Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- A pro-Russian rebel leader in
one eastern Ukrainian city resigned and shells reportedly rocked
another rebel-held area Thursday as the Ukrainian military kept up its
deadly offensive to retake separatist strongholds.
The latest developments
come after weeks of heavy fighting that is said to have killed hundreds
of people and prompted the Red Cross to urge more humanitarian
assistance, saying thousands in Ukraine's battle-torn east were believed
to be without access to water, electricity and medical aid.
In the contested city of
Luhansk, the self-declared governor of the rebels there resigned in a
video posted Thursday on social media, saying that the region was "at
the edge of a human catastrophe" and that injuries he'd suffered have
kept him from focusing sufficiently on the job.see more details below...
Valeriy Bolotov didn't
specify his injuries, but rebels previously said he'd been wounded in a
firefight with Ukrainian forces in May.
"The aftermath (of my)
injury does not let me fully work on the post to the benefit of the
Luhansk people in this difficult war time," said Bolotov, who said he
was offering his position to the Luhansk rebels' "defense minister,"
Igor Plotnitskiy.
Tens of thousands of
Ukrainian troops have stepped up efforts to retake areas in and around
Luhansk and Donetsk, two cities that have been rebel strongholds for
months.
Shells hit Donetsk, city leaders say
Shelling hit nearly all
districts Donetsk on Thursday, city leaders said. Two shopping centers
were damaged, and a fire raged near an oil storage facility, the Donetsk
city council said on its website.
Fighting in the Donetsk
region has killed 74 people and injured 116 others in the past three
days, the region's health care department said. Days of shelling in
Donetsk has pushed some residents underground into cellars and
half-built basements.
Ukraine's forces have
been increasing pressure on the rebel fighters, and Ukrainian officials
say they expect to be able to fully recapture the city by Ukraine's
Independence Day on August 24.
Near Luhansk, up to 20
civilians were killed in shelling Wednesday at Peremozhne village, said
Irina Verigina, the Kiev-backed governor of the Luhansk region.
The ongoing fighting --
sparked last year with a political crisis over whether Ukraine would
seek closer ties with Europe or Russia -- has left more than 2,000
people dead and just under 5,000 wounded in eastern Ukraine since
mid-April, according to estimates from U.N. officials that they called
"conservative."
Hundreds of thousands of
people have been forced to flee their homes and seek shelter either
elsewhere in Ukraine or across the border in Russia, the United Nations
says.
More than 800 people
died and more than 1,600 others have been injured in this year's
fighting in the Donetsk region alone, the health care department said.
The department did not give a breakdown of combatants and civilians.
Ukraine: Humanitarian aid coming to Luhansk
Thursday's developments
come amid a diplomatic struggle between Russia and Western nations that
accuse it of supplying weapons to the rebels in Ukraine.
Russia has denied
allegations that it is supporting separatists in Ukraine and maintains
it wants to see a diplomatic solution to the crisis. But U.S. and
Ukrainian officials have accused Russia of saying one thing while doing
another: building up troops along the border and continuing to support
pro-Russian separatists.
Ukraine and Russia also
are at loggerheads over humanitarian aid. Russia insists that it should
be allowed to provide aid to the war-torn region, many of whose
residents are Russian speakers. According to the Russian news agency
ITAR-Tass, Russia this week sent trucks with hundreds of tons of grain
and other supplies toward the border, bound for Luhansk.
But Ukraine's
government, fearing the mission was actually an attempt to smuggle
supplies to pro-Russian rebels, has said it will keep the convoy out.
Ukraine has said any aid must first go through the Red Cross, which so
far has said it doesn't have any agreement with Russia about an aid
convoy.
Meanwhile, Ukraine's
state news agency Ukrinform reported Thursday that the government was
giving 250,000 tons of water, food and other aid to the Red Cross for
distribution in the Luhansk region.
The United States and
the European Union have applied steadily increasing sanctions against
Russian officials, banks and other interests since March, when Russia
annexed the Black Sea Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea. Russia's move came a
month after Ukraine's parliament ousted pro-Moscow President Viktor
Yanukovych.
Yanukovych left office
after violent protests against his government in the capital, Kiev.
Those protests were motivated in part by his decision to back out of a
trade deal with the European Union in favor of closer ties with Russia.







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