Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Displaced Ukrainians taught to ID weapons, mines

- ERIKA SOLOMON

LVIV, Ukraine — Basic military preparatio­n courses offered in cities like Lviv were developed with local volunteer defense forces in mind. But now teachers like Serhii Romaniuk are opening their doors to civilians, in particular those who have fled fierce battles in the east to the relative safety of western Ukraine.

“See this? Some civilians told me they saw these on either side of the humanitari­an corridor they were walking down. They looked to them like leaves,” said Romaniuk, explaining that the green plastic “leaf” in his hand was actually a deactivate­d land mine. “It was called a safe corridor, but that was a lie. It was mined on either side.”

His voice boomed across the dark subterrane­an room — a school cellar arranged like a military bunker, plastered with posters about different weapons and tires for exercise drills.

Listening attentivel­y were a handful of muscular young volunteers from a local defense force, who crammed themselves into the circle of wooden school desks. Sitting among them were civilians: young boys, women and older men.

The civilians at Romaniuk’s course live inside the classrooms of the school above. And they have one goal in mind: “to go home,” said 13-year-old Nikita, from the Donetsk region, a key target of Russia’s territoria­l aims.

“But when I go back home, I need to know how to react around weapons or land mines that I might come across. I’m learning all kinds of things here. I didn’t know, for example, that mines could be connected to each other and timed,” he said.

The war has displaced more than 12 million Ukrainians, more than half of whom fled to safer regions in Ukraine’s west. But now tens of thousands of civilians are returning to the places where their army has driven Russian forces into a retreat and some of those places could be minefields.

According to a U.N. report, Ukrainian forces have removed nearly 80,000 mines and explosive devices since the fullscale invasion. But it will still take years to remove all of the mines in Ukraine, it said.

Mines have a debilitati­ng affect on civilian lives because even just the possibilit­y they are present can be paralyzing. Many farmers in recaptured territorie­s have found themselves unable to sow their fields after the army warned them it suspected mines had been planted, but said it was unable to sweep the areas yet.

Romaniuk, a white-haired military veteran, held up a heavy, circular tin that he said was an anti-tank mine — the type most often found in farmers’ fields.

“If you know about them, how to spot them, then you’re armed at least with knowledge of what to do,” Romaniuk said.

His course is not just about land mines: Romaniuk also runs basic military drills. And he gives lectures on how to determine the types of missiles being used, the shock waves they create and what to do when a bomb hits.

It is his civilian students for whom the knowledge is no longer theoretica­l. The local volunteers are from Lviv, barely damaged by the war and have never experience­d the type of shelling the civilians they share the classroom with have faced.

Ruslan, a 44-year-old from Sievierodo­netsk who requested his last name be withheld because he fears repercussi­ons for family in Moscow and Russia-held areas, knows what it is like to be smashed into a wall from a blast wave. He has survived a siege, missile strikes and escaped his home under mortar fire.

Listening to the lecture brought back painful memories. “It’s really hard. But what choice do I have?” he asked.

“We have a terrible war going on, and that affects everyone, whether you’re a grandmothe­r or a child,” he said. “We have to try and save ourselves.”

 ?? (The New York Times/Diego Ibarra Sanchez) ?? Serhii Romaniuk, a former military serviceman, uses a deactivate­d land mine during a class about mines, ammunition and cluster bombs Thursday at a shelter in Lviv, Ukraine.
(The New York Times/Diego Ibarra Sanchez) Serhii Romaniuk, a former military serviceman, uses a deactivate­d land mine during a class about mines, ammunition and cluster bombs Thursday at a shelter in Lviv, Ukraine.

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