Ukrainian officials have said their troops still control about 60% of Vovchansk. They are fighting house-to-house to defend the border town in northeastern Kharkiv region from Russian attacks. This has been the most detailed public assessment of the battle to date.
“The enemy continues to try, especially inside Vovchansk, to push the Ukrainian Armed Forces out of the town,” Kharkiv region’s deputy governor Roman Semenukha has said on national television. “About 60% of the town is controlled by the Ukrainian Armed Forces, meaning that the assaults do not stop,” he added. Semenukha said local authorities had evacuated around 10,500 people from the border areas since May 10 when Russia launched the assault on the Kharkiv region.
The region’s governor, Oleh Syniehubov, has said the front line now runs along the Vovcha river which cuts through the town. “Our soldiers are trying to defend the town house by house, street by street,” Syniehubov said on national television. “The enemy’s plan to quickly capture the north of the region failed,” he added.
Vovchansk’s police chief said last week that Russian forces had taken positions in the town and called the situation “extremely difficult”.
Russia’s push in the Kharkiv region with assaults in the areas of Vovchansk and Lyptsi forced Ukraine to send in reinforcements. As a result, it has had to stretch its troops along the more than 1,000-km frontline in the east and south. Capturing Vovchansk would be Moscow’s most significant gain since it opened a new front in the northern part of Kharkiv region earlier this month. This would stretch Kyiv’s forces in the third year of the full-scale invasion.
Ukraine’s General Staff said earlier its forces had repelled Russian attacks near Starytsia as some of Kyiv’s units worked to strengthen defensive positions in the area on Monday. Starytsia is a village about 5 km from the border with Russia.
With inputs from Reuters