The evacuation of Ukraine’s war-battered city of Mariupol is finally safe and residents have been urged to flee to Zaporozhye, 140 miles to the west, authorities said Sunday. 

“It’s official. Today it is possible to evacuate the civilian population from Mariupol,” the city council said in a statement. “If you have relatives or friends in Mariupol, try to contact them … and say that there is an opportunity to travel to Zaporozhye, where it is safe. We pray that everything will work out.”

Scores of civilians, including some women and children, were evacuated over the weekend from in and around the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, the Russian state-run Tass media outlet reported Sunday. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on social media that 100 people are on their way from the area to Ukrainian-controlled territory. 

Up to 2,000 Ukrainian fighters and an estimated 1,000 civilians remain in the periphery of the plant, the last major holdout in the city. U.N. humanitarian spokesman Saviano Abreu said the evacuation involved the International Committee of the Red Cross in coordination with Ukrainian and Russian officials. 

It’s unclear how many civilians remain in Mariupol, trapped with little food, water or utilities. The city council said evacuation of city districts that don’t include the steel plant has been postponed until Monday.

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Other developments:

►Russian troops have destroyed or damaged about 250 objects of the cultural heritage of Ukraine, said Oleksandr Tkachenko, Minister of Culture and Information Policy.

►German Chancellor Olaf Scholz pledged Sunday to continue to support Ukraine with money, aid and weapons, saying a pacifist approach to the war is “outdated.” Officials also said Germany expects to be independent of crude oil imports from Russia by late summer.