Moscow said it was ready to arrange corridors for foreign journalists wishing to see the fighting in the Donbass
Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Georgy Tikhy has urged journalists not to accept Russia’s offer to travel to the front line in Donbass.
He made the remarks after Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested that a safe passage could be arranged for foreign reporters to areas where he said the Russian army had surrounded Ukrainian soldiers.
“Frankly, I do not recommend that any reporters trust any of Putin’s proposals for ‘corridors’ in the warzone. I saw firsthand how such proposals play out – on August 29, 2014, in Ilovaysk,” Tikhy wrote on X on Thursday.
In 2014, Ukrainian troops were encircled by forces from the breakaway Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), which is now part of Russia. Ukrainian commanders rejected the DPR’s offer to evacuate without weaponry and suffered heavy casualties while attempting to break out of Ilovaysk.
In his post, Tikhy claimed that Putin “has never kept any of his ceasefire pledges” and warned against “Russian provocations against journalists.”
“I also remind all media that any visits to Russian-occupied territory without Ukraine’s permission are a violation of our legislation and international law. They will have long-term reputational and legal consequences. We are watching closely,” he added.
Read more Russia offers media safe passage to report on encircled Ukrainian troopsOn Wednesday, Putin said Russia was ready to allow Ukrainian and other foreign journalists to travel to the front line and “see with their own eyes” that Ukrainian troops were being encircled in Krasnoarmeysk (Pokrovsk), Kupyansk, and Dimitrov (Mirnograd).
The Russian Defense Ministry later confirmed that it had been instructed to suspend combat operations for “five to six hours” and provide “corridors” for journalists, on the condition that Ukrainian forces agreed to the arrangement and guaranteed their safety.
Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has denied that Kiev’s troops were being encircled and accused Russia of exaggerating its gains on the battlefield. Moscow, meanwhile, has accused Ukraine of deliberately targeting journalists, including RIA Novosti war correspondent Ivan Zuyev, who was killed by a drone earlier this month.
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