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Wed, February 1, 2023 | 20:50
In a devastated Ukrainian village, winter brings more misery
Posted : 2022-11-26 19:37
Updated : 2022-11-27 14:40
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People wait in line to get pizzas from the volunteers, in Kherson, southern Ukraine, Nov. 24. EPA-Yonhap
People wait in line to get pizzas from the volunteers, in Kherson, southern Ukraine, Nov. 24. EPA-Yonhap

As the temperatures plunge in eastern Ukraine, Sergiy Khmil says he has little choice but to use the stacks of ammunition boxes left by the retreating Russians forces as firewood this winter.

Without the wood, Khmil says he will probably freeze amid the ruins of his destroyed village of Kamyanka.

"The most difficult thing is to get enough chopped wood," Khmil explains.

"There's a huge queue to get the donated wood from volunteers."

With his home largely destroyed by shelling, Khmil is still hard at work converting his summer kitchen into impromptu winter lodging ― now filled with blankets, ammunition crates and a furnace pieced together from Russian shell casings.

"I need to cover the walls with another layer of insulation," Khmil adds, while scanning the modest room that he hopes will see him through the winter.

In March, the village was shelled and strafed by helicopters before infantry and tanks stormed the area as Russian forces advanced south from Izyum during the early days of the invasion.

After occupying the area, the Russians settled in ― commandeering buildings, looting homes, stealing booze and driving drunk, according to residents.

"They started to break into garages and houses and partying drunk overnight," says resident Volodymyr Tsybulya, 53, during a break from repairing the roof of his sister's home.

"They used to throw grenades for fun. I came to my place and found my bathroom destroyed by a grenade."

And on it went for months, until a lighting offensive by Ukrainian forces in September crushed the Russian's northeastern flank, routing its troops and sending them further east in disarray.

In the retreating army's wake, a trail of destroyed villages was left in ruin, including Kamyanka on the outskirts of Izyum.

In the weeks since retaking control of the area, Ukrainian officials have scrambled to pick up the pieces, while uncovering mass graves and taking stock of the damage to the formerly occupied territories.

People wait in line to get pizzas from the volunteers, in Kherson, southern Ukraine, Nov. 24. EPA-Yonhap
A volunteer distributes free food to people who lost electrical power after recent Russian attacks, in a heating point in the town of Vyshhorod, north of Kyiv, Ukraine, Nov. 25. AP-Yonhao

'War is chasing us'

Izyum deputy mayor Mykhaylo Ishyuk says the situation is stark at the onset of winter, with nearly 30 to 40 percent of the roofs in the city destroyed from the fighting.

A lack of building materials and construction equipment, and a labor shortage has made the much-needed repairs all the more unlikely as the cold sets in. Temperatures are forecast to drop below freezing in the coming days.

The situation in Kamyanka is even worse, he admits. Nearly all the roofs on the 550 homes and buildings in the village have been damaged or outright destroyed.

"We're watching the situation carefully," he adds.

He points to the increase in power cuts following waves of Russian attacks on infrastructure sites across Ukraine that have left Izyum and surrounding areas with less and less electricity and heating.

In Kamyanka, Lyubov Perepelytsya drifts between recounting the horrors experienced during the Russian occupation and sharing her fears about the coming winter.

"They looted literally everything. It's such vile behaviour," the 65-year-old resident says through tears as she describes the destruction of her home and the looting of her valuables.

"How could you treat people in such a bad manner?" Most of the village's 1,200 population have left the area but Perepelytsya and her ailing husband will join a few dozen others who are planning to hunker down for the winter in Kamyanka, come what may.

"I have cried a river. This is our sixth place (during the war). It looks like the war is chasing us everywhere we go," says Perepelytsya.

"I just don't know how we can make it through this. I don't know." (AFP)


 
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