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Tag: Donetsk Region

  • Despair and destruction: Civilians in Ukraine’s eastern strongholds struggle as Russia advances

    DONETSK REGION, Ukraine (AP) — With the Russian advance deeper into the Donetsk region, the air in Ukraine’s last strongholds is thick with dread and the future for civilians who remain grows ever more uncertain.

    In Kostiantynivka, once home to 67,000 people, there is no steady supply of power, water or gas. Shelling intensifies, drones fill the skies and the city has become unbearable, driving out the last remaining civilians.

    Kramatorsk, by contrast, still shows signs of life. Just 25 kilometers (15 miles) to the north, the prewar population of 147,000 has thinned, but restaurants and cafes remain open. The streets are mostly intact. Though the city has endured multiple strikes and is now dominated by the military, daily routines persist in ways that are no longer possible in nearby towns.

    Once the industrial heart of Ukraine, Donetsk is being steadily reduced to rubble. Many residents fear its cities may never be rebuilt and, if the war drags on, Russia eventually will swallow what is left.

    “(Donetsk) region has been trampled, torn apart, turned into dust,” said Natalia Ivanova, a woman in her 70s who fled Kostiantynivka in early September after a missile struck near her home. Russian President Vladimir Putin “will go all the way … I’m sure of it. I have no doubt more cities will be destroyed.”

    Despair and destruction

    Kostiantynivka now sits on a shrinking patch of Ukrainian-held territory, wedged just west of Russian-occupied Bakhmut and nearly encircled on three sides by Moscow’s forces.

    “They was always shooting,” Ivanova said. “You’d be standing there … and all you’d hear was the whistle of shells.”

    She had two apartments. One was destroyed and the other one damaged. For months, she watched buildings disappear in an instant, while swarms of buzzing drones “like beetles” filled the sky, she said.

    “I never thought I’d leave,” she added. “I was a stolid soldier, holding on. I’m a pensioner and it (the home) was my comfort zone.”

    For years now, Ivanova had watched the region’s cities fall: Bakhmut, then Avdiivka, and others. But the war, she said, still felt far away, even as it closed in on her doorstep.

    “I felt for those people,” she said. “But it wasn’t enough to make me leave.”

    A blast near her building finally forced her out. The explosion bent her windows so badly she couldn’t shut them before fleeing. Her apartment remained wide open. She left her whole life behind in Kostiantynivka, the city where she was born.

    “Please, stop it,” she pleaded, directing her appeal to world leaders as she sat in an evacuation hub shortly after fleeing. “It’s the poorest people who suffer the most. This war is senseless and stupid. We’re dying like animals — by the dozens.”

    Living through it together

    Olena Voronkova decided to leave Kostiantynivka earlier, in May, when she could no longer run her two businesses: a beauty salon and a cafe.

    She and her family relocated to nearby Kramatorsk, which is so close yet, in many ways, far away, as she is no longer able to enter her hometown. It wasn’t the first loss she had suffered since the war began. In 2023, a rocket strike from a multiple-launch system severely damaged their house.

    The move to Kramatorsk wasn’t by choice, she added, but “because the circumstances left us no other option.”

    First came the mandatory evacuation orders. Then a curfew so strict they could only move around the city for four hours a day. Then came the floods of remote-controlled drones.

    “We’re used to life in Donetsk region. We feel good here. Kramatorsk is familiar. A lot of people from our city moved here — even local municipal workers,” Voronkova said.

    Not long after arriving in Kramatorsk, she opened a cafe that is nearly identical to the one she left behind. She said the space just happened to look similar. It has high white walls and ornate mirrors she brought from her beauty salon, which is now in the combat zone.

    The cafe has since become a refuge for others who also fled Kostiantynivka.

    “At first there was hope that maybe some homes would survive — that people might go back,” she said. “Now we see it’s unlikely anyone has anything left. The city is turning into another Bakhmut, Toretsk or Avdiivka. Everything is being destroyed.”

