Ukraine fight to ‘stabilise’
"The Ukrainian army is quite rapidly and powerfully advancing in the south."
Russian President Vladimir Putin said yesterday that he expected the situation to "stabilise" in Ukrainian regions annexed by the Kremlin after Moscow suffered military setbacks and lost several key towns to Kyiv.
Ukraine earlier claimed victories over Russian troops in the eastern region of Lugansk as the Kremlin vowed to recapture territory lost in a lightning Ukrainian counteroffensive.
In recent weeks, Ukraine's forces, bolstered by Western weapons, have wrested Russian troops out of a string of towns and villages in the southern Kherson region and the eastern separatist strongholds of Lugansk and Donetsk.
"We are working on the assumption that the situation in the new territories will stabilise," Putin told Russian teachers during a televised video call.
Just hours earlier, the Ukrainian-appointed head of Lugansk Sergiy Gaiday announced that the "de-occupation of the Lugansk region has already officially started".
A senior Russian lawmaker called on military officials to tell the truth about developments on the ground in Ukraine following the string of bruising defeats.
"We need to stop lying," the chairman of the lower house of parliament's defence committee, Andrei Kartapolov, told a journalist from state-run media.
"The reports of the defence ministry do not change. The people know. Our people are not stupid. This can lead to loss of credibility."
Putin yesterday signed into legislation his annexation of four Ukrainian territories -- including Lugansk -- as the European Union agreed a new round of sanctions against Moscow in response.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow would take back land it lost to Kyiv within the annexed regions, vowing they would be "Russian forever and will not be returned."
Putin last week signed agreements with the Moscow-installed leaders of the four regions to become subjects of the Russian Federation, despite condemnation from Kyiv and the West.
Russian forces do not have full control over Kherson or Zaporizhzhia and recently lost control of several settlements in Donetsk, reports AFP.
"The way we are regrouping (our forces) along the front means that we can gather strength and strike back," Kirill Stremousov, the Moscow-appointed deputy head of Kherson region, told the RIA Novosti news agency.
Ukraine's forces "won't enter Kherson. Its impossible," he said referring to the region's eponymous main city.
On Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said his forces had retaken "dozens" of villages in the east and south. "The Ukrainian army is quite rapidly and powerfully advancing in the south," Zelensky said in his daily address on social media.
The latest battlefield maps from Moscow showed that Russian troops had left many areas in Kherson, including along the west bank of the Dnipro River.
While Russian authorities remain largely silent about the extent of the setbacks, war correspondents of pro-Kremlin media admitted that troops were in trouble.
"There won't be any good news in the near future. Not from the Kherson front nor from Lugansk," newspaper journalist Alexander Kots wrote on his Telegram channel with over 640,000 followers.
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