Ukraine residents there have been sheltering underground from relentless bombardment, unable to evacuate their wounded, and with no access to food, water, power or heat. Local ceasefires to let them leave have failed since Saturday.
According to report, Russia announced a new ceasefire in Ukraine on Wednesday to let civilians flee besieged cities, but there were only limited signs of progress providing escape routes for hundreds of thousands of people trapped without medicine or fresh water.
The governor of Sumy, an eastern city, said civilian cars were leaving for a second day through a safe corridor set up to Poltava further west.
But by midday in Ukraine there was no confirmation that any of the other evacuation corridors had been successfully opened, including a route out of Mariupol, seen as the most urgent, where the Red Cross has described conditions as "apocalyptic".
The mayor of Enerhodar, site of Europe's biggest nuclear power plant which Russian forces seized last week in a battle that raised global alarm, said humanitarian supplies would be allowed in and buses would take residents out on the way back.
The greatest humanitarian concern
is Mariupol, a southern port surrounded by Russian troops for more than a week.
Kyiv said 30 buses and eight trucks of supplies failed to reach it on Tuesday after they came under Russian shelling in violation of the ceasefire. Moscow has blamed Kyiv for failing to halt fire.
More than 2 million people have fled Ukraine since President Vladimir Putin launched the invasion nearly two weeks ago. Moscow calls its action a "special military operation" to disarm its neighbour and dislodge leaders it calls "neo-Nazis."
Kyiv and its Western allies dismiss that as a baseless pretext for an unprovoked war against a democratic country of 44 million people.
In recent days, Russia has also
accused Ukraine of having tried to develop biological or nuclear weapons. On
Wednesday, the Kremlin said Washington must explain what Moscow described as
Ukrainian biological weapons labs. Western countries call that an attempt to
fabricate a new pretext for the invasion retroactively.
U kraine's nuclear power plant operator said it was concerned for safety, both at Enerhodar and at Chernobyl, mothballed site of the world's worst nuclear disaster, where it said a power cut due to fighting meant spent nuclear fuel could not be cooled.
The war
has swiftly cast Russia into economic isolation never before visited on such a
large economy. The United States said on Tuesday it was banning imports of
Russian oil, a major policy change after energy was previously exempted from
sanctions.
Western
companies have swiftly withdrawn from the Russian market. In a stark symbol,
McDonalds said on Tuesday it was shutting its nearly 850 restaurants in Russia.
Its first, which drew huge queues to Moscow's Pushkin Square when it opened in
1990, had been an emblem of the end of the Cold War.
Starbucks
, Coca-Cola, Pepsi and others made similar announcements. Imperial Brands, the
UK-listed maker of Winston cigarettes, joined the stampede out on Wednesday,
shutting its factory in Volgograd.
Russia's
ruling United Russia party said it proposed seizing assets of foreign companies
that leave.
"We
will take tough retaliatory measures, acting in accordance with the laws of
war," Andrei Turchak, secretary of the party's council, wrote on its
website.
Banishing
Russia, the world's top exporter of combined oil and gas, from markets is
sending shockwaves through the global economy at a time when inflation in the
developed world is already at levels not seen since the 1980s. Retail fuel pump
prices have surged to records.
Both
Ukraine and Russia are also major global exporters of food and metals. Prices
of grain and food oils have soared worldwide, punishing poor countries in the
Middle East, Africa and Asia. Trade in nickel, critical in electric vehicle
production, was called off on Tuesday in London after the price more than
doubled.
Ukraine
said on Wednesday it was halting exports of rye, barley, buckwheat, millet,
sugar, salt and meat for the rest of the year.
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