The Japan Times - Russia, Ukraine agree civilian evacuation corridors as fighting rages

EUR -
AED 4.15647
AFN 80.353882
ALL 98.652984
AMD 441.260635
ANG 2.039528
AOA 1037.705819
ARS 1328.82124
AUD 1.757588
AWG 2.036936
AZN 1.926581
BAM 1.957844
BBD 2.290291
BDT 137.813865
BGN 1.957844
BHD 0.427646
BIF 3374.022162
BMD 1.131631
BND 1.471836
BOB 7.838182
BRL 6.416799
BSD 1.134284
BTN 95.862071
BWP 15.444122
BYN 3.712175
BYR 22179.97381
BZD 2.278479
CAD 1.564882
CDF 3248.91331
CHF 0.933106
CLF 0.027968
CLP 1073.273408
CNY 8.228769
CNH 8.159
COP 4830.538021
CRC 573.598783
CUC 1.131631
CUP 29.98823
CVE 110.380227
CZK 24.938857
DJF 201.990859
DKK 7.462837
DOP 66.619545
DZD 149.835414
EGP 57.354806
ERN 16.97447
ETB 151.786651
FJD 2.552847
FKP 0.852666
GBP 0.853063
GEL 3.100481
GGP 0.852666
GHS 15.936636
GIP 0.852666
GMD 80.913298
GNF 9825.256645
GTQ 8.73612
GYD 238.008458
HKD 8.770742
HNL 29.457751
HRK 7.53044
HTG 148.044545
HUF 404.399583
IDR 18634.572894
ILS 4.059957
IMP 0.852666
INR 95.652832
IQD 1485.951194
IRR 47655.827295
ISK 146.104689
JEP 0.852666
JMD 179.917817
JOD 0.802554
JPY 163.764009
KES 146.72694
KGS 98.961581
KHR 4544.744286
KMF 491.693774
KPW 1018.468172
KRW 1584.169006
KWD 0.347004
KYD 0.945287
KZT 586.001731
LAK 24528.605561
LBP 101634.096452
LKR 339.664578
LRD 226.866828
LSL 20.880697
LTL 3.341413
LVL 0.684512
LYD 6.193465
MAD 10.51788
MDL 19.510367
MGA 5151.377554
MKD 61.594299
MMK 2375.987505
MNT 4043.462656
MOP 9.056154
MRU 45.180164
MUR 51.296696
MVR 17.438538
MWK 1966.85321
MXN 22.204145
MYR 4.806604
MZN 72.424561
NAD 20.880697
NGN 1818.384184
NIO 41.743576
NOK 11.7981
NPR 153.379113
NZD 1.903324
OMR 0.435405
PAB 1.134284
PEN 4.158641
PGK 4.702909
PHP 62.961694
PKR 318.740835
PLN 4.280786
PYG 9075.473943
QAR 4.139321
RON 4.978048
RSD 117.322474
RUB 93.750523
RWF 1600.971264
SAR 4.243851
SBD 9.43829
SCR 16.078785
SDG 679.548434
SEK 10.919168
SGD 1.468048
SHP 0.889285
SLE 25.789781
SLL 23729.724523
SOS 648.27674
SRD 41.672341
STD 23422.483504
SVC 9.925361
SYP 14713.260469
SZL 20.871788
THB 37.445578
TJS 11.740056
TMT 3.96071
TND 3.403052
TOP 2.650396
TRY 43.669743
TTD 7.69203
TWD 34.762919
TZS 3054.689385
UAH 47.359639
UGX 4155.337782
USD 1.131631
UYU 47.59969
UZS 14632.274721
VES 98.155404
VND 29428.072394
VUV 137.031667
WST 3.144268
XAF 656.642473
XAG 0.035318
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.05829
XDR 0.816653
XOF 656.642473
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.853804
ZAR 20.846577
ZMK 10186.040293
ZMW 31.482865
ZWL 364.384822
  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.32

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    21.45

    +0.05%

  • SCS

    0.2700

    10.14

    +2.66%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.07

    +0.46%

  • RIO

    1.1500

    59.7

    +1.93%

  • BCC

    3.4400

    96.15

    +3.58%

  • NGG

    0.0300

    71.68

    +0.04%

  • AZN

    1.9300

    72.44

    +2.66%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    39.07

    +0.82%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.1

    +0.32%

  • RELX

    0.9400

    55.02

    +1.71%

  • RBGPF

    67.2100

    67.21

    +100%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    43.17

    -0.3%

  • BP

    0.2400

    28.12

    +0.85%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    9.61

    -1.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    10.35

    +1.26%

Russia, Ukraine agree civilian evacuation corridors as fighting rages
Russia, Ukraine agree civilian evacuation corridors as fighting rages

Russia, Ukraine agree civilian evacuation corridors as fighting rages

Russia and Ukraine agreed Thursday to create humanitarian corridors for civilians fleeing intensifying fighting as Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow's advance was "going to plan" and to schedule.

Text size:

The agreement was the only tangible progress from a second round of talks between Moscow and Kyiv, according to an adviser to Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, and it was not immediately clear how they would work. A Russian negotiator, nationalist lawmaker Leonid Slutsky, confirmed the initiative and said it would be implemented soon.

The two sides met after the fall of the first major Ukrainian city to Russian forces, with Putin apparently unwilling to heed a global clamour for hostilities to end as the war entered its second week.

