MOSCOW, May 19 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Russia’s defence ministry said that 959 Ukrainian soldiers had surrendered this week at the besieged Azovstal steel plant in Ukraine’s port city of Mariupol.
“Over the past 24 hours, 694 militants surrendered, including 29 wounded,” the ministry said in its daily briefing on the conflict. “In total since May 16, 959 militants surrendered, including 80 wounded.”
It said those requiring medical treatment were taken to a hospital in the town of Novoazovsk in Russian-controlled territory.
Kyiv is hoping to exchange the surrendered Ukrainian fighters, but Russia has yet to confirm whether they will be part of a prisoner swap.
Earlier in April, Moscow claimed control of Mariupol after a weeks-long siege, but hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers remained holed up in underground tunnels beneath the huge Azovstal industrial zone, blocked by Russian troops.
Kyiv’s Defence Ministry has said it would do “everything necessary” to rescue the undisclosed number of personnel that remain in the steelworks, but admitted there was no military option available.
Meanwhile, a pro-Russian separatist leader said that more than 1,000 Ukrainian soldiers including senior commanders remain inside the besieged Azovstal steel plant in Ukraine’s port city of Mariupol,.
Speaking to reporters in Mariupol, the leader of the breakaway Donetsk People’s Republic, Denis Pushilin, said there had been about 2,000 fighters in the sprawling industrial complex and “a little more than half” remained inside.
“Commanders and high-ranking fighters of (the) Azov (regiment) have not yet come out,” he told journalists on a press tour organised by the Russian military.
The Azov regiment, a former paramilitary unit created in 2014, has integrated into the Ukrainian armed forces. Russia describes the unit, which has previous links to far-right groups, as a neo-Nazi organisation.
Pushilin said the forces inside the plant were running out of supplies and had been left with little choice but to surrender.
“The first option is to raise the white flag and lay down your arms. The second option is to die there, just die. They chose the first option,” he said.
Pushilin said some of the wounded were also being treated in the city of Donetsk and that the rest of those who emerged from the plant were being held under guard in a prison colony.
He suggested some of the Ukrainians could face trial.
“As for war criminals and those who are nationalists, if they lay down their weapons their fate will be in the hands of the court,” he said. — NNN-AGENCIES