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Tag: In Pictures

  • Photos: Millions of plastic pellets flooding beaches in England

    Photos: Millions of plastic pellets flooding beaches in England

    On an early spring afternoon, Tregantle Beach is bathed in a dazzling light reminiscent of a painting by British landscape artist JMW Turner as sea, sky and sun merge.

    “It’s beautiful, right? But look at your feet,” says Rob Arnold, 65, an environmental activist and artist, crouching down to pick tiny plastic balls out of the Cornwall sand.

    The bits of plastic are the size of a lentil and are used by industry to manufacture plastic products. They are known as nurdles and are sometimes nicknamed “mermaids’ tears” because when spilled at industrial facilities, they can be swept into drains and out into the sea.

    An estimated 11.5 trillion nurdles end up in the ocean each year, according to the UK charity Fauna & Flora International.

    Once released into the natural environment, the nurdles circulate on ocean currents and often wash up on beaches and other shores.

    They look like fish eggs, so birds and other sea life eat the pellets, which also absorb toxic pollutants, adversely affecting the entire food chain, Arnold says.

    He is among about 10 people taking part in a cleanup on the beach in southwestern England’s Cornwall region, using a device he invented made from a plastic basin, a large grid and a set of tubes.

    “It separates plastic waste from natural waste and sand, thanks to a filtering and water floating system,” the former engineer says.

    He then uses the collected nurdles and other microplastics – tiny bits of plastic that have broken off larger pieces – in artworks.

    Jed Louis, 58, wearing a khaki hoodie bearing the name of the local beach cleanup association, says several factors add to the beach’s vulnerability.

    “This beach is particularly polluted because of its geographical location, the sea currents that affect it and its very open shape,” he says.

    “In autumn and winter, we find the most microplastics because of the weather,” Louis says. “Storms, thunderstorms and winds – it brings them to the surface.

    “Unfortunately the plastic remains, it does not disappear.”

    Another volunteer Claire Wallerstein, 53, says the work is a bit like doing archaeology.

    “If you dig in the sand, you’ll find different layers of plastic,” she says.

    Some of the nurdles go to Arnold for his artistic creations while others are used to raise awareness in schools.

    The rest, which cannot be recycled, end up in the rubbish and are incinerated.

    After three hours, the volunteers have cleaned just a few square metres of the beach.

    Arnold looks at his loot – a large tarp filled with nurdles and other microplastics.

    Once dried and sorted, he can add them to the 20 million nurdles he has collected over six years. He stores them in a friend’s garage.

    Arnold’s most notable work using the nurdles is a 1.7-metre (5.5-foot) sculpture, similar to the Moai statues of Easter Island.

    The work is on display at the National Maritime Museum Cornwall in the coastal town of Falmouth under the title A Lesson from History.

    “It’s a metaphor to what we are doing here to our planet Earth,” Arnold says. “We are polluting our planet, using its resources. If we destroy it, we have nowhere to go. This is our only home.”

    For his next creation, he wants to mould the tiny plastic pellets into a meteorite headed towards Earth in a nod to the one that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs.

    After cleaning up the beach and packing his nurdle-filled bags away, Arnold looks disillusioned.

    “Sometimes I think about throwing all my bags of nurdles into the river from a bridge,” he says. “It would be so shocking that maybe, finally, people would realise.”

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  • Photos: Ukraine says it’s survived its ‘most difficult winter’

    Photos: Ukraine says it’s survived its ‘most difficult winter’

    Russia has been pummelling key infrastructure facilities in Ukraine with missiles and drones for months, disrupting millions of people’s water, heating and electricity supplies.

    President Volodymyr Zelenskyy praised Ukrainians for surviving a winter marked by systematic Russian attacks on energy facilities, which plunged millions into darkness and cold.

    “We have overcome this winter. It was a very difficult period, and every Ukrainian experienced this difficulty, but we were still able to provide Ukraine with power and heat,” Zelenskyy said in his daily address on Wednesday.

    Foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba hailed the first day of spring as another “major defeat” for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine.

    “We survived the most difficult winter in our history. It was cold and dark, but we were unbreakable,” Kuleba said in a statement.

