Bangkok Post

CITIZEN SPIES FOIL PUTIN’S GRAND PLAN

A partisan cell in Kherson spied on, undermined and even hunted down Russian soldiers. Now that Vladimir V Putin’s forces are gone, people feel free to talk - and to brag a little

- JEFFREY GETTLEMAN KHERSON, UKRAINE

On a foggy morning a few months ago, Valentyn Dmytrovych Yermolenko, an ageing Ukrainian fisherman with a bad back and horrible knees, puttered down a narrow channel off the Dnieper River, his inflatable dinghy cutting through the mist.

His city, Kherson, had been taken over by the Russian army, and on the floor of his boat, concealed under a fishing net in a black plastic tub, Mr Yermolenko had hidden three disassembl­ed automatic rifles.

As he took a bend in the river, he recalled, a Russian patrol boat materialis­ed in front of him. A commander standing on the deck in crisp camouflage barked: “Grandpa! Where are you going?”

After Mr Yermolenko muttered something about getting fish for his wife, the commander ordered a search of the boat. A young soldier stomped aboard and went straight to the black plastic tub. “What is this?” he asked. Mr Yermolenko, 64, said he was so scared that he wet his pants.

Kherson, at the mouth of the Dnieper, near the Black Sea, was captured in the war’s first days. Russian officials soon declared it part of Russia forever.

Kherson’s occupation government, run by Russian military commanders and Ukrainian collaborat­ors, wasted little time pulling down Ukrainian flags, taking over Ukrainian schools, trucking in crates of Russian rubles, even importing Russian families.

Perhaps nowhere else in Ukraine did Russia’s leader, Vladimir Putin, devote so much money and violence, the carrot and the stick, to bend a city to his imperial will. But it did not work.

Guided by contacts in the Ukrainian security services, an assembly of ordinary citizens formed themselves into a grassroots resistance movement.

In dozens of interviews, residents and

Ukrainian officials described how retirees like Mr Yermolenko — along with students, mechanics, grandmothe­rs and even a wealthy couple who were fixing up their yacht and got trapped in the city for the better part of a year — became spirited partisans for the Kherson undergroun­d. It was almost like something out of a spy movie.

They took clandestin­e videos of Russian troops and sent them to Ukrainian forces along with map coordinate­s. They used code names and passwords to circulate guns and explosives right under the Russians’ noses. Some even formed small attack teams that picked off Russian soldiers at night, making the fear and paranoia that settled over the city two-sided.

When the Russian army hastily pulled out in mid-November, perhaps the biggest embarrassm­ent so far to Mr Putin’s war effort, Kherson became a powerful symbol. To allies questionin­g Ukraine’s resolve, and to Ukrainians themselves who had suffered so much misery and death and needed a glimmer of hope, Kherson showed what was possible.

Now that the Russian forces are gone and people feel free to talk about what they did and even brag a little, one message keeps emerging.

“I never questioned what we were doing,” said Dmytro Yevminov, the yacht owner whom Mr Yermolenko recruited into hiding guns and sacks of grenades in various boatyards. “I never knew I loved my country so much.”

‘LIKE LINKS IN A CHAIN’

Mr Yermolenko and his wife, Olena, might not seem like insurgent types.

Hovering over each other in their small kitchen, the rushing blue flame on the stove serving as the home’s only source of heat, they shoo each other away and shush each other, arguing over who is the bigger patriot.

“I’m the one who forced you to feel like this,” she said, laughing.

“Well,” Mr Yermolenko sighed, “maybe this country didn’t give me everything I wanted. But it’s still my country.”

They met in Kherson in 1978. She was a clerk at a shipbuildi­ng plant. He had been born in Belarus and had just exited the Soviet army.

He spied her sunbathing on a beach alongside the Dnieper River and soon they married, moving to a riverside Kherson neighbourh­ood called the Island, where people make their living off the water one way or another: fishing, working in boatyards or at the shipbuildi­ng plants, servicing marine engines. The Yermolenko­s used to run a smoked-fish business but retired a few years ago. It was not long before their lives were upended.

On Feb 24, the first day of the invasion, thousands of Russian troops poured into Kherson, which had a population of about 300,000 before the war. Like in many other Ukrainian cities, local residents, some with military experience, banded together into a group known as a territoria­l defence force to try to repel Moscow’s army. Mr Yermolenko and his teenage grandson, also named Valentyn, enlisted.

They had few weapons, mostly just some old hunting rifles. Worse, the Ukrainian military made a strategic decision to withdraw from Kherson, leaving the local fighters on their own.

They tried to ambush a Russian column a few days after the invasion but failed miserably, according to witnesses, leaving at least 18 militia members dead on the frozen ground. After that, the Kherson resistance changed tactics. It went undergroun­d.

Members of the local defence force and other civilians began to spy on Russian troops in the city. The Ukrainian security services encouraged this — within days of the war breaking out, they set up special channels on Telegram and other messaging services for people to funnel strategic tips.

The resistance movement would soon evolve. In the next few weeks, Ukrainian military commanders and intelligen­ce agents based outside the city asked civilians whom they trusted, including the Yermolenko­s, to do even more.

Life was getting grim. Kherson was running out of food. Stores were closed. People were out of work. Russian troops were searching for civilians who were spying on them; many residents shared disturbing stories of themselves or people they knew being dragged into torture chambers and subjected to electric shocks and sadistic beatings.

But the residents kept finding avenues of resistance. In mid-April, a rash of yellow ribbons mysterious­ly appeared all over Kherson, spray-painted on buildings.

It was a small act of defiance. But residents said that Russian soldiers were so enraged that they had stormed into hardware stores and demanded to see closed-circuit TV footage to find out who had been buying yellow paint.