    She described the mood as “heavy” because “people are losing hope” and it felt easier in Kramatorsk because everyone shared the same loss, which created a sense of connection and mutual support.

    “No one really knows where to go next. Everyone sees that Russia isn’t stopping. And that’s where the hopelessness begins. No one has a direction anymore. The uncertainty is everywhere,” she said.

    Seizing the day

    War is slowly draining the life out of Kramatorsk, as if warning that it may be the next city to be reduced to rubble.

    Daria Horlova still remembers it as a bustling place where, at 9 p.m., life in the central square was just getting started. Now it’s deserted at all hours and 9 p.m. is when a strict curfew begins. The city is regularly bombed thanks to its proximity to the front line about 21 kilometers (13 miles) east.

    “It’s still terrifying — when something’s flying overhead or strikes nearby, especially when it hits the city,” the 18-year-old said. “You want to cry, but there are no emotions left. No strength.”

    Horlova studies remotely at a local university that relocated to another region and works as a nail artist. One day, she hopes to open her own salon. For now, she and her boyfriend are stuck in limbo, unsure of what to do next.

    “It’s terrifying that most of the Donetsk region is occupied — and that it was Russia who attacked,” she said. “That’s why it feels like everything could change at any moment. Just look at Kostiantynivka — not long ago, life there was normal. And now …”

    To distract herself from the anxiety, and the difficult decision she might soon have to make to leave, Horlova tries to focus on what brings her joy in the moment.

    She already was evacuated from Kramatorsk once, earlier in the war, and doesn’t want to repeat it.

    Instead of dwelling on what the future could hold, she asked her boyfriend, a tattoo artist, to ink a large tattoo of a goat skull on her right leg, something she has dreamed about for years.

    “I think you just have to do things — and do them as soon as you can,” she said. “Being here, I know this tattoo will be a memory of Kramatorsk, if I end up leaving.”

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    Vasilisa Stepanenko and Yehor Konovalov contributed to this report.

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  • Inside Donetsk as residents flee attacks on Ukrainian region Putin wants to control

    The Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine has long been in Moscow’s sights. Vladimir Putin reportedly wants to freeze the war in return for full control of it.

    Russia already controls 70% of Donetsk and nearly all of neighbouring Luhansk and is making slow but steady advances.

    I’m heading to the front-line Donetsk town of Dobropillia with two humanitarian volunteers, just 8km (five miles) from Russia’s positions. They’re on a mission to bring the sick, elderly and children to safer ground.

    At first, it goes like clockwork. We speed into the town in an armoured car, equipped with rooftop drone-jamming equipment, hitting 130km/h (80mph). The road is covered in tall green netting which obscures visibility from above – protecting it from Russian drones.

    [BBC]

    This is their second trip of the morning, and the streets are mostly empty. The few remaining residents only leave their homes to quickly collect supplies. Russian attacks come daily.

    The town already looks abandoned and has been without water for a week. Every building we pass has been damaged, with some reduced to ruins.

    In the previous five days, Laarz, a 31-year-old German, and Varia, a 19-year-old Ukrainian, who work for the charity Universal Aid Ukraine, have made dozens of trips to evacuate people.

    Three people walk down a dirt path past a building and piles of weeds, carrying large bags

    Evacuees leave the town of Dobropillia in Donetsk, Ukraine [BBC]

    A week earlier, small groups of Russian troops breached the defences around the town, sparking fears that the front line of Ukraine’s so-called “fortress belt” – some of the most heavily defended parts of the Ukrainian front – could collapse.

    Extra troops were rushed to the area and Ukrainian authorities say the situation has been stabilised. But most of Dobropillia’s residents feel it’s time to go.

    Two people - a tall man in black and a small woman in khaki camouflage gear, both wearing padded body warmers and dark sunglasses - walk down a residential street. Neither are smiling

    Laarz and Varia make evacuation trips for the charity Universal Action Ukraine [BBC News]

    As the evacuation team arrives, Vitalii Kalinichenko, 56, is waiting on the doorstep of his apartment block, with a plastic bag full of belongings in hand.