    Aid organisations had warned at the beginning of winter that the targeted campaign would force a new wave of migration to Europe and that Ukraine’s priority would be “survival” through the months of freezing temperatures.

    The Kremlin said Kyiv was responsible for civilians’ suffering stemming from the enormous outages because it had refused to capitulate to Moscow’s war demands.

    But the grid has been stabilising and Ukrainian energy provider Ukrenergo said on Wednesday there had been “no power deficit” for more than two weeks.

    “Engineers are also continuing repairs at all power system facilities that were previously damaged by Russian missile and drone attacks,” it said.

    The war in Ukraine has seen Europe shake its deep reliance on Russian oil and gas amid waves of sanctions aimed at stemming Moscow’s ability to fund its military through energy revenues.

    “The EU also won, and contrary to Moscow’s laughter, it did not freeze without Russian gas. One piece of advice to Russia: choke on your gas and choke on your missiles,” Kuleba added in the statement.

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  • Photos: A year of facing nature’s fury

    Photos: A year of facing nature’s fury

    A cascade of extreme weather exacerbated by climate change has devastated communities around the globe this year, including through sweltering heat and drought, wilted crops, forest fires and big rivers shrinking to a trickle.

    In Pakistan, record monsoon rains inundated more than a third of the country, killing more than 1,500 people. In India and China, prolonged heat waves and droughts dried up rivers, disrupted power grids and threatened food security for billions of people. Widespread flooding and mudslides brought on by torrential rains also killed hundreds of people in South Africa, Brazil and Nigeria.

    In Europe, heat waves set record temperatures in Britain and other parts of the continent, leading to severe droughts, low river flows that slowed shipping, and wildfires in many parts of the continent. Much of East Africa is still in the grips of a multi-year drought – the worst in more than 40 years, according to the United Nations – leaving millions of people vulnerable to food shortages and starvation.

    An analysis by an international team of climate scientists in October found that human-caused climate change made drought across the northern hemisphere at least 20 times more likely, and warned that such extreme dry periods would become increasingly common with global heating.

    The planet currently remains off track from a goal set by the Paris climate accord in 2015 to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

    This year might provide a glimpse of our near future, as these extreme climate events become more frequent.

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  • World mourns ‘O Rei’, the one and only king of football, Pele

    World mourns ‘O Rei’, the one and only king of football, Pele

    Edson Arantes do Nascimento, who came to be known as Pele and one of the greatest and most popular footballers in the world, died on Thursday after a long battle with cancer. He was 82.

    Born in Tres Coracoes, in the state of Minas Gerais, in 1940, Pele grew up in poverty. His parents could not even afford a football. An old sock filled with newspapers was the first “ball” his magical feet kicked but it was enough for him to fall in love with the game – and for people to start noticing he was different.

    His unmatched skill ensured that he scored two goals in the 1958 World Cup final to lead Brazil to victory over Sweden. He was just 17.

    Pele, who is credited with coining the phrase “the beautiful game” to refer to football, helped his Brazil win the World Cup also in 1962 and 1970.

    In addition to skills and charisma, a certain mysticism always surrounded the character of the king of football.

    One of his many famous quotes, made at the last match he ever played in 1977 in New York, was honouring children and with his limited English, he just said “love, love, love”.

    Brazil’s outgoing President Jair Bolsonaro has declared three days of mourning for the nation to grieve Pele’s death.

    His funeral will be held at the Vila Belmiro stadium, outside Sao Paulo, where Pele played some of the best matches of his career.

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  • Photos: Sri Lanka’s cancer patients struggle amid economic chaos

    Photos: Sri Lanka’s cancer patients struggle amid economic chaos

    Priyantha Kumarasinghe starts his day in the small Sri Lankan town of Maharagama with a breakfast of two biscuits and a small glass of tea, followed by a round of cancer medicines.

    The 32-year-old vegetable farmer was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2021 and started receiving treatment earlier this year, just as Sri Lanka’s economy went into free fall.

    Amid crippling fuel scarcity and weeks of unrest, Kumarasinghe said he was unable to travel the 155km (96 miles) between his home and Sri Lanka’s main cancer hospital on the outskirts of the country’s largest city, Colombo, for treatment.

