Putin claims ‘liberation’ of Ukraine’s Mariupol, halts Russian plan to storm Azovstal steel plant
- Mariupol’s last Ukrainian defenders are holding out against Russian forces in the city’s Azovstal steel plant
- A full capture of the southeastern port city would be Russia’s biggest victory after two months of fighting

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Russia strikes Mariupol steel plant that has become Ukraine’s stronghold in strategic city
President Vladimir Putin on Thursday hailed Russia’s “liberation” of Mariupol after Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu told him Moscow controlled the Ukrainian port city apart from the giant Azovstal steel plant.
Taking full control of Mariupol on the Azov Sea would be a major strategic victory for Russia, helping it to connect annexed Crimea to the territories of pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.
“Mariupol has been liberated,” Shoigu told Putin during a televised meeting. “The remaining nationalist formations took refuge in the industrial zone of the Azovstal plant.”
Shoigu said around 2,000 Ukrainian soldiers remained inside the plant, where the last pocket of Ukrainian resistance has been sheltering, using the facility’s network of underground tunnels.
Putin said the “liberation” of Mariupol was a “success” for Russian forces, but ordered Shoigu to call off the planned storming of the Azovstal industrial area, dismissing it as “impractical”.