Tag Archives: Kherson

Frontline report: Ukrainian advances in Kherson Oblast create a tactical dilemma for Russian military – Euromaidan Press

  1. Frontline report: Ukrainian advances in Kherson Oblast create a tactical dilemma for Russian military Euromaidan Press
  2. Ukraine now in full control of Kherson Oblast’s left bank, forcing Russians to flee from reinforced ‘Surovikin Yahoo News
  3. Ukraine has advanced across the Dnipro River, its biggest achievement on the front in 12 months EL PAÍS USA
  4. The Dnipro River, a new key front line for Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russia FRANCE 24 English
  5. Estonian intelligence doesn’t believe Russia can push Ukrainian army beyond Dnipro Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Defense forces to respond to Russian army’s strikes on Kherson region – Zelensky – Ukrinform

  1. Defense forces to respond to Russian army’s strikes on Kherson region – Zelensky Ukrinform
  2. Kherson remains defiant one year on, even as daily shelling continues The Economist
  3. One Year After Liberation, Ukrainians in Kherson Hold on to Hope Amid Constant Shelling Military.com
  4. ‘We Realized That We Still Had To Fight’: Life In Kherson One Year After The End Of Russia’s Occupation Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  5. Zelenskyy congratulates Ukrainians on anniversary of Kherson’s liberation: Russia never comes “forever” Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rescuers in Kherson come under Russian shelling: 1 killed, 8 injured – Ukrinform

  1. Rescuers in Kherson come under Russian shelling: 1 killed, 8 injured Ukrinform
  2. Russia-Ukraine war: Russia fires at rescue workers in Kherson; drone attacks reported across Ukraine – as it happened The Guardian
  3. Ukraine-Russia news – live: One dead as Putin’s troops ‘fire at rescue workers in flood-hit Kherson’ Yahoo News
  4. Ukraine Rescue Worker Killed, 8 Injured by Russian Fire in Kherson – Minister The Moscow Times
  5. Russia-Ukraine War Live Updates: Ukraine rescue worker killed, 8 injured by Russian fire in Kherson Times of India
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russia’s deadly attack leaves Kherson facing up to its bloodiest day | Ukraine dispatch – The Telegraph

  1. Russia’s deadly attack leaves Kherson facing up to its bloodiest day | Ukraine dispatch The Telegraph
  2. Kyiv Says Six Killed By Russian Shelling During Demining Operation As Air-Raid Sirens Blare Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  3. Russian Shelling Kills Several Civilians in Kherson – Russian Shelling Kills Several Civilians in Kherson The New York Times
  4. Kherson buries the victims of Russian shelling as Ukraine’s counter-offensive looms The Telegraph
  5. Ukraine updates: Russia orders partial evacuation near front line Al Jazeera English
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russia planned Kherson torture centers, say international lawyers – CNN

  1. Russia planned Kherson torture centers, say international lawyers CNN
  2. Torture chambers in Kherson linked to Kremlin money; Russia, China block G-20 from condemning war: Live Ukraine updates USA TODAY
  3. At least 20 torture centers in Kherson were directly financed by the Kremlin, international lawyers say in a new report CNBC
  4. Kherson torture centres were planned by Russian state, say lawyers The Guardian
  5. After annexing Kherson, Russia tortured Ukrainian civilians at 20 centers, claims rights group, Watch video Firstpost
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Torture chambers in Kherson linked to Kremlin money; Russia, China block G-20 from condemning war: Live Ukraine updates – USA TODAY

  1. Torture chambers in Kherson linked to Kremlin money; Russia, China block G-20 from condemning war: Live Ukraine updates USA TODAY
  2. At least 20 torture centers in Kherson were directly financed by the Kremlin, international lawyers say in a new report CNBC
  3. Kherson torture centres were planned by Russian state, say lawyers The Guardian
  4. Kremlin ‘financed’ over 20 torture chambers during ‘genocidal plan’ in Kherson: investigators New York Post
  5. Torture chambers in Ukraine’s Kherson ‘financed by Russian state’ -investigators Reuters
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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At least 20 torture centers in Kherson were directly financed by the Kremlin, international lawyers say in a new report – CNBC