    Kumarasinghe is among hundreds of cancer patients who have had their treatment upended by Sri Lanka’s worst economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1948.

    Hospitals countrywide have struggled to contend with severe drug shortages, which have worsened over the last eight months, a representative of Sri Lanka’s largest doctor’s union said.

    “All hospitals are experiencing shortages. There is difficulty in even sourcing basics like paracetamol, vitamin C and saline for outpatient services,” said Vasan Ratnasingam, a spokesman for the Government Medical Officers’ Association.

    Specialist facilities like cancer and eye hospitals are running on donations, Ratnasingam said.

    Battered by the loss of tourism and remittance earnings because of the pandemic, alongside an ill-timed tax cut, Sri Lanka slid into crisis in early 2022 after its foreign exchange reserves dried up, leaving it short of dollars to pay for imports of fuel, food, cooking gas and medicines.

    For months, the country of 22 million people faced hours-long power cuts and severe fuel shortages.

    The economic hardship triggered protests, which in July led to the removal of former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

    Currency depreciation and record inflation have pushed middle-class families like Kumarasinghe’s to the brink as they scrambled to meet higher living costs.

    For decades, Sri Lankans have benefitted from a universal public healthcare system that subsidises treatment, including medicine for serious illnesses.

    But services have been hampered by the dollar shortage, which has restricted imports of medicines, and limited public funds available to hospitals to provide care.

    President Ranil Wickremesinghe has pledged to restore economic stability but has warned reforms will be painful as the country strives to increase taxes to put its public finances in order and work with creditors, including India, Japan and China, to restructure debt.

    In September, the country entered a preliminary agreement with the International Monetary Fund for a $2.9bn bailout but has to put its huge debt burden on a sustainable track before disbursement can begin.

    The economic hardship remains crushing for many.

    Sathiyaraj Silaksana, 27, is visiting her five-year-old son S Saksan suffering from leukaemia, travelling 350km (217 miles) with her husband to feed him.

    “Due to the current crisis in Sri Lanka, we are facing severe problems in transport and food,” said Silaksana, who is pregnant with her second child.

    “I have no option but to pay for my son’s needs. My husband is a construction worker. In order to pay for all these expenses we pawned our jewellery.”

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  • Photos: England going home, France moving on to face Morocco

    Photos: England going home, France moving on to face Morocco

    Defending champions France have knocked England out of the World Cup in Qatar with a 2-1 victory at Al Bayt Stadium.

    France took the lead in the 17th minute when Aurelien Tchouameni’s thumping shot from outside the post beat English goalie Jordan Pickford.

    The match remained relatively even between the sides until early in the second half, when England forward Bukayo Saka was brought down in the French box. Captain Harry Kane stepped up, and his powerful conversion drew the game level in the 54th minute.

    Both sides then fought tooth-and-nail to take the lead, with several close misses, including a bar-kissing header from England centre-back Harry Maguire.

    But it was Olivier Giroud, France’s record goalscorer, who scored the decisive to goal in the 78th minute to give Les Blues the lead with a header.

    Kane had a chance to equalise shortly after when England won a second penalty, but he blasted the ball well over the bar in the 84th minute.

    Despite several other chances and a last-moment free-kick from just outside the penalty area that saw Marcus Rashford unable to convert, France sent England home empty-handed, with the reigning champions moving on to face Morocco on Wednesday.

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  • Photos: England roar past Senegal into the quarter-finals

    Photos: England roar past Senegal into the quarter-finals

    Despite a sluggish start, England roared three times against a stalled Senegal who could not answer, knocking them out of the tournament with a 3-0 victory.

    2018 World Cup’s Golden Boot winner and England Captain Harry Kane ended the first half by decisively doubling the point scored minutes earlier by midfielder Jordan Henderson.

    Bukayo Saka delivered the final blow in the 57th minute off a cross from Phil Foden.

    Senegal, missing suspended striker Idrissa Gueye and others due to injuries, left their side unable to come together in the face of the dominant English side, despite a notable effort by striker Ismaila Sarr.

    With the victory, England goes on to face 2018 Cup champions and cross-channel rivals France at Al Bayt Stadium on Saturday.

