Tag: Afghanistan.

  • Russian mercenaries allegedly in charge of 80% of Bakhmut – Wagner Group

    Russian mercenaries allegedly in charge of 80% of Bakhmut – Wagner Group

    Ukraine’s government has refuted Yevgeny Prigozhin’s assertion that Russia owns “80%” of Bakhmut.

    One of the longest-running and deadliest battles in the Ukrainian War, Bakhmut, was about to be captured, according to Prigozhin’s Telegram post from today.

    Despite not being a major strategic node, Bakhmut, a mid-sized mining city in eastern Afghanistan, has emerged as one of the conflict’s most emblematic locations.

    Bakhmut is mostly in ruins after ten months of carnage and bombardment, but the battle “continues,” according to Prigozhin, who today displayed a map of the region.

    ‘In Bakhmut, the larger part, more than 80% is now under our control, including the whole administrative centre, factories, warehouses, the administration of the city,’ he said.

    He used a red marker pen to highlight the relatively small, mainly residential area of the city that remained to be captured by Russian forces.

    Ukrainian servicemen drive towards the frontline of Bakhmut and Chasiv Yar, during heavy fighting near Chasiv Yar, Ukraine, April 11, 2023. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
    Ukrainian soldiers have been facing off against ‘human waves’ of Wagner mercenaries (Picture: Reuters)
    FILE - An aerial view of Bakhmut, the site of heavy battles with Russian troops in the Donetsk region, Ukraine, Sunday, March 26, 2023. Europe???s biggest armed conflict since World War II is poised to enter a key new phase in the coming weeks. With no suggestion of a negotiated end to the 13 months of fighting between Russia and Ukraine, a counteroffensive by Kyiv???s troops is in the cards. (AP Photo/Libkos, File)
    Bakhmut has become mostly ruins in the 10 months of battle (Picture: AP)
    CHASIV YAR, UKRAINE - APRIL 10: A woman cries while the Russia-Ukraine war continues near Bakhmut frontline in Chasiv Yar, Ukraine on April 10, 2023. (Photo by Muhammed Enes Yildirim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
    Around 90% of the city’s pre-invasion population has fled (Picture: Anadolu)

    ‘There,’ Prigozhin said, ‘the war continues.’

    Not quite, said Serhii Cherevatyi, a spokesperson for the eastern grouping of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

    ‘This statement by Prigozhin is not true,’ Cherevatyi told CNN.

    ‘I’ve just been in touch with the commander of one of the brigades that are defending the city.

    ‘I can confidently state that the Ukrainian defence forces control a much larger percentage of the territory of Bakhmut.’

    ‘Prigozhin needs to show at least some victory in the city, which they have been trying to capture for nine months in a row, so he makes such statements,’ Cherevatyi added. 

    Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin has said the ‘war continues’ in the city (Picture: AFP)

    Wagner, a private military force with close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, has sent wave after wave of recruits into Bakhmut to drag out the fight.

    Prigozhin said he has handed some Wagner-dominated sections of the city to the Russian military.

    ‘We handed over the flanks to the Ministry of Defence. Units of the Ministry of Defence, including the airborne troops, have today taken over both the right and left flanks,’ he said.

    ‘That is why Zaliznyanskoye, Nikolaevka, and other settlements, which were stormed by units of the Wagner PMC in previous months, are in the area of responsibility of the airborne troops and other units of the Ministry of Defence.’

    With Kyiv soldiers facing round-the-clock artillery bombardments, Moscow is now using ‘scorched earth’ tactics on Bakhmut, a Ukrainian commander said Monday.

    ‘The enemy switched to so-called scorched earth tactics from Syria. It is destroying buildings and positions with air strikes and artillery fire,’ the commander of Ukraine’s ground force, Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi, said.

    ‘The situation is difficult,’ he added, ‘but controllable.’

  • Copies of Prince Harry’s memoir stained with Afghan blood go on sale

    Copies of Prince Harry’s memoir stained with Afghan blood go on sale

    Copies of Prince Harry’s memoir smeared with the blood of Afghan people are set to go on sale – with a five-figure price tag.

    Artist Andrei Molodkin says he has covered 25 copies of Spare with human blood, which he will put on display at a shop in Windsor today.

    It comes after the Russian anti-war artist projected a sculpture filled with blood on to St Paul’s Cathedral in London, in a protest over the Duke of Sussex‘s remarks about his number of kills in Afghanistan.

    Artist Andrei Molodkin says he has smeared 25 copies of Prince Harry's memoir with blood donated by Afghans

    Molodkin said some of the blood donated for the artwork has now been used to create his “alternative Spare” books, which will be available to buy from 2 May – four days before the King’s coronation – for $10,000 (£8,000) each.

    The artist says any money raised from the sale will be donated to Afghan charities.

    In a statement about his latest stunt – called “Blood Money” – Molodkin said: “Prince Harry boasts of killing Taliban like they’re baddies in a video game, ‘otherising’ human life then cashing in on the sorry tale to sell books about his drug binging, sexual exploits and killing conquests.”

    After going on display in Windsor on Saturday, a spokesman for Molodkin said the blood-covered books will be available to buy at a/political, an arts organisation in Kennington, London, on 2 May.

    Harry faced criticism for revealing in his memoir that he killed 25 Taliban fighters while serving with the British Army in Afghanistan. He wrote that it “wasn’t a number that gave me any satisfaction… but neither was it a number that made me feel ashamed”.

    Prince Harry pictured while serving in Afghanistan in 2008
    Image: Prince Harry pictured serving in Afghanistan in 2008

    The prince also admitted that he did not think of those he killed as “people”, but instead as “chess pieces” that had been taken off the board.

    He wrote: “While in the heat and fog of combat, I didn’t think of those 25 as people. You can’t kill people if you think of them as people. You can’t really harm people if you think of them as people. They were chess pieces removed from the board, Bads taken away before they could kill Goods.”