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Officials backed by Russia claim that Russia has captured a village in eastern Ukraine near a lithium deposit

A Russian-backed official announced on Thursday that Russian troops had taken control of an eastern Ukrainian village near a lithium deposit, after fierce resistance by Ukrainian forces.

Shevchenko, a village in Donetsk in Ukraine, is one of four regions that Moscow claims as its own territory. Kyiv and the Western powers have rejected this as illegal.

On Thursday, the Russian Defence Ministry said that Shevchenko and another settlement named Novoserhiivka had been taken.

Ukraine has not yet commented on the report. Deep State, a Ukrainian military blog resource that uses open source mapping, shows Shevchenko as being under Russian control.

Soviet geologists discovered the deposit in 1982 and said it was significant. The deposit is at a depth which would allow for commercial mining. Russian-backed officials say that it will be developed as soon as the conditions permit.

The village of Shevchenko is also a settlement with a lithium deposit. It is located near the Dnipropetrovsk Region. The Ukrainian armed forces were one of those who sent a large number of soldiers to defend it, according to the TASS state news agency.

According to the Ukrainian Geological Survey, the deposit is situated on Shevchenko’s eastern outskirts. It covers an area of almost 40 hectares.

In January, some Russian media incorrectly reported that the Shevchenko Deposit had been captured. They confused it with another settlement by the same name in another country.

Lithium has become a highly sought-after global resource due to its wide range of applications, from electric cars to mobile phones. According to U.S. estimates, the Ukraine has about 500,000 tonnes of lithium reserves, while Russia has twice that amount. Reporting by Andrew Osborn, Writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Marktrevelyan

(source: Reuters)