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14 WORLD maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 19 APRIL 2023 Putin visits two regions of occupied Ukraine, Russia steps up assault on Bakhmut RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin has met his command- ers in two regions of Ukraine that Moscow claims to have annexed, while Russian forc- es stepped up heavy artillery bombardments and air strikes on the devastated eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut. The Kremlin said Putin had attended a military command meeting in Ukraine's southern Kherson region and visited a national guard headquarters in eastern Luhansk. It did not say when the visits took place. Putin heard reports from commanders of the airborne forces and the Dnieper army group as well as other senior officers who briefed him on the situation in the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions in the south. "It is important for me to hear your opinion on how the situ- ation is developing, to listen to you, to exchange information," Putin, 70, told the commanders. Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Lu- hansk and Donetsk are the four regions that Putin proclaimed annexed last September follow- ing what Kyiv and its Western allies said were sham referen- dums. Russian forces only part- ly control the four regions. Russian troops retreated from Kherson city, the regional cap- ital, last November, and have been reinforcing their positions on the opposite bank of the Dnipro River in anticipation of a Ukrainian counteroffensive. While numerous Western leaders have made their way to Kyiv for talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelens- kiy since Russian forces invad- ed 14 months ago, Putin has rarely visited parts of Ukraine under Russian control. Last month, he visited Crimea - annexed by Russia in 2014 - and the southeastern city of Mariupol in Donetsk region. A Russian winter offensive failed to make much pro- gress and its troops have been bogged down in a series of battles in the east and south, where advances have been in- cremental and come at a huge cost to both sides. Heavy artillery Fighting has raged in and around Bakhmut in Donetsk region for months, with Ukrainian forces holding out despite regular claims by Rus- sia to have taken the mining city. "Currently, the enemy is in- creasing the activity of heavy artillery and the number of air strikes, turning the city in- to ruins," the commander of Ukraine's ground forces, Gen- eral Oleksandr Syrskyi, said in a statement on Tuesday. Bakhmut's capture could pro- vide a stepping stone for Rus- sia to advance on two bigger cities it has long coveted in the Donetsk region - Kramatorsk and Sloviansk. The head of the Wagner mer- cenary group, which has spear- headed Russia's attempt to take Bakhmut, said this month that its fighters controlled more than 80% of the city. Ukraine's military has denied this. Russia says its "special mil- itary operation" in Ukraine, launched on Feb. 24 last year, was necessary to protect its se- curity against what it sees as a hostile and aggressive West. Ukraine and its Western allies say Russia is waging an unpro- voked war aimed at grabbing territory. 'Irresponsible' A meeting of Group of Seven foreign ministers in Japan con- demned on Tuesday a Russian plan to station shorter-range, so-called tactical nuclear weap- ons in Belarus, a Moscow ally which borders Ukraine. It was the first time Russia had said it would station nucle- ar weapons on the territory of another country since the end of the Cold War three decades ago, and appeared to raise the stakes, at least symbolically, in an intensifying standoff with the West over the war in Ukraine. In a communique issued at the end of a three-day meeting in Japan, G7 foreign ministers said: "Russia's irresponsible nuclear rhetoric and its threat to deploy nuclear weapons in Belarus are unacceptable." "Any use of chemical, biologi- cal or nuclear weapons by Rus- sia would be met with severe consequences," they said. The G7 groups the United States, Japan, Germany, Brit- ain, France, Italy and Canada, which have all imposed eco- nomic sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. The war in Ukraine has killed tens of thousands of people, levelled cities, forced millions from their homes and raised fears of a global food shortage because of disruption to grain supplies. But the latest alarm over food appeared to be over as Rus- sia's RIA news agency, citing the Russian foreign ministry, said inspections of ships mov- ing grains from Ukraine have restarted after a pause which threatened to shut down the Black Sea shipping corridor. A ministry official quoted by RIA blamed Monday's inter- ruption on Ukraine's failure to observe agreed procedures but said the issue has been resolved. It remains unclear if the grain deal, in place since last Ju- ly, will be renewed, as Russia complains another agreement, aimed at facilitating its own agricultural and fertilizer ex- ports, has not been upheld. Vladimir Putin meets Russian generals in occupied Ukraine