  1. At least 20 torture centers in Kherson were directly financed by the Kremlin, international lawyers say in a new report CNBC
  2. Kherson torture centres were planned by Russian state, say lawyers The Guardian
  3. Torture chambers in Kherson linked to Kremlin money; Russia, China block G-20 from condemning war: Live Ukraine updates USA TODAY
  4. Torture chambers in Ukraine’s Kherson ‘financed by Russian state’ -investigators Reuters
  5. Russia-Ukraine war news – latest: Blinken meets Lavrov for first time since invasion Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russia-Ukraine war live: air raid alarms sound in Kyiv and Kherson; Bakhmut reaching stalemate, say US thinktank | Ukraine

Air raid alarms sound in Kyiv and Kherson

At around 6am on Thursday, 29 December, air raid alarms sounded in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, as well as the southern regions of Kherson and Mykolaiv and the western region of Zhytomyr.

“An air alert has been announced in the capital! Please go to the shelter!” the Kyiv City Military Administration posted on Telegram.

As yet, there have been no confirmed attacks.

The head of Ukraine’s military intelligence agency, Kyrylo Budanov, has made a similar claim to what the Institute for the Study of War had to say about Bakhmut, though he has widened it to the whole country.

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Budanov says that fighting in Ukraine is at a deadlock, as neither Ukraine nor Russia is able to make significant advances.

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“The situation is just stuck…It doesn’t move,” Budanov told the news agency in an interview.

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He said that Russia was at a dead end but that Ukraine “can’t defeat them in all directions comprehensively” while it awaits weapons.

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Analysts at the US-based Institute for the Study of War believe that Russia has reached a stalemate in Bakhmut, with “several indicators support[ing] the assessment that Russian forces around Bakhmut have culminated”.

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On Wednesday, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said “only a few” civilians remained in the embattled frontline city, which is in the eastern province of Donetsk. In a post on Telegram, Ukraine’s leader said of the city that “there is no place that is not covered with blood”.

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In an update posted at 8.15pm Eastern Time, the ISW wrote:

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US military doctrine defines culmination as the “point at which a force no longer has the capability to continue its form of operations, offense or defense,” and “when a force cannot continue the attack and must assume a defensive posture or execute an operational pause.” If Russian forces in Bakhmut have indeed culminated, they may nevertheless continue to attack aggressively. Culminated Russian forces may continue to conduct ineffective squad-sized assaults against Bakhmut, though these assaults would be very unlikely to make operationally significant gains.

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At around 6am on Thursday, 29 December, air raid alarms sounded in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, as well as the southern regions of Kherson and Mykolaiv and the western region of Zhytomyr.

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“An air alert has been announced in the capital! Please go to the shelter!” the Kyiv City Military Administration posted on Telegram.

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As yet, there have been no confirmed attacks.

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Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine. My name is Helen Sullivan and I’ll be bringing you the latest developments as they happen.

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Air raid sirens sounded in the capital city, Kyiv, and the southern Ukrainian regions of Kherson and Mykolaiv in the early hours of Thursday morning, a day after Russian forces stepped up mortar and artillery attacks on Kherson city.

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As yet, we have no reports of rocket fire, only notifications via the respective governors on Telegram that the alarms are sounding and that people should head to shelters.

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Our other top story this morning is that analysts at the US-based Institute for the Study of War believe that Russia has reached a stalemate in Bakhmut, with “several indicators support[ing] the assessment that Russian forces around Bakhmut have culminated”.

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On Wednesday, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said “only a few” civilians remained in the embattled frontline city, which is in the eastern province of Donetsk. In a post on Telegram, Ukraine’s leader said of the city that “there is no place that is not covered with blood”.

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We’ll bring you more detail on these stories shortly. In the meantime, here are the other key recent developments:

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  • Ukrainian officials were urging residents to evacuate from the city of Kherson on Wednesday as Russian forces stepped up mortar and artillery attacks on the southern Ukrainian city, which was recently liberated. Some residents who lived through the Russian occupation are reluctant to leave despite the bombardment, according to a local official who has been involved in the evacuation.

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  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy said “only a few” civilians remain in the embattled frontline city of Bakhmut in the eastern province of Donetsk. In a Telegram post, Ukraine’s leader said “there is no place that is not covered with blood” in the Ukrainian-held city, where his troops are waging a battle that has come to symbolise the grinding brutality of the war.

