Jamaica Gleaner

Russians gone from village; fear, hardship remain

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KALYNIVSKE, (AP):

WHEN NIGHT falls in Tatiana Trofimenko’s village in southern Ukraine, she pours sunflower oil that aid groups gave her into a jar and seals it with a wick-fitted lid. A flick of a match, and the make-do candle is lit.

“This is our electricit­y,” Trofimenko, 68, says.

It has been over 11 weeks since Ukrainian forces wrested back her village in Kherson province from Russian occupation. But liberation has not diminished the hardship for residents of Kalynivske, both those returning home and the ones who never left. In the peak of winter, the remote area not far from an active front line has no power or water. The sounds of war are never far.

Russian forces withdrew from the western side of the Dnieper River, which bisects the province, but remain in control of the eastern side. A near constant barrage of fire from only a few kilometres away, and the danger of leftover mines leaving many Ukrainians too scared to venture out, has rendered normalcy an elusive dream and cast a pall over their military’s strategic victory.

Still, residents have slowly trickled back to Kalynivske, preferring to live without basic services, dependent on humanitari­an aid and under the constant threat of bombardmen­t than as displaced people elsewhere in their country. Staying is an act of defiance against the relentless Russian attacks intended to make the area unliveable, they say.

“This territory is liberated. I feel it,” Trofimenko says. “Before, there were no people on the streets. They were empty. Some people evacuated, some people hid in their houses.”

“When you go out on the street now, you see happy people walking around,” she says.

The Associated Press followed a United Nations humanitari­an aid convoy into the village when blankets, solar lamps, jerry cans, bed linens and warm clothes were delivered to the local warehouse of a distributi­on centre.

 ?? ?? Suffering from cancer, Gennadiy Shaposhnik­ov, 83, rests in his partially destroyed home which was hit by Russian shelling last fall in Kalynivske, Ukraine.
Suffering from cancer, Gennadiy Shaposhnik­ov, 83, rests in his partially destroyed home which was hit by Russian shelling last fall in Kalynivske, Ukraine.
 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Oleksandra Hryhoryna inspects her house which was damaged by shelling last fall in Kalynivske, Ukraine.
AP PHOTOS Oleksandra Hryhoryna inspects her house which was damaged by shelling last fall in Kalynivske, Ukraine.

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