Gulf Today

Russian attacks fail to paralyse Ukraine’s lifeline

Russian attacks on some of the 1,000 stations have killed scores of civilians, including dozens killed in an attack in April on the station in Kramatorsk. That has not deterred passengers

- Jonathan Landay and Natalie Vikhrov,

Asalvo of missiles brought the Kremlin’s war on Ukraine to Fastiv, a quiet town abounding with flowering cherry trees and set in sweeping farmland hundreds of kilometres from the front lines. The strike on April 28, which injured two people, hit an electrical substation that feeds power to a confluence of railway lines that forms a key hub of networks linking central Europe, Russia, and Asia. The damage quickly was repaired, said Ukrainian officials, and a Reuters visit last week revealed no lingering impact. Trains plied between Kyiv and the southern port of Odesa, disgorging passengers into the station at Fastiv, a town of 45,000 people 75 km (45 miles) south of the capital.

Officials said the atack was part of an escalating Russian assault on infrastruc­ture, aimed in part at paralysing rail deliveries of Westernsup­plied arms and also reinforcem­ents sustaining Ukrainian forces fighting in the east and south. So far, Moscow’s effort has failed, making stateowned Ukrainian Railways a leading symbol of the country’s resilience. “The longest delay we’ve had has been less than an hour,” said Oleksandr Kamyshin, 37, a former investment banker who keeps the trains running as the CEO of the railways, Ukraine’s largest employer. “They haven’t hit a single military train.”

The Russian defences ministry has said Ukrainian facilities powering the railways have been targeted by missile strikes because trains are used to deliver foreign arms to Ukrainian forces. The rail system is being hit not just because it is critical to military supplies, Ukrainian officials said.

Moscow’ s“goal is to destroy critical infrastruc­ture as much as possible for military, economic and social reasons,” Deputy Infrastruc­ture Minister Yuri Vaskov said in an interview.

With Russian warships blockading Black Sea ports, downed bridges and checkpoint­s obstructin­g roadways, and a fuel crunch snarling trucking, Ukraine’s 22,000 km (14,000 miles) of track are the main lifeline of the struggling economy and a passage to the outside world. Trains have evacuated millions of civilians fleeing to safer parts of the country or abroad. They have begun running small grain shipments to neighbouri­ng counties to circumvent Russia’s maritime blockade. Ukraine was the world’s fourth largest grain exporter in the 2020/21 season and exports disrupted by the war have interrupte­d global food chains and helped fuel worldwide inflation. Internally, trains are distributi­ng humanitari­an aid and other cargoes. They enabled the restart of the Acelormitt­al steel plant, in Kryvyi Rih, by bringing workers in and product out, said Kamyshin. They carry civilian casualties in hospital cars staffed by Doctors Without Borders. Since Russia invaded on Feb. 24, he said, trains have distribute­d more than 140,000 tonnes of food and will have carried some 1 million kilos of mail for the state postal service by mid-may.

Russian atacks on some of the 1,000 stations have killed scores of civilians, including dozens killed in an atack in April in the station in the eastern city of Kramatorsk. That has not deterred passengers. Daily ridership has reached as many as 200,000 passengers, Kamyshin said in an interview on Saturday as he rode a train across a bridge that had been repaired ater being badly damaged during Russia’s failed advance on Kyiv from the suburb of Irpin. Nor have the railway’s 230,000 personnel stayed home even though 122 have been killed and 155 others wounded on the job and in their houses, said Kamyshin. Moscow denies striking civilian targets in what it calls a “special military operation” to disarm Ukraine and rid it of what it calls anti-russian nationalis­m fomented by the West. Ukraine and the West say Russia launched an unprovoked war of aggression.

Reuters was not able to independen­tly verify the assertions of Kamyshin and other Ukrainian officials about their successes keeping the railways going in wartime.

Helena Muskrivska, 56, the Irpin station master, said she worked for the first four days of the Russian assault, helping evacuate some 1,000 people and relaying local developmen­ts by landline to Kyiv. She took documents and equipment home when it became too dangerous.

“I was here when the Russians came into the station. I didn’t want to see them face to face,” said Muskrivska.

A group of current and former U.S. and

European railway executives formed the Internatio­nal Support Ukraine Rail Task Force in March to raise money for protective gear, first aid kits and financial aid for railway staff. “There’s a lot of fundraisin­g efforts everywhere for Ukraine, but none of it goes to the railroad,” said Jolene Molitoris, a former U.S. Federal Railroad Administra­tion chief who chairs the group. “It is the lifeline of the country.”

The group also aims to fund purchases of heavy machinery, rails and other equipment sought by the railways. Kamyshin said he is racing against the Russian atacks, deploying teams of workers and dispatcher­s around the clock to fix tracks and reroute trains. “It’s all about hours, not about days.”

He and top aides constantly move, taking trains to inspect damage and repairs around Ukraine, he said, adding: “Once they break it, we fix it”.

Kamyshin said his top priority is redirectin­g grain exports from Ukraine’s southern ports to Poland, Romania, and the Baltic states to help revive the economy. He said Russia would remain a threat even ater what he called its inevitable defeat. “This crazy neighbour will stay with us,” he said. “No one knows when they will come again.”

Meanwhile, at the railway station in the Polish border town of Przemysl during late March and early April, Ukrainians lined up to board a train bound for Kyiv. Some only planned to go back temporaril­y, but for many the desire to return to their own homes and families outweighed the risks of life in a war zone. Katya Fedorova, 20, let Kyiv in late March with relatives who had fled Russia’s advance in the Donbas region, and had planned to stay abroad. But her partner in Kyiv suddenly fell ill so she made up her mind to go back just days ater leaving. “He doesn’t have anyone else in Kyiv to help him, so I’m going back,” Fedorova said. Russian forces have since retreated from around the capital, but officials in the Kyiv region have warned residents against returning home yet. Lyubov, 70, let her home in Vinnytsia in central Ukraine with her husband and daughter during the first days of the invasion, which Moscow calls a “special military operation” to disarm its southern neighbour.

Ukraine and the West say this a false pretext for an unprovoked war of aggression by Russia. Though grateful for the help they have received in Poland, Lyubov said the family were eager to return. “I never knew that the Polish were such generous people,” she said, asking not to give her surname. “They gave us a big room with all the amenities. They gave us so much food, we couldn’t eat it all. But we want to go home,” she said, adding that she wanted to see her son, who had stayed behind and joined the Territoria­l Defence Forces. “When we ring him, he yells: ‘Don’t come here, stay there’,” she said. “So, we’re going now and not telling him anything.”

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? A pedestrian sits on a railway bridge over a river in Slovyansk, eastern Ukraine, on Sunday amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Agence France-presse A pedestrian sits on a railway bridge over a river in Slovyansk, eastern Ukraine, on Sunday amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

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