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  • Ukraine has secured the release of 1,456 prisoners of war since Russia invaded in February, according to Zelenskiy. Ukraine’s president was speaking in an annual address to the Ukrainian parliament, where Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, the commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, cabinet ministers, foreign diplomats, military personnel and family members of fallen soldiers were reportedly present.

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  • The Kremlin has insisted any proposals to end the conflict must take into account what it calls “today’s realities” of four Ukrainian regions Moscow has unilaterally declared part of Russia. In a regular briefing with reporters, the Kremlin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, dismissed Zelenskiy’s 10-point peace plan, which includes the restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity, the withdrawal of Russian troops, the release of all prisoners, a tribunal for those responsible for the aggression and security guarantees for Ukraine.

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  • Russia’s foreign minister has said he is convinced that Moscow would achieve its goals in Ukraine thanks to its “patience” and “perseverance”. “I am convinced that thanks to our perseverance, patience and determination, we will defend the noble goals that are vital for our people and our country,” Russia’s top diplomat Sergei Lavrov said in an interview broadcast on national television.

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  • The head of Gazprom has said the Russian gas giant had a challenging year, as the company seeks new markets after international sanctions over Moscow’s Ukraine offensive. “I want to say right away that 2022, of course, has turned out to be very, very difficult,” Alexei Miller said during an end-of-year conference as tensions soar between Russia and the west.

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  • A Crimean human rights activist has been sentenced to seven years in prison after a Moscow-installed court in the Russian-annexed peninsula found her guilty of carrying an explosive device, in a trial that rights activists have described as “trumped up” and “illegal”. Iryna Danilovich was sentenced to seven years in a general regime colony by a court in Feodosia, the Kyiv-based organisation Institute of Mass Information (IMI) said.

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  • Authorities in the Ukrainian city of Odesa have begun dismantling a monument to Catherine the Great, the Russian empress who founded the city in the late 18th century. Last month, the local parliament voted to dismantle the statue, as well as another to the Tsarist general Alexander Suvorov.

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  • Russian soldiers mobilised to fight in Ukraine will be able to store their frozen sperm in a cryobank for free, a leading Russian lawyer has said. Demographers have warned that Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and its “partial” military mobilisation could further deepen Russia’s demographic crisis.

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  • The United Nations high commissioner for human rights has released a count of the number of civilian casualties in Russia’s war on Ukraine so far, saying that 6,884 people are known to have died in Ukraine, including 429 children, between 24 February 2022 to 26 December 2022. The actual figure is likely to be “considerably higher”, it added.

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Key events

Fighting at a deadlock, says Ukraine spy chief

The head of Ukraine’s military intelligence agency, Kyrylo Budanov, has made a similar claim to what the Institute for the Study of War had to say about Bakhmut, though he has widened it to the whole country.

Budanov says that fighting in Ukraine is at a deadlock, as neither Ukraine nor Russia is able to make significant advances.

“The situation is just stuck…It doesn’t move,” Budanov told the news agency in an interview.

He said that Russia was at a dead end but that Ukraine “can’t defeat them in all directions comprehensively” while it awaits weapons.

Bakhmut reaching stalemate, say US thinktank

Analysts at the US-based Institute for the Study of War believe that Russia has reached a stalemate in Bakhmut, with “several indicators support[ing] the assessment that Russian forces around Bakhmut have culminated”.

On Wednesday, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said “only a few” civilians remained in the embattled frontline city, which is in the eastern province of Donetsk. In a post on Telegram, Ukraine’s leader said of the city that “there is no place that is not covered with blood”.

In an update posted at 8.15pm Eastern Time, the ISW wrote:

US military doctrine defines culmination as the “point at which a force no longer has the capability to continue its form of operations, offense or defense,” and “when a force cannot continue the attack and must assume a defensive posture or execute an operational pause.” If Russian forces in Bakhmut have indeed culminated, they may nevertheless continue to attack aggressively. Culminated Russian forces may continue to conduct ineffective squad-sized assaults against Bakhmut, though these assaults would be very unlikely to make operationally significant gains.

Air raid alarms sound in Kyiv and Kherson

At around 6am on Thursday, 29 December, air raid alarms sounded in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, as well as the southern regions of Kherson and Mykolaiv and the western region of Zhytomyr.

