Many badly wounded fighters are among the 1,000 Ukrainian troops still holed up at the sprawling Azovstal steel plant, the last major holdout in the port city of Mariupol, Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said Tuesday.

About 100 civilians also remain trapped in the maze of bunkers and tunnels, she said.

“Hundreds are injured,” Vereshchuk told AFP. “There are people with serious injuries who require urgent evacuation. The situation is deteriorating every day.”

Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration, said Russian bombardments have targeted the complex dozens of times in the last day or so.

“It is easier to say when the shelling does not happen than when it happens,” he said. “Aviation and artillery are almost constantly at work there.”

Russian troops have overwhelmed most of the embattled city, home to 450,000 people before the war. Local officials say fewer than 100,000 remain, but Russia has struggled to complete a takeover that would deprive Ukraine of an important port while providing Russia with a land corridor to the Crimean peninsula and a staging area to send troops elsewhere in the country.

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Latest developments:

►Finland and Sweden, two non-aligned European countries in close proximity to Russia — Finland shares a border — are expected to announce this week whether they’ll pursue NATO membership.

►Maria Alyokhina, the leader of the punk band Pussy Riot who was jailed at least seven times for her activism against Russia’s repressive regime, escaped the country last month as Moscow police sought her, the New York Times reported.

►About 14 million Ukrainians had been forced from their homes by the end of April, including more than 5.9 million who left the country, the United Nations said.

►Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced the shipment of a multimillion dollar aid package to Odesa, including medical supplies and body armor. Odesa, the subject of intensifying Russian shelling, is a sister city of Baltimore.

►At least 44 bodies of civilians were found under the rubble of a destroyed residential building in Izium, near Kharkiv, said Oleh Synehubov, head of the Kharkiv Regional Military Administration.

US House passes $40 billion aid package

The U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday night passed a package of about $40 billion in additional aid money for Ukraine, $7 billion more than President Joe Biden’s request to Congress.

The package comprises military and humanitarian aid, provide economic assistance, help regional allies, replenish weapons the Pentagon has shipped overseas and provide $5 billion to address global food shortages.