Putin again said Russia was rooting out "neo-Nazis", adding during the televised opening of a national security council meeting that he "will never give up on (his) conviction that Russians and Ukrainians are one people".

He earlier told French President Emmanuel Macron that Moscow "intends to continue the uncompromising fight against militants of nationalist armed groups", according to a Kremlin account of their call.

Zelensky has called on the West to up its military assistance, after NATO members ruled out enforcing a no-fly zone for fear of igniting a direct war with nuclear-armed Russia.

"If you do not have the power to close the skies, then give me planes!" Zelensky told a news conference.

"If we are no more then, God forbid, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia will be next," he said, adding that direct talks with Putin were "the only way to stop this war".

The EU has offered fighter jets already, and a source in Berlin said the German government was planning to deliver another 2,700 anti-aircraft missiles to Ukraine.

The 27-nation bloc agreed further to approve temporary protection for all refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine -- numbered by the United Nations at more than one million.

At the talks at an undisclosed location on the Belarus-Poland border, both sides shook hands across a table at the outset, the Ukrainian delegates in military attire and the Russians in more formal suits.

A first round of talks on Monday also yielded no breakthrough, and Kyiv says it will not accept any Russian "ultimatums".

The invasion, now in its eighth day, has turned Russia into a global pariah in the worlds of finance, diplomacy, sports and culture.

The UN has opened a probe into alleged war crimes, as the Russian military bombards cities in Ukraine with shells and missiles, forcing civilians to cower in basements.

Addressing the Putin regime in a video statement, Zelensky said: "You will reimburse us for everything you did against our state, against every Ukrainian, in full."

Thirty-three people died Thursday when Russian forces hit residential areas, including schools and a high-rise apartment block, in the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv, authorities said.

- 'Just like Leningrad' -

Zelensky claims thousands of Russian soldiers have been killed since Putin shocked the world by invading Ukraine, purportedly to demilitarise and "de-Nazify" a Western-leaning threat on his borders.

Moscow said Wednesday that it has lost 498 troops, and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin praised their sacrifice.

The Kremlin has been condemned for likening the government of Zelensky, who is Jewish, to that of Germany in World War II.

While a long military column appears stalled north of Ukraine's capital Kyiv, Russian troops seized Kherson, a Black Sea city of 290,000 people, after a three-day siege that left it short of food and medicine.

Russian armoured columns from Crimea -- annexed by Moscow in 2014 -- pushed deep into the region around Kherson, triggering fighting that left at least 13 civilians dead.

Nine Ukrainian soldiers were also killed, the Kherson regional administration said.

Russian troops are also besieging the port city of Mariupol east of Kherson, which is without water or electricity in the depths of winter.

"They are trying to create a blockade here, just like in Leningrad," Mariupol mayor Vadym Boichenko said, referring to the brutal Nazi siege of Russia's second city, now re-named Saint Petersburg.

Ukrainian authorities said residential and other areas in the eastern city of Kharkiv had been "pounded all night" by indiscriminate shelling, which UN prosecutors are investigating as a possible war crime.

Oleg Rubak's wife Katia, 29, was crushed in the rubble of their family home in Zhytomyr, west of Kyiv, by a Russian missile strike.

"One minute I saw her going into the bedroom. A minute later there was nothing," Rubak, 32, told AFP amid the ruins in the bitter winter chill.

"I hope she's in heaven and all is perfect for her," he said, adding through tears, "I want the whole world to hear my story."

- Junk status -

UN emergency relief coordinator Martin Griffiths urged Russia to allow relief workers to help Ukraine's people.

"Protect civilians, for God's sake, in Ukraine; let us do our job", he told AFP in Geneva.

The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency urged Russia to "cease all actions" at Ukraine's nuclear facilities, including the site of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

Putin now finds himself an international outcast, his country the subject of swingeing sanctions that sent the ruble into further free-fall Thursday.

Russia's central bank -- whose foreign reserves have been frozen in the West -- imposed a 30-percent tax on all sales of hard currency, following a run on lenders by ordinary Russians.

The unfolding financial costs were underlined as ratings agencies Fitch and Moody's slashed Russia's sovereign debt to "junk" status.

Turmoil deepened on markets more broadly. European stocks slid and oil prices approached $120 per barrel.

Russia's sporting isolation worsened as it lost the right to host Formula One races. The International Paralympic Committee, in a U-turn, banned Russians and Belarusians from the Beijing Winter Games.

- Leaving everything behind -

Many Ukrainians have now fled into nearby countries, according to the UN refugee agency's rapidly rising tally.

"We left everything there as they came and ruined our lives," refugee Svitlana Mostepanenko told AFP in Prague.

Nathalia Lypka, a professor of German from the eastern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, arrived in Berlin with her 21-year-old daughter.

"My husband and son stayed... My husband already served in the army, and he had to return to duty," she said, before boarding a train for Stuttgart where friends were waiting.

Russian authorities have imposed a media blackout on what the Kremlin euphemistically calls a "special military operation" that Western analysts say has become bogged down.

Two liberal media groups -- Ekho Moskvy radio and TV network Dozhd -- said they were halting operations, in another death-knell for independent reporting in Putin's Russia.

But Russians have still turned out for large anti-war protests across the country, braving mass arrests in a direct challenge to the president's 20-year rule.

Nearly 7,000 Russian scientists, mathematicians and academics had as of Thursday signed an open letter "strongly" protesting Putin's war in Ukraine.

burs-jit-gw/har

T.Ueda--JT