    “My windows were all smashed, look, they all flew out on the second floor. I’m the only one left,” he says.

    He’s wearing a grey t-shirt and black shorts, and his right leg is bandaged. Mr Kalinichenko points to a crater beyond some rose bushes where a Shahed drone crashed a couple of nights earlier, shattering his windows and cutting his leg. The engine from another drone lies in a neighbour’s garden.

    As we are about to leave, Laarz spots a drone overhead and we take cover again under trees. His handheld drone detector shows multiple Russian drones in the area.

    Young woman Varia wearing khaki camouflage gear holding a device, standing next to a middle-aged man wearing a grey vest and blue trousers

    Varia holding a drone detector standing beside Dobropillia resident Vitalii Kalinichenko [BBC]

    An older woman in a summer dress and straw hat is walking by with a shopping trolley. He warns her about the drone, and she quickens her pace. An explosion hits nearby, its sound echoing off the nearby apartment blocks.

    But before we can attempt to leave, there is still another family to be rescued, just around the corner.

    Laarz goes on foot to find them, switching off the idling vehicle’s drone-jamming equipment to save battery power. “If you hear a drone, it’s the two switches in the middle console, turn it on,” he says as he disappears around the corner. The jammer is only effective against some Russian drones.

    A series of blasts hit the neighbourhood. A woman, out to fetch water with her dog, runs for cover.

    Map showing which areas of east of Ukraine are under Russian military control or limited Russian control highlighting the regions of Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson and Crimea

    [BBC]

    Laarz returns with more evacuees, and with drones still in the air above, drives out of town even faster than he arrived.

    Inside the evacuation convoy, I sit beside Anton, 31. His mother stayed behind. She cried as he departed and he hopes she will leave too soon.

    In war, front lines shift, towns are lost and won and lost again, but with Russia advancing and the fate of the region hanging on negotiations, this may be the final time Anton and the other evacuees see their homes.

    Anton says he’s never left the town before. Over the roar of the engine, I ask him if Ukraine should relinquish Donbas – the resource-rich greater region made up of Donetsk and Luhansk.

    “We need to sit at the negotiation table and after all resolve this conflict in a peaceful way. Without blood, without victims,” he says.

    A blonde woman, who looks distressed, tightly embraces a man with short brown hair.  Her hand is round the back of his head and only the back of his head, back and rucksack can be seen.

    A mother says goodbye to her son before his evacuation [BBC News]

    But Varia, 19, feels differently. “We can never trust Putin or Russia, whatever they are saying, and we have experience of that. If we give them Donbas, it won’t stop anything but only give Russia more room for another attack,” she tells me.

    The situation in Donbas is increasingly perilous for Ukraine as Russia slowly but steadily advances. President Volodymyr Zelensky has scoffed at suggestions that it could be lost by the end of this year, predicting it would take four more years for Russia to fully occupy what remains.

    But it’s unlikely Ukraine will recapture significant territory here without new weaponry or additional support from the West.

    This part of Donetsk is critical to Ukraine’s defensive. If lost or given to Russia, neighbouring Kharkiv and Zaporizhia regions – and beyond – would be at greater risk.

    A man wearing just shorts lie on a bed, surrounded by six other men. There are shelves on the walls with various medical items, and medical items also rest on the bed next to the man.

    Injured people are transferred to field hospitals at night [BBC]

    The cost of holding on is measured in Ukrainian soldiers’ lives and body parts.

    Later on, I drive to a nearby field hospital under the cover of darkness. The drone activity never ceases, and the war injured, and the dead, can only be safely retrieved at night.

    Russian casualties are far higher, perhaps three times as much or more, but it has a greater capacity to absorb losses than Ukraine.

    The wounded begin to arrive, the cases growing steadily more serious as night stretches into morning. The casualties are from fighting in Pokrovsk, a city that Russia has been trying to seize for a year, and is now partially encircled. It’s a key city in Donetsk’s defence, and the fighting has been brutal.

