russian forces.

"Over the past week, several thousand Mariupol residents have been taken to Russian territory. The occupiers illegally took people from the Livoberezhny district and from the shelter in the sports club building, where more than a thousand people (mostly women and children) were hiding from the constant bombing," the statement read.

The city council said captured Mariupol residents were taken to camps where Russian forces checked their phones and documents, then redirected some of the residents to remote cities in Russia -- adding that the "fate of the others is unknown."

The statement quoted Mariupol mayor Vadym Boichenko saying, "What the occupiers are doing today is familiar to the older generation, who saw the horrific events of World War II, when the Nazis forcibly captured people."

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