As the weeks ticked away, Mr Yermolenko became more careful in whom he confided, he said. Slowly, he struck up a friendship with Mr Yevminov, a successful entreprene­ur whose around-the-world sailboat trip went by the wayside.

The two men huddled by the waterfront, pretending that they were staring at circles from fish jumps or talking about boats, and spied on Russian patrols prowling the river.

One day, Mr Yermolenko, who tends not to express a lot of emotion, pulled Mr Yevminov aside and said, “Will you feed my dogs if something happens to me?”

Mr Yermolenko felt himself getting sucked into a more dangerous role. He said that he had started receiving coded messages from contacts within the resistance network about weapons. The messages were fragmentar­y — a code name, a location, a password. His job was to move assault rifles, bullets and grenades from one location to another.

Mr Yermolenko, along with other members of Kherson’s partisan network and a Ukrainian military officer from the city, said in interviews that the weapons had passed from civilian to civilian.

Eventually, they were handed over to undercover Ukrainian security agents who had filtered quietly back into Kherson or to members of the undergroun­d territoria­l defence force.

“The system was built like links in a chain,” said Oleksandr Samoylenko, head of Kherson’s regional council, who helped coordinate partisan activity from outside the city. “No person knew the next link, so if someone got caught, it wouldn’t compromise the whole operation.”

‘I WASN’T GOING TO WORK WITH THEM’

By summer, the elder Yermolenko was watching his city get Russified. Propaganda billboards on Kherson’s busiest boulevards were decorated with bands of white, blue and red, in the spirit of the Russian flag, which many locals derisively called “the Aquafresh”.

Acts of defiance kept popping up. When the occupation government severed trade links with Ukraine and then instructed transporta­tion companies in Kherson to haul stolen Ukrainian grain to Russia, some refused, which was no small risk.

“They assaulted our country,” said Roman Denysenko, the owner of a trucking company who was later kidnapped. “I wasn’t going to work with them. Period.”

Mr Samoylenko, the Kherson regional council head, said that civilians working with the army had sent in real-time surveillan­ce informatio­n that enabled Ukrainian forces to bomb a meeting of high-level collaborat­ors in mid-September and a hotel full of Russian intelligen­ce officers a few weeks later. He cited two factors behind those successes: American precision artillery and partisan intelligen­ce.

“It’s only because of the residents that the liberation happened so quickly,” he said.

Flush with new, more powerful weapons, the Ukrainian military ratcheted up the pressure. They blew up bridges across the Dnieper River. Ground forces advanced across the countrysid­e and pressed in on three sides. By early November, the Russian forces had begun to flee.

“We didn’t know what was happening out there,” Mr Yermolenko said.

But on Nov 11, a repairman banged on his gate and joyously announced that Ukrainian forces had arrived. The Yermolenko­s drove to Kherson’s main square, joining the crowds of stunned, happy people celebratin­g the city’s liberation.

“You wouldn’t believe what I did for the first time in my life,” he said. “I kissed a policeman.”

GOODBYE, AND THANKS

The Yermolenko­s felt that it was important to recognise everyone in the neighbourh­ood who had participat­ed in the resistance. So, on a recent morning, two dozen partisans, men and women from their early 20s to mid-70s, wrapped in heavy coats and woolen hats, stood in their yard. The wind lifted off the river and whipped their ruddy faces.

Mr Yermolenko began speaking. Many of the people here, he said, experience­d close calls. He knew something about that from his encounter on the river in May.

When the Russian patrol stopped him that day, the soldier cracked open the plastic tub, coming within 8 centimetre­s of finding the concealed guns. But he apparently didn’t want to get his hands dirty and never lifted the fishing net. Had the soldier found the guns underneath, Mr Yermolenko said, he would have been shot on the spot.

His eyes traced the faces of the people listening to him — his neighbours, other veteran fishermen, the yacht owners. He is often gruff, even grouchy, but on this morning, he was reflective. He thanked everyone by name and at the end added, “I also want to thank everyone on the Island who didn’t betray us.”

He hobbled inside. No refreshmen­ts were offered. Slowly, the people walked out of his gate, into the road and back to their ordinary lives.

 ?? Olena. ?? A n o ld p h o t ograp h o fV a l en t yn D my t rovyc hY ermo l en k o an dhi sw if e,
Olena. A n o ld p h o t ograp h o fV a l en t yn D my t rovyc hY ermo l en k o an dhi sw if e,
 ?? ?? Ukrainian civilians and soldiers rejoice over the liberation of Kherson, after Russia formally announced it had retreated from the city.
Ukrainian civilians and soldiers rejoice over the liberation of Kherson, after Russia formally announced it had retreated from the city.
 ?? ?? ABOVE
A Russian propaganda billboard in Kherson, Ukraine, days after the city was liberated, on Nov 13.
ABOVE A Russian propaganda billboard in Kherson, Ukraine, days after the city was liberated, on Nov 13.
 ?? ?? LEFT
Smoke from Russian artillery bombardmen­ts over the port of Kherson.
LEFT Smoke from Russian artillery bombardmen­ts over the port of Kherson.
 ?? ?? A memorial at a park where residents said at least 18 militia members died at the beginning of the war in a disastrous attempt to ambush a Russian column in Kherson, Ukraine, on Nov 21.
A memorial at a park where residents said at least 18 militia members died at the beginning of the war in a disastrous attempt to ambush a Russian column in Kherson, Ukraine, on Nov 21.
 ?? ?? Olena Yermolenko, top, second from right, leads fellow resistance members in a rendition of the Ukrainian national anthem in the yard of her home in Kherson.
Olena Yermolenko, top, second from right, leads fellow resistance members in a rendition of the Ukrainian national anthem in the yard of her home in Kherson.

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