“An air alert has been announced in the capital! Please go to the shelter!” the Kyiv City Military Administration posted on Telegram.

As yet, there have been no confirmed attacks.

Summary and welcome

Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine. My name is Helen Sullivan and I’ll be bringing you the latest developments as they happen.

Air raid sirens sounded in the capital city, Kyiv, and the southern Ukrainian regions of Kherson and Mykolaiv in the early hours of Thursday morning, a day after Russian forces stepped up mortar and artillery attacks on Kherson city.

As yet, we have no reports of rocket fire, only notifications via the respective governors on Telegram that the alarms are sounding and that people should head to shelters.

Our other top story this morning is that analysts at the US-based Institute for the Study of War believe that Russia has reached a stalemate in Bakhmut, with “several indicators support[ing] the assessment that Russian forces around Bakhmut have culminated”.

On Wednesday, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said “only a few” civilians remained in the embattled frontline city, which is in the eastern province of Donetsk. In a post on Telegram, Ukraine’s leader said of the city that “there is no place that is not covered with blood”.

We’ll bring you more detail on these stories shortly. In the meantime, here are the other key recent developments:

  • Ukrainian officials were urging residents to evacuate from the city of Kherson on Wednesday as Russian forces stepped up mortar and artillery attacks on the southern Ukrainian city, which was recently liberated. Some residents who lived through the Russian occupation are reluctant to leave despite the bombardment, according to a local official who has been involved in the evacuation.

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy said “only a few” civilians remain in the embattled frontline city of Bakhmut in the eastern province of Donetsk. In a Telegram post, Ukraine’s leader said “there is no place that is not covered with blood” in the Ukrainian-held city, where his troops are waging a battle that has come to symbolise the grinding brutality of the war.

  • Ukraine has secured the release of 1,456 prisoners of war since Russia invaded in February, according to Zelenskiy. Ukraine’s president was speaking in an annual address to the Ukrainian parliament, where Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, the commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, cabinet ministers, foreign diplomats, military personnel and family members of fallen soldiers were reportedly present.

  • The Kremlin has insisted any proposals to end the conflict must take into account what it calls “today’s realities” of four Ukrainian regions Moscow has unilaterally declared part of Russia. In a regular briefing with reporters, the Kremlin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, dismissed Zelenskiy’s 10-point peace plan, which includes the restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity, the withdrawal of Russian troops, the release of all prisoners, a tribunal for those responsible for the aggression and security guarantees for Ukraine.

  • Russia’s foreign minister has said he is convinced that Moscow would achieve its goals in Ukraine thanks to its “patience” and “perseverance”. “I am convinced that thanks to our perseverance, patience and determination, we will defend the noble goals that are vital for our people and our country,” Russia’s top diplomat Sergei Lavrov said in an interview broadcast on national television.

  • The head of Gazprom has said the Russian gas giant had a challenging year, as the company seeks new markets after international sanctions over Moscow’s Ukraine offensive. “I want to say right away that 2022, of course, has turned out to be very, very difficult,” Alexei Miller said during an end-of-year conference as tensions soar between Russia and the west.

  • A Crimean human rights activist has been sentenced to seven years in prison after a Moscow-installed court in the Russian-annexed peninsula found her guilty of carrying an explosive device, in a trial that rights activists have described as “trumped up” and “illegal”. Iryna Danilovich was sentenced to seven years in a general regime colony by a court in Feodosia, the Kyiv-based organisation Institute of Mass Information (IMI) said.

  • Authorities in the Ukrainian city of Odesa have begun dismantling a monument to Catherine the Great, the Russian empress who founded the city in the late 18th century. Last month, the local parliament voted to dismantle the statue, as well as another to the Tsarist general Alexander Suvorov.

  • Russian soldiers mobilised to fight in Ukraine will be able to store their frozen sperm in a cryobank for free, a leading Russian lawyer has said. Demographers have warned that Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and its “partial” military mobilisation could further deepen Russia’s demographic crisis.

  • The United Nations high commissioner for human rights has released a count of the number of civilian casualties in Russia’s war on Ukraine so far, saying that 6,884 people are known to have died in Ukraine, including 429 children, between 24 February 2022 to 26 December 2022. The actual figure is likely to be “considerably higher”, it added.

