(Reuters) -
Pro-Russian rebels appeared to be in full control on Wednesday of one of
the towns that has been a principal target of their advance, as they
attempt to surround a nearby garrison of Ukrainian forces. The apparent fall of
the town of Vuhlehirsk would be a setback for Kiev, which has been
trying to defend it and the larger neighboring town of Debaltseve, an
important rail hub, from encirclement by advancing rebels. A
military spokesman in the capital said Vuhlehirsk was still contested.
But Reuters journalists on the ground were freely able to enter about 60
percent of it and saw no sign of areas controlled by Ukrainian troops.
Rebels patrolled casually and were in a boisterous mood, using positions
in the town to fire artillery on Debaltseve. Kiev's
Western allies are alarmed over the rebel advance in recent weeks,
which scuppered a five-month-old ceasefire. U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry is due to visit Kiev on Thursday amid talk that Washington might
begin to provide weapons to the Ukrainian government for the first time. In
Vuhlehirsk, shattered from the combat, metal worker Sergey Kopun, 50,
dressed in dirty blue overalls, walked out from a cellar where he had
been hiding for days with his wife and quadriplegic mother. "Someone should come to remove these corpses, it is inhumane to leave them here to rot," he said. About
300 meters (yards) away at least four bodies of soldiers with Ukrainian
shoulder patches were scattered inside a garden of what appeared to be a
restaurant. "They had a
good firing point here. We had to use anti-tank weapons to blast our way
into this garden," said a rebel commander in his 50s who gave his name
as Ironside. The town,
with around 9,000 people before the war, has been one of the main
targets of the rebel advance, sitting in a pocket of government-held
territory surrounded on three sides by rebel territory and straddling
road and rail routes linking major rebel strongholds. Ukrainian
forces are still holed up in neighboring Debaltseve, a major rail town
of about three times the size and an important stopping point for goods
traffic by rail from Russia. Taking the two would link up the main rebel strongholds of Luhansk and Donetsk. Fighting
in a war which has already killed more than 5,000 people has reached an
intensity unseen since before a ceasefire in September. An attempt to
revive peace talks collapsed on Saturday. Kiev
and its Western allies accuse Moscow of arming and funding the rebels
and backing the latest advance with Russian troops on the ground. Moscow
denies any involvement. OUTGUNNED Ukraine says its military is outgunned by the heavy weaponry rebels have received from Russia. But the prospect of new arms arriving from the United States raises the risk of escalating the war. Rebels
say they had no choice but to advance, to make the cities they control
more secure and push back government artillery which had been killing
civilians. At least two shells landed near a hospital in the separatist stronghold Donetsk on Wednesday, killing at least three people. A
statement by the rebel-controlled city administration said an artillery
shell had hit the building at noon (0900 GMT), and said five people had
been killed and five wounded. Kiev's state prosecutor's office later
said from four to 10 people had been killed and blamed the separatists
for the attack. A Reuters
cameraman who went to the scene said the hospital had not itself been
hit though a shell had left a big crater in the ground 20 meters away.
He saw three bodies - one near the hospital and two others on the
street. People at the scene said at least two shells had been fired, one
after the other. German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country hosts world leaders in Munich at
the weekend, said the situation had sharply worsened in east Ukraine and called for the negotiation process not to be abandoned. The EU's foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, condemned the separatist offensive against Debaltseve. Kiev,
supported by the West, insists that a ceasefire agreement reached in
Minsk last September with separatist leaders is the only viable roadmap
to peace, and the rebels flouted the agreement by seizing swathes of
territory. The rebels
appear now to be seeking a new blueprint and want a different format for
talks involving senior Ukrainian state officials. "We
have to follow the logic of the Minsk agreement. We need firstly a real
ceasefire just to stop continuous shelling and the suffering of people
on the ground. We need to agree on the touchline (lines of engagement)
and we need to start withdrawing artillery from this line," Ukrainian
Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin told a group of foreign journalists on
Wednesday. It was important the EU did not relax sanctions on Russia, he said. A
Kiev military spokesman said four soldiers had been killed and 25 had
been wounded in fighting against pro-Russian separatists in the previous
24 hours and separatists were continuing attacks on Debaltseve.
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