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Volodymr Zelensky says Russia is building torture chambers in southern Ukraine

Meanwhile, the country’s foreign minister said Mariupol effectively does not exist any more due to massive destruction.

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Ambulance paramedics move an injured man on a stretcher

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said Russian troops in southern Ukraine have been carrying out torture and kidnappings as he called on the world to respond.

“Torture chambers are built there,” Mr Zelensky said in an evening address to the nation.

“They abduct representatives of local governments and anyone deemed visible to local communities.”

The president said the theft of humanitarian aid has caused famine.

In occupied parts of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, he said, the Russians are creating separatist states and introducing Russian currency, the ruble.

Intensified Russian shelling of Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, has killed 18 people and wounded 106 in the last four days alone, Mr Zelensky added.

“This is nothing but deliberate terror. Mortars, artillery against ordinary residential neighborhoods, against ordinary civilians,” he said.

10 year old Alesiy looks out of a bus at the city of Bashtanka
Russia is introducing the ruble in occupied parts of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions (Petros Giannakouris/AP)

He said a planned Russian offensive in eastern Ukraine “will begin in the near future.”

Mr Zelensky again called for increased sanctions against Russia, including its entire banking sector and oil industry.

“Everyone in Europe and America already sees Russia openly using energy to destabilize Western societies,” he said.

“All of this requires greater speed from Western countries in preparing a new, powerful package of sanctions.”

A local resident looks at a damaged building
Mariupol has been said to effectively not exist as a city following widespread destruction (Alexei Alexandrov/AP)

It came as the battered port city of Mariupol appeared on the brink of falling to Russian forces following seven weeks under siege.

That development would mark a crucial success for Moscow following Russia’s failure to storm the capital and the loss of its Black Sea flagship.

Ukraine’s foreign minister said Mariupol effectively does not exist any more because of massive destruction.

Dmytro Kuleba told CBS programme Face the Nation that the remaining Ukrainian military personnel and civilians in the port city are basically encircled by Russian forces.

He said his country has been keeping up “expert level” talks with Russia in recent weeks in hopes of reaching a political solution for peace. But citing the significance of Mariupol, he echoed Mr Zelensky in saying the elimination of Ukrainian forces there could be a “red line” that stops peace efforts.

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