The Citizen (KZN)

‘Everything is worse’

INVASION: GROWING UNCERTAINT­Y AMONG THOSE CAUGHT UP IN FIGHTING

- Kostyantyn­ivka – AFP

Fallout over aid has rippled all the way to the front line.

Nearly every day since her school in east Ukraine was reduced to rubble by two Russian missiles last month, Lyudmila Polovko has walked its grounds to dream of a time when children could return.

Stepping over glass shards and torn text books, the teacher and administra­tor recounted how her thoughts had turned from planning to mark 60 years since the school opened to surviving the war.

“We’re very tired of hearing that our men are dying. We’re tired of seeing it all with our own eyes, of not sleeping at night because of the noise, because of the missiles,” she told AFP at the school.

“As bitter as it is to see these ruins, we still hope for the best.”

On the two-year anniversar­y of Russia’s brutal invasion, which has pitted the Kremlin’s expansioni­st ambitions against Ukrainian resolve, there is a growing sense of uncertaint­y among those caught in between over how and when it will all end.

The fallout from disagreeme­nts in Washington and Brussels over aid has rippled all the way to the front line in the Donetsk region, where outnumbere­d and outgunned Ukrainian troops are ceding ground to Moscow’s determined forces.

For the Ukrainian troops holding Russian forces from cities like Kostyantyn­ivka, the task is becoming harder as their resources and stamina ebb.

“We are running out of shells and the Russians keep coming. Lots of our comrades are injured – or worse. Everything is getting worse and worse,” said one soldier deployed outside Bakhmut, which was captured by Russia last May.

“There is no supply of ammunition or artillery support. The command is not interested in the morale of the soldiers,” another from the Azov battalion, known for its last-stand in the port city of Mariupol – also now Russian-controlled – told AFP.

President Volodymyr Zelensky has warned allies that Russia is taking advantage of these setbacks, and that Ukrainian defences could collapse.

In Kostyantyn­ivka, Polovko felt sure the West would not abandon Ukraine and struggled to imagine a future in which help from abroad ran out.

“It’s hard to say what would happen then. I just know how selflessly our guys are fighting, not sparing their lives. And they are dying. Let’s stop speaking,” she said, turning away as her eyes welled up with tears.

The civilian cost of Ukraine’s struggle to hold back Russian forces is mounting, too.

AFP journalist­s in the city of Kramatorsk last week saw dozens of rescue workers dig by lamplight for a woman, her mother and her son buried under their home at night by a Russian missile.

All three were found dead during the frantic rescue operation.

The governor says 1 876 civilians have been killed in the region over the past two years, but there are no figures for those killed in occupied cities like Mariupol and low estimates point to a toll in that city alone four times the region’s total.

In a community centre in Kramatorsk, psychologi­st Olga Yudakova painted a bleak picture of civilian life where anxiety has gripped an generation of children.

“For a child, loud noises are a trigger. Anxiety in children is very highly elevated,” said the psychologi­st.

The town counts among its population many who fled their homes from towns and cities further east earlier captured by Russia, a group Yudakova said had suffered immensely.

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