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  • Photos: Rashford brace downs Wales and sends England to last 16

    Photos: Rashford brace downs Wales and sends England to last 16

    Forward Marcus Rashford’s second-half double propelled England to a 3-0 win over neighbours Wales, sending them into the World Cup last 16 as Group B winners and ending Welsh hopes of reaching the knockout stage.

    The match on Tuesday came to life when Rashford curled home a free kick from the edge of the area in the 50th minute before Phil Foden arrived unmarked at the far post to side foot Harry Kane’s cross into the net a minute later.

    Rashford then inflicted a final blow when he cut inside and somehow managed to find the net with a shot that went through the legs of goalkeeper Danny Ward in the 68th minute.

    The win moved England to seven points and set up a tie against Senegal in the next round, while Wales finished bottom with one point as their first World Cup in 64 years ended without a victory and only one goal scored in three games.

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  • Photos: Landslides strike Italian island, dozen people missing

    Photos: Landslides strike Italian island, dozen people missing

    Heavy rains triggered landslides early on Saturday on the southern Italian island of Ischia, collapsing buildings and sweeping cars into the sea. As many as 12 people were missing, and the mayor of Naples was quoted by the news agency ANSA as saying one body had been recovered.

    The force of the mud barrelling down mountainsides was strong enough to send cars and buses into the sea at the port of Casamicciola Terme on the northern end of the island off Naples. Streets were impassable, and mayors on the island urged people to stay at home. At least 100 people were reportedly stranded.

    There was confusion over the death toll. Italian Vice Premier Matteo Salvini initially said eight people had been confirmed dead. The interior minister later said no deaths had been confirmed but 10 to 12 people were missing.

    “The situation is very complicated and very serious because probably some of those people are under the mud,” Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi told RAI state TV from an emergency command centre in Rome.

    ANSA reported that at least 10 buildings had collapsed. One family with a newborn had been reported missing but was then located and was receiving medical care, according to the Naples prefect.

    Firefighters and the coastguard were working on rescue efforts. Reinforcements arrived by ferry, including teams of sniffer dogs to help in the search for survivors.

    The densely populated mountainous island is popular with locals and tourists alike for its beaches and spas. A magnitude 4 earthquake on the island in 2017 killed two people and caused significant damage to Casamicciola Terme and neighboring Lacco Ameno.

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  • Australia stays alive at World Cup with Mitch Duke’s header

    Australia stays alive at World Cup with Mitch Duke’s header

    Australia defeated Tunisia 1-0 in their second World Cup match, with Mitchell Duke’s header early in the first half keeping the Socceroos’ hopes of qualification alive in the highly competitive clash.

    It was Australia’s first World Cup victory in 12 years and with it, they move up to second in Group D behind reigning champions France.

    Striker Duke scored midway through the first half with a glancing header past keeper Aymen Dahmen to give Australia the lead, while Tunisia’s best chance came when skipper Youssef Msakni shot just wide.

    The victory, only the third for Australia in six visits to the World Cup, was the perfect response to their 4-1 drubbing at the hands of France on Tuesday.

    Tunisia made clear their intentions from the start, ranging five defenders and two holding midfielders across the pitch and inviting the Australians to try to break them down.

    Australia had some success getting the ball down the flanks but the final ball into the area rarely got anywhere near a blue shirt as the Tunisian defenders wrapped up the Socceroos’ forwards.

    Craig Goodwin’s cross from the left looked to be heading the same way until it took a hefty deflection off a Tunisian defender and looped to Duke, who nodded it into the far right corner of the net.

    The goal was the first conceded by Tunisia against any team barring Brazil in their last 11 matches and forced the Tunisians out of their defensive shell.

    They brought on the squad’s top scorer, Wahbi Khazri, in the second half as they upped the tempo in search of an equaliser, but the Australian defence stood firm with goalkeeper and skipper Mat Ryan a calming presence at the back.

    The victory snapped Australia’s seven-match winless run at World Cups since they last picked up three points in a victory over Serbia in 2010.

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  • Photos: Russia hits cities across Ukraine with wave of missiles

    Photos: Russia hits cities across Ukraine with wave of missiles

    Air raid sirens blared and explosions rang out in nearly a dozen major cities as Russia rained missiles across Ukraine on Tuesday, in what Kyiv said was the heaviest wave of missile attacks in nearly nine months of war.

