Jump directly to the content

DISTURBING images show what appear to be mass graves near Mariupol, amid fears Russian has committed fresh war crimes.

New satellite photos show hundreds of holes in a field 12 miles west of the besieged city.

Satellite image appear to show a mass grave site outside Mariupol
5
Satellite image appear to show a mass grave site outside MariupolCredit: AFP
Some 2,000 Ukrainian troops and civilians are trapped in a bunker below the Azovstal steelworks
5
Some 2,000 Ukrainian troops and civilians are trapped in a bunker below the Azovstal steelworksCredit: Reuters
Vladimir Putin has hailed his campaign in Mariupol a 'success'
5
Vladimir Putin has hailed his campaign in Mariupol a 'success'Credit: Alamy

The formation has four sections of linear rows and contains 200 freshly dug graves, according to Maxar Technologies pictures.

The images, taken between mid-March and mid-April, are said to show just a fraction of new graves dug during the past few weeks.

The harrowing pictures appear to support claims made by Mariupol's mayor Vadym Boychenko that Russian troops had dug huge trenches near Manhush and buried hundreds of dead civilians.

Boychenko said bodies had "started disappearing from the streets" of the city and that Mad Vlad's forces were "hiding the trace of their crimes and using mass graves as one of the instruments for that".

MORE ON THE WAR IN UKRAINE

"They are taking the bodies of the dead residents of Mariupol in trucks and throw them into those trenches," he said during an online briefing.

Ukrainian officials said on Thursday the mass grave site could contain as many as 9,000 bodies.

It comes as Putin called off an assault of Azvostal steelworks, which is currently housing the last of Mariupol's brave Ukrainian defenders and innocent civilians.

Instead, the Russian despot ordered his troops to blockade the complex, which has as many as 2,000 defenders holed up inside

He gave the fresh orders to defence minister Sergei Shoigu and called the partial retaking of Mariupol a "success".

Ukrainian fighters, along with a small group of civilians, are refusing to budge from inside the Azovstal steelworks - despite Putin's grim threat to starve them.

The brave fighters were told earlier this week to surrender and promised they will would be allowed to live, given medical attention and looked after.

But troops are said to still be holed up in the steel mill which boasts a large underground network of tunnels.

In a moving piece, columnist Andreas Kluth remarked their efforts were something of a marvel as we have seen in other events throughout history.

He referenced the incredible last stand by the 300 Spartans at the Battle of Thermopylae when the Persians’ failed attempt to conquer Greece in 480 BC.

He wrote: "A tiny force centered around 300 Spartans held the gap for three days until they were betrayed and outflanked.

"All died. But they had slowed down the Persian assault. The following year, the Greeks won the war."

Kluth continued: "The Ukrainians at Azovstal are fighting for one another, for their country, and for history.

"Maybe, like the rebel samurai and so many others before, they’re also fighting just because the whims of fate placed them in a particular place at a particular time, and they heard the call to take their last stand.

"If they perish, it will be on their own terms, and with honor.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

Read More on The Sun

The Azovstal troops are likely inspired by the country's leader President Volodymyr Zelensky whose fierce commitment to defend his country has impressed the world.

As Russian troops relocated to the Donbas as part to begin battle to seize the east, he vowed they will keep defending their land.

Mariupol has been devastated by weeks of Russian bombardment
5
Mariupol has been devastated by weeks of Russian bombardmentCredit: Reuters
Natalia Maznychenko holding a portrait of her late husband, Vasyl Maznychenko 60
5
Natalia Maznychenko holding a portrait of her late husband, Vasyl Maznychenko 60Credit: Rex
Topics