Read original article here

Donetsk: Ukraine launches ‘most massive strike’ on occupied region since 2014, Russia-installed mayor says



CNN
 — 

Ukrainian forces have unleashed the biggest attack on the occupied Donetsk region since 2014, according to a Russia-installed official, in the wake of heavy fighting in the east of the country.

Donetsk has been held by Russian-backed separatists for eight years and it is one of four Ukrainian regions that Moscow attempted to annex in October, in violation of international law.

“At exactly 7 a.m. the (Ukrainians) subjected the center of Donetsk (city) to the most massive strike since 2014,” the Moscow-appointed mayor, Aleksey Kulemzin, posted on Telegram.

“Forty rockets from BM-21 ‘Grad’ MLRS were fired at civilians in our city,” he said Thursday, adding that a key intersection in Donetsk city center had come under fire.

Kulemzin shared photographs on Telegram of damage to residential and commercial buildings and a cathedral.

There have been no immediate reports of casualties, according to Russian state media.

CNN cannot independently confirm Kulemzin’s claims.

The war in Ukraine ramped up further south as Russia also launched fresh assaults on Kherson overnight, after a wave of fatal shelling in the region earlier this week. Ukrainian forces retook control of the city last month in one of the most significant breakthroughs of the war to date.

The city was hit 86 times with “artillery, MLRS, tanks, mortars and UAVs,” in the past 24 hours, according to the regional head of the Kherson military administration.

Ongoing shelling from Moscow has killed at least two people on Thursday and wounded another three people, Yaroslav Yanushevych said on Telegram.

“One of (the victims) was a volunteer, a member of the rapid response team of the international organization. During the shelling, they were on the street, they were fatally wounded by fragments of enemy shells,” he added.

Yanushevych added that three people were killed and 13 injured, including a 8-year-old boy, on Wednesday.

The ramped-up strikes in Donetsk and Kherson took place against the backdrop of a harsh winter season in Ukraine inflamed by wide-ranging power outages, caused by Russia’s targeting of critical infrastructure, and a grinding war of attrition on the battlefield.

The strikes in Kherson left the city “completely disconnected” from power supplies, according to the regional head of the Kherson military administration, Yanushevych.

“The enemy hit a critical infrastructure facility. Shell fragments damaged residential buildings and the place where the medical aid and humanitarian aid distribution point is located,” Yanushevych later said in a Telegram video on Thursday.

Meanwhile, further west Kyiv received machinery and generators from the United States to help strengthen the Ukrainian capital’s power infrastructure amid the widespread energy deficits.

Kyiv’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said the city “received machinery and generators from the U.S. Government to operate boiler houses and heat supply stations.”

The Energy Security Project, run by USAID, delivered four excavators and over 130 generators, Klitschko said on Telegram. All equipment was free of charge.

This week, the Kremlin also appeared to rebuff Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s peace solution that involved asking Russia to start withdrawing troops from Ukraine this Christmas – as the war approaches the 10-month mark.

“The Ukrainian side needs to take into account the realities that have developed over all this time,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday in response to Zelensky’s three-step proposal.

“And these realities indicate that the Russian Federation has new subjects,” he said, referring to four areas Russia has claimed to have annexed, Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia.

“Without taking these new realities into account, any progress is impossible,” Peskov added.

Read original article here

Booby Traps and Destruction in Kherson, Ukraine After Russian Army Retreats

KHERSON REGION, Ukraine—The sight of fresh planks of wood on the roof of a destroyed house was like a small ray of sunshine sticking out among the wreckage of the village of Myrne.

“At the very start of the war, one [Ukrainian] soldier made a stupid TikTok video on the streets outside our house,” Tatiana, a middle-aged local resident, told The Daily Beast. She picked up her phone to show a video of a grinning young man in military uniform, boasting of his unit’s success in pushing the Russians back.

Almost immediately after that, Russian artillery had fired on her property, thinking that the Ukrainian soldiers had sheltered inside it.

Ukraine’s operational security is much tighter now, but Tatiana’s anger is still palpable. For six months, this village had been on the Ukrainian front line of the war for the Kherson region, which Russian forces had seized in the opening weeks of the invasion. Tatiana had stayed behind under bombardment with only her dog for company. The poor animal’s fur was ragged—it was shell-shocked and barked its head off at anyone who took a step towards it.

