Pro-Ukraine Russian fighters launch fresh cross-border raid

Incursion by three armed groups timed to disrupt presidential elections

Ukraine’s military operates in close co-ordination with the three armed groups of Russian exiled fighters. Photograph: Yakiv Liashenko / EPA
Ukraine’s military operates in close co-ordination with the three armed groups of Russian exiled fighters. Photograph: Yakiv Liashenko / EPA

Three pro-Ukrainian battalions made up of recruits from Russia have launched a fresh incursion into southern Russia in a cross-border raid meant to sow chaos before Vladimir Putin’s widely expected re-election this weekend.

The three armed groups of Russian exiled fighters, who operate in close co-ordination with Ukraine’s military, said they had crossed the border into the southern Kursk and Belgorod regions. In a statement the Russian National Guard acknowledged the raid, saying that together with the armed forces, they were repelling the Ukrainian-backed armed groups’ attack near the village of Tyotkino in Russia’s western Kursk region.

Russia’s defence ministry later in the day said it had foiled the raids and posted a video appearing to show destroyed tanks and armoured fighting vehicles belonging to the pro-Ukrainian fighters.

But several pro-war Russian journalists close to the military said that fighting on the Russian border was continuing on Thursday evening. Readovka, a pro-Kremlin news site with ties to security services, said the pro-Ukrainian battalions had entered the Russian border village of Kozenka in the Belgorod region, where fighting was taking place.

READ SOME MORE

The Kremlin-controlled RT channel said some people living in border towns in Belgorod were evacuating their homes.

Members of the Siberia, Freedom of Russia Legion and RDK battalions – the three groups that claimed the cross-boarder raid – closely work with the Ukrainian army.

Russia Legion and RDK battalions comprise members ranging from far-right nationalists to anarchists, while the Siberian battalion is predominantly made of minority ethnic people from Siberia, including Buryats, Yakuts and Tuvans.

While the cross-border raids are unlikely to result in Ukrainian territorial gains, they could pull Russian troops away from significant battles in eastern Ukraine, where Moscow holds the momentum.

Using several tanks and armoured vehicles, the three groups earlier this week first launched an attack on Tyotkino, a small village located on the Russian border, but soon appeared to have made a retreat back into Ukraine.

On Thursday the anti-Putin militias posted a statement on Telegram saying that cross-border assault to “liberate” the Kursk and Belgorod regions would continue “until all targets are achieved”.

They urged Russians to evacuate the border regions, announcing a humanitarian corridor from Thursday evening until Friday morning. “After that, we launch a massive attack on Putin’s military,” the militias said.

The border skirmishes were accompanied by sustained Ukrainian drone and missile strikes targeting the city of Belgorod. On Thursday Ukraine fired at least eight missiles at Russia’s Belgorod border region, killing one person and wounding six, local officials said. Kyiv this week also stepped up its attacks on refineries and energy facilities deep inside Russia, disrupting production at least one vital oil refinery.

The latest wave of Ukrainian attacks comes before the March 15-17th presidential election, which Mr Putin is guaranteed to win.

In an interview with state media on Wednesday, Mr Putin said the latest flurry of Ukrainian border attacks were meant to disrupt the presidential elections. “The main goal, I do not doubt it, is to ... somehow prevent the normal process of the expression of the will of the citizen,” he said. – Guardian