    The first man arrives conscious, a bullet wound to chest from a firefight. Next comes another man in his forties covered in shrapnel wounds. It took two days and three attempts to rescue him, such was the intensity of the fighting. Next a man whose right leg has been almost blown off entirely by a drone strike on the road from Pokrovsk to Myrnohrad.

    Surgeon and Snr Lt Dima, 42, moves from patient to patient. This is a medical stabilisation unit, so his job is to patch up the injured as quickly as possible and send them on to a main hospital for further treatment. “It’s hard because I know I can do more, but I don’t have the time,” he tells me.

    After all this carnage, I ask him too if Donbas should be surrendered to bring peace.

    “We have to stop [the war], but we don’t want to stop it like this”, he says. “We want back our territory, our people and we have to punish Russia for what they did.”

    He’s exhausted, casualties have been heavier, dozens a day, since Russia’s incursion, and the injuries are the worst the doctors have seen since the war began, mostly because of drones.

    “We just want to go home to live in peace without this nightmare, this blood, this death,” he says.

    A man is lying topless, wearing a breathing mask, as a pair of hands holding pliers appears to stitch up a wound under his armpit

    A surgeon at the field hospital said that injuries are the worst the doctors have seen since the war began [BBC News]

    On the drive out that afternoon, between fields of corn and sunflowers, miles of newly uncoiled barbed wire glint in the sunlight. They run alongside raised banks of red earth, deep trenches and neat lines of anti-tank dragon’s teeth concrete pyramids. All designed to slow any sudden Russian advance.

    It is believed that Russia has over 100,000 troops standing by, waiting to exploit another opportunity like the earlier breaches around Dobropillia.

    These new fortifications carved in the Ukrainian dirt chart a deteriorating situation here in Donetsk. What’s left of the region may yet be surrendered by diplomacy, but until then Ukraine, bloodied and exhausted, remains intent on fighting for every inch of it.

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  • Ukrainian troops pull back again as Russia’s onslaught pushes ahead in eastern Ukraine

    Ukrainian troops pull back again as Russia’s onslaught pushes ahead in eastern Ukraine

    KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian troops have pulled out of a village in the east of the country, an army spokesman said Monday, as Russian forces make their advantages in manpower and ammunition tell on the battlefield at the start of the war ’s third year.

    The latest setback for Kyiv’s soldiers was in the village of Lastochkyne, where they fell back to nearby villages in an attempt to hold the line there, Dmytro Lykhovii, a spokesman for one of the Ukrainian troop groupings, said on national television.

    Lastochkyne lies to the west of Avdiivka, a suburb of Donetsk city that the Kremlin‘s forces captured on Feb. 18 after a four-month battle. The outnumbered defenders were overwhelmed by Moscow’s military might, and Ukraine chose to pull out its troops and mount a defense elsewhere.

    Though not in itself a major loss, abandoning the village illustrates the battlefield challenges Ukraine is currently facing. The new phase of the war has brought some bleak developments for Ukraine.

    Despite suffering high losses of troops and equipment, Ukraine says, Moscow’s troops are driving on, smashing towns and cities with their superior firepower.

    Western analysts say the Russians are attacking in strength along four parallel axes in the northeast, aiming to press deeper into the Ukraine-held western part of the Donetsk region and also penetrating into the Kharkiv region north of it.

    Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustan Umerov complained Sunday that half of promised Western military support to Ukraine fails to arrive on time. That, he said, makes it hard to undertake proper military planning and ultimately costs the lives of soldiers.

    Western leaders have sworn to stand by Ukraine as long as they need to defeat Russia’s full-scale invasion of Feb. 24 2022, and Bulgarian Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov arrived in Kyiv on Monday to show his support.

    More than 20 European heads of state and government and other Western officials were due to meet in Paris on Monday to discuss the war at what French President Emmanuel Macron called a “critical” juncture. He says Kyiv needs more military resources and likely will require them over an extended period of time.

