Search for survivors in bombed Mariupol theatre rubble continues

‘Russia’s armed forces don’t bomb towns and cities,’ Kremlin spokeswoman claims

Rescue workers were searching for survivors in the rubble of a theatre in the besieged city of Mariupol on Thursday, after Ukraine said a powerful Russian airstrike hit the building where hundreds of people had been sheltering from the war.

The port city is encircled by Russian forces and has seen fierce bombardment. A statement from the city council said that about 30,000 residents had managed to escape so far, but more than 350,000 remained stuck there.

"The heart is breaking from what Russia does to our people, our Mariupol, and our Donetsk region," Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in a late-night address on Wednesday, after referring to the theatre attack.

The city council said hundreds of people, mostly women, children and the elderly, had been hiding in the theatre and a nearby swimming pool building because of heavy shelling.

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“Information about the victims is still being clarified,” it said.

Earlier, Petro Andrushchenko, an adviser to the city's mayor, said some people survived the blast and the bomb shelter had held. Emergency workers were looking for them in the rubble.

‘Children’ sign

Russia has denied bombing the theatre.

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Thursday that the allegation that Russia had bombed the theatre was a "lie", and repeated Kremlin denials that Russian forces had targeted civilians since the February 24th invasion of Ukraine.

“Russia’s armed forces don’t bomb towns and cities,” she said in a briefing.

Satellite images of the theatre taken earlier this week before it was struck show a large structure with a red roof and the Russian word for “children” painted in large white letters on the tarmac at the front and back.

The Italian government offered on Thursday to help rebuild the theatre.

Speaking after a cabinet meeting, culture minister Dario Franceschini said on Twitter: "The cabinet . . . has approved my proposal to offer Ukraine the resources and means to rebuild [the theatre] as soon as possible. Theatres of all countries belong to the whole [of] humanity."

Destroyed city

Mariupol council said the physical damage to the city from Russian bombing had been “enormous”. It estimated that about 80 per cent of the city’s homes had been destroyed, of which almost 30 per cent were beyond repair.

On the outskirts of town, reporters saw people leaving on foot and in cars, some pushing their belongings in shopping carts. In the background there were badly burned and bombed apartment blocks, some still smouldering.

Yuriy Ryzhenkov, chief executive of Ukraine's largest steelmaker, Metinvest, said he was keeping intermittent contact with some of the company's employees still in Mariupol.

“For the last two days, the bombing was literally happening every 30 minutes, so in reality people couldn’t even get out of the bomb shelters or their basements,” he said from somewhere close to Kyiv.

Mariupol was, he said, “. . . our pride. Now we are seeing all of the work that we have done over the last eight years just being destroyed, completely destroyed, and that’s a very sad feeling.” – Reuters