Daily Press

Russian shelling keeps Kharkiv on the edge

Bombardmen­t on daily basis prevents any return to normal

- By Jane Arraf and Oleksandr Chubko

KHARKIV, Ukraine — Alina Titova fell to her knees on the steps of the central railway station at her first glimpse of her home city after arriving back on the train.

“I want to kiss these steps,” Titova, 35, told the two friends who had come to meet her. It was her first trip back to Kharkiv since she left the besieged city in March, ending up in Germany with her three young children.

But Titova was staying only long enough to take care of some business matters and to try to persuade her parents to leave their nearby village before winter set in.

“Everyone wants to return to Kharkiv,” she said. “If it’s safe to return we would walk on foot from Germany. But it’s not safe for the kids yet.”

Just 25 miles from the Russian border, Kharkiv is Ukraine’s second-biggest city and has been one of the hardest hit in the war. But despite relentless bombardmen­t, Ukrainian forces repelled Russian troops trying to capture the city, and eventually pushed many of them out of the northern suburbs and back into Russia — a limited but meaningful success that offered the promise of a respite for Kharkiv’s beleaguere­d residents.

The relief was ephemeral. Though Russian troops pulled back, the attacks never stopped. Airstrikes have devastated the city’s infrastruc­ture, and rockets and artillery still slam into the city and surroundin­g suburbs every night.

Military analysts have said the attacks are a way to force Ukraine to keep troops in the north, preventing them from joining the larger fight in the eastern Donbas region. But in June, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia was gathering forces to attack Kharkiv again. And the city is bracing for it.

“We know that they did not abandon the idea of capturing Kharkiv city,” said Oleh Synyehubov, the regional governor.

Synyehubov, who is also head of the regional military administra­tion, said that on average four or five airstrikes hit Kharkiv every night, many of them targeting schools and colleges.

Because Russian forces have been pushed back, Synyehubov said, most attacks now were using rockets with a 40-mile range.

“They are trying to prevent people from sending their children to school in September,” the governor said, adding that he saw the continued bombardmen­t as an attempt by Russia to gain leverage in any potential negotiatio­ns.

Half of Kharkiv’s prewar population of 1.8 million has left and 90% of businesses are closed, according to city officials. The normally vibrant center of the city, a cultural hub of eastern Ukraine, is largely deserted. There are few cars on the wide streets where largely empty trolley cars rumble along the tracks.

On a recent morning, a man in a motorized wheelchair with a large Ukrainian flag flying behind him made his way down the middle of an empty street, between buildings with boards in the windows to replace shattered glass.

Next to a heavily damaged bank building, two customers walked into a shawarma shop — one of the few businesses open in the area.

Valeria Golovkina said her Turkish husband and his brother had reopened the Ala Cafe two days earlier after replacing broken equipment and repairing water damage from the shelling.

“We need to work — what else can we do?” said Golovkina, 42, who left for Istanbul in March with her husband. When they returned in June, she said, all the windows had shattered and the ceiling had collapsed