    U.S. President Joe Biden was also seeking to remove political roadblocks on providing more aid to Ukraine, convening the top four congressional leaders at the White House on Tuesday.

    Russia launched seven missiles of various types and 14 Shahed drones over Ukraine early Monday morning. Ukraine’s Air Force said it intercepted nine drones and three missiles.

    A guided aerial bomb killed a married couple at home in the northeastern Sumy region of Ukraine, regional authorities said.

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    Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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  • Monday, October 10. Russia’s War On Ukraine: News And Information From Ukraine

    Monday, October 10. Russia’s War On Ukraine: News And Information From Ukraine

    Dispatches from Ukraine: Day 229.

    As Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues and the war rages on, reliable sources of information are critical. Forbes gathers information and provides updates on the situation.

    By Polina Rasskazova

    Kyiv. Russia launched attacks hitting the center of Kyiv, as well as dozens of regions in Ukraine on Monday. This is viewed as an apparent retaliation for the explosion of the Crimean bridge a few days ago. Power outages throughout Ukraine are also reported on Monday morning

    Zaporizhzhia. The Russian army continues to terrorize the civilian population of Ukraine. That night, the Russians shelled one of the residential neighborhoods of Zaporizhzhia. They attacked the city with twelve Kh-22 and Kh-59 missiles (designed to engage a wide range of fixed ground targets), which were launched from airplanes, reports the head of the Zaporizhia Regional Military Administration. Dozens of private houses, two apartment buildings and other civilian infrastructure of the city came under Russian fire.

    As a result of the rocket attack on the city, 13 people died, including 1 child. 89 civilians were injured, including 11 children. The data on the deceased is still being updated. “Absolute evil. Savages and terrorists. From the one who gave this order to everyone who fulfilled this order. They will bear responsibility. For sure. Before the law and before people.”, commented Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyi. In addition, it is known that 20 Ukrainians were killed as a result of shelling by the Russian military on the city on Thursday.

    Sumy region. In the morning, Russian forces shelled several communities of the city, more than 50 shells have already been recorded. Private houses and infrastructure facilities were damaged. One person died. “A drone brought death just outside a store in Myropil community.”, informed the Deputy Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine.

    Kharkiv region. The police of the Kharkiv region documented another case of brutality by the Russian army. In the village of Kupyansk-Vuzlovy, Kharkiv region, law enforcement officers found 4 bodies with signs of violent death. Russian soldiers shot dead four civilians in the cellar of the house. Among them is the 73-year-old owner of the house and the neighboring family — a 65-year-old woman, her grandson and daughter-in-law. Victims were buried by relatives and neighbors on the territory of their homes. “All bodies have gunshot wounds”.

    The fall in the GDP of Ukraine for 9 months of the current year is estimated at the level of 30%, according to the Ministry of Economy of Ukraine. At the same time, the drop in GDP in September amounted to 35%, as in August. However, some positive trends are observed. For example, improving the dynamics of transport, both as a result of the increase in the export of agricultural products by sea, and due to the increase in the transportation of goods by railway. “Thanks to the implementation of the “Grain Initiative”, 5.5 million tons of agricultural products were exported through the ports of Odesa in August-September.” The message on the website of the Ministry also states that in September, compared to August, the number of exported products increased by more than 2 times, and the number of ships that left the ports — almost tripled.

    Russia is trying to drag Belarus into an open war with Ukraine, reports the Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine. “We see measures being taken by the Russian Federation in order to force the leadership of Belarus to enter into an open war. Meetings between Putin and Lukashenko are constantly held, where this issue is discussed and Putin tries to persuade Lukashenka to this decision”, said Vadym Skibitskyi, representative of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine. Today, according to military intelligence, 6 battalions are concentrated on the border of Ukraine and Belarus. “These are mechanized battalions, battalions of airborne troops of the so-called command of special operations forces.”

    Katya Soldak, Forbes Staff

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