    A Ukrainian Air Force spokesman said Russia had launched about 100 missiles into Ukraine by early evening, more than on October 10, previously described as the largest number since the opening salvoes of the war.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the main target of the missile flurry was energy infrastructure.

    “It’s clear what the enemy wants. He will not achieve this,” he said in a video address circulated on the Telegram messaging app.

    In the capital Kyiv, flames funnelled out of a five-storey apartment block, one of two residential buildings that authorities said had been hit. Residents later huddled by the smouldering ruins. Kyiv’s mayor said one person was confirmed dead and half the capital was without power.

    Other attacks and explosions were reported in cities ranging from Lviv and Zhytomyr in the west to Kryvy Rih in the south and Kharkiv in the east. Regional officials reported that some of the attacks had knocked out electricity supplies.

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  • Photos: Police, media return to Kherson after Russian retreat

    Photos: Police, media return to Kherson after Russian retreat

    Ukrainian police officers have returned – along with TV and radio services – to the southern city of Kherson following the withdrawal of Russian troops.

    The deployment is part of fast-but-cautious efforts to make the only regional capital captured by Russia habitable after months of occupation. One official has described the city as “a humanitarian catastrophe”.

    People across Ukraine awoke from a night of jubilant celebrating on Sunday after the Kremlin announced its troops had withdrawn to the other side of the Dnieper River from Kherson.

    The Ukrainian military said it was overseeing “stabilisation measures” around the city to make sure it was safe.

    The Russian retreat represented a significant setback for the Kremlin some six weeks after President Vladimir Putin annexed the Kherson region and three other provinces in southern and eastern Ukraine – in breach of international law – and declared them Russian territory.

    About 200 officers were at work in the city, setting up checkpoints and documenting evidence of possible war crimes. Police teams were working to identify and neutralise unexploded ordnance.

    Ukraine’s communications watchdog said national TV and radio broadcasts had resumed and an adviser to Kherson’s mayor said humanitarian aid and supplies had begun to arrive from the neighbouring Mykolaiv region.

    But the adviser, Roman Holovnya, described the situation in Kherson as “a humanitarian catastrophe”. He said the remaining residents lacked water, medicine and food — and key basics such as bread went unbaked because of a lack of electricity.

    “The occupiers and collaborators did everything possible so that those people who remained in the city suffered as much as possible over those days, weeks, months of waiting” for Ukraine’s forces to arrive, Holovnya said. “Water supplies are practically nonexistent.”

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  • Photos: How frequent river flooding impacts migrants in Delhi

    Photos: How frequent river flooding impacts migrants in Delhi

    For Bhagwan Devi, 38, and Shivakumar, 40, and their four children, a flood follows unseasonal rain so often now that they have less and less time to pick up the pieces and start over again.

    Devi and Shivakumar had to flee their hut on the banks of the Yamuna River, which passes through Delhi, earlier this month as water levels rose without warning.

    “This is how deep the water was,” said Devi, pointing to her chin.

    The family, like thousands of others, has taken refuge on the roadside kerb, 100 meters (328 feet) from their now-flooded hut.

    Their story is similar to that of millions of others in South Asia who are on the front line of climate change. According to the World Bank, climate change could force 216 million people to migrate within their own countries by 2050. In South Asia alone, 40.5 million people are expected to be displaced.

    “The extreme rains in India’s Himalayan states are just the latest in a series of events in South Asia that are exacerbated by climate change,” said Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at the Climate Action Network International.

    “We saw unprecedented and devastating floods in Pakistan earlier this year. We are facing melting glaciers in Nepal and Pakistan, rising seas in India and Bangladesh, and cyclones and inhospitable temperatures across the region. Climate change is increasingly forcing millions of people to flee their homes in search of safety and new means to provide for their families,” he added.

    For Devi and others who live in Yamuna Khadar, on the floodplains of the Yamuna River, being dislocated by floods has become a way of life. The latest displacement was a consequence of extreme rainfall in upstream states that resulted in the swelling of rivers and the opening of many dams that were unable to hold the excess water.