Life in Kherson is nowhere near normal yet. Not only are residents still in danger of Russian shelling, but the fields are littered with mines, discarded and unexploded munitions, and booby traps set up by retreating Russian troops.

Tatiana and her dog outside her damaged house.

Courtesy of Tom Mutch

When driving back from Snihurivka, another former frontline village, we passed a Ukrainian tank lying on its side in a roadside ditch. It had been wrecked less than 15 minutes before by a grenade detonation. Its tracks had fallen off, its chassis was cracked, and it was leaking fuel. Its crew were sitting on top of the carcass, nervous and shaking but miraculously uninjured.

Anthony Connell, a mine clearance expert at the Swiss de-mining company FSD, predicted it would take “decades of peace” for the Ukrainians to clear the country of explosive remnants. He has worked in the Donbas region since 2016, which was one of the most mine contaminated regions in the world—even then.

Now, the damage to the whole country is indescribably worse. Even in the regions of Kyiv and Chernihiv, where battles raged for just over a month, many areas are too dangerous to walk through. Connell estimated dozens of civilians had been killed by explosives in those regions since they were liberated in April.

Adding to the troubles of civilians like Tatiana is the dire economic crisis triggered by the war. Tatiana’s brother-in-law, who did not want to be named, said that the local authorities had promised financial assistance, but that nothing had so far materialized.

“When can we get back to living here? It’s all about money. And we have very little,” he told The Daily Beast. They will be rebuilding as much as they can before the worst of the cold weather hits. Then they plan to stay with extended family in the Mykolaiv region before returning to their village in springtime.

This is the start of what will likely be the hardest winter in Ukraine’s recent history, as civilians struggle with widespread shortages of heat and water after a series of Russian missile strikes crippled the country’s power infrastructure.

Tatiana’s relatives drinking tea on a break from work.

Courtesy of Tom Mutch

As with a great many of the privations during the war, Ukrainians are adapting the best they can. Walking the streets of any major city, you can hear the whir of diesel generators being imported in their thousands to power local homes and businesses.

Local authorities and civil society organizations have set up thousands of “invincibility stations” in schools, public buildings, and railway stations across Ukraine. These are tents with heaters, electricity stations to charge devices, and provisions of tea, coffee, and sandwiches. But these can be little more than a Band-Aid over what has become the most difficult period since the full-scale invasion began in February.

When The Daily Beast visited the Kherson region last Thursday, lines of cars were streaming from the entrance to Kherson city, as hundreds fled renewed shelling by the Russian army, now entrenched over the Dnipro River just 1 mile or so away.

It is a far cry from the jubilation of the previous week, where a triumphant President Volodymyr Zelensky entered the main city square, which was full of joyful citizens singing patriotic songs and waving Ukrainian flags.

Since then, at least 32 civilians have been killed by Russian attacks, the highest of any region in the country. The city has been entirely without power, and local authorities have insisted that anyone with the ability to evacuate for the winter should do so.

The devastated main road in the village of Myrne.

Courtesy of Tom Mutch

What is happening in Kherson is a microcosm of the state of Ukraine as a whole.

There is a sad irony because on the military front, Ukraine’s armed forces are performing better than even the most optimistic predictions made before the war. The Ukrainians recently undertook two well-executed and successful counteroffensives in the Kharkiv and Kherson regions, allowing them to liberate swathes of territory, including the only regional capital the Russians had captured.

Meanwhile, the Russians have been unable to accomplish even their most pared-down war objectives. In the Donetsk region, the Russian army and Wagner mercenary group have been relentlessly assaulting the small city of Bakhmut, making incremental territorial gains at the cost of high casualties.

A cat scavenges in a Russian trench.

Courtesy of Tom Mutch

About a five-minute drive down the road from Tatiana’s place are the remains of Russian trenches, full of abandoned weaponry and ammunition covered in rubbish. Crawling through the wreckage and scavenging for food was a ginger tabby cat with bright green eyes, which jumped in our vehicle and refused to leave. We ended up taking him with us to Kyiv.

Back in the capital, Anna Kudriashova, a well-known singer, said she expected to see out the winter in her home no matter what happened. “I am with my family,” she told The Daily Beast, “and this is the most important and warming thing for me.”

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