    Devi and Shivakumar are originally from the Budayun region in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, about five hours by road from Delhi. In Budayun, their homestead, which was 2km (1.24 miles) from the Ganges River, also repeatedly flooded. Unable to farm successfully because of unseasonal extreme weather, they decided to escape to Delhi to create a better life for themselves some 15 years ago.

    In Delhi, they grow vegetables on a small patch of land in the Yamuna River’s floodplains to make ends meet. But as in Budayun, flooding and other extreme weather in Delhi are taking away the little they possess.

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  • ‘If they don’t deliver bread, what will we do’

    ‘If they don’t deliver bread, what will we do’

    Seemingly abandoned during the day, the damaged factory building in eastern Ukraine comes to life at night, when the smell of fresh bread emanates from its broken windows.

    It is one of two large-scale bakeries left in operation in the Ukrainian-held part of the Donetsk region, most of which is under Russian occupation.

    The others had to close down because they were damaged by fighting or because their electricity and gas supplies were cut.

    The bakery in Kostiantynivka adjusted its working hours according to the rhythm of the war.

    Employees at the factory come to work at 7pm to start kneading the dough. By dawn, truck drivers arrive to pick up fresh loaves of bread for delivery to towns and villages where the grocery stores are typically open only in the morning, when, on most days, there is a lull in Russian shelling.

    “We bake more bread at night so we can distribute it to stores in the morning,” bakery director Oleksandr Milov says.

    The factory bakes about 7 tonnes of bread daily, or about 17,500 loaves. Half of it goes to the Ukrainian military.

    Another plant in Druzhkivka is still operational, producing rolls, loaves and cookies.

    But the bakeries in Kostiantynivka and Druzhkivka do not make enough bread for the estimated 300,000 people who remain in the Ukrainian-controlled part of the Donetsk region. In the south of the region, entrepreneurs bring in bread from the neighbouring Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhia regions, and some supermarkets have small bakeries.

    The Kostiantynivka bakery has remained open despite many challenges. In April, it lost its gas supply, but the ovens were reconfigured to run on coal – a system which had not been used at this plant since World War II. The coal-fired boiler is operated by three men.

    Milov tried six types of coal before he found the right type with high heat output. One advantage of the coal system is that the plant will not need additional heating in winter. There will be no central heating in the region this winter because of the lack of gas.

    The bakery faced its next problem in June, when Russia occupied the town of Lyman in the north of the region where the mill that supplied flour to the Kostiantynivka bakery was located. Milov had to buy flour from a supplier in the Zaporizhia region, which is 150km (about 90 miles) from Kostiantynivka.

    The added transport costs increased the price of bread. So has the inflation rate, which is about 20 percent in Ukraine.

    Another concern is a shortage of grain. In 2021, the harvest in Ukraine exceeded 100 million tonnes of grain. The new harvest, according to preliminary estimates of the Ministry of Agriculture Policy, is 65-67 million tonnes. Since Russia has attacked not only fields, but grain storage as well, some farmers are exporting grain for storage abroad.

    The bakery in Kostiantynivka has 20 drivers deliver bread daily, not only to cities, but also to half-empty front-line villages.

    One of them, Vasyl Moiseienko, a retiree, arrives in his car at the factory at 6am and fills it up with still hot loaves. He shows the crack in the windshield that a piece of shrapnel left a few weeks ago during a bread delivery run.

    “Who else will go? I’m old, so I could drive,” Moiseienko said.

    He drives along bad roads to the village of Dyliivka, 15km (9 miles) from the line of contact. The driver quickly unloads the bread and drives on to another town on the front line.

    About 100 people live in Dyliivka, but the village looks empty. Every 10 to 15 minutes, the sounds of artillery can be heard. It is hard to find a mobile phone connection in the area, but the data network functions. The saleswoman of the local store writes in the village’s Viber chat that bread has been brought. And within 15 minutes, the store fills up with people.

    Liubov Lytvynova, 76, takes several loaves of bread. She says she dries some of it to make breadcrumbs which she keeps in her cellar. She puts one loaf in the freezer to keep it longer.

    “We only live in fear. And if they don’t deliver bread, what will we do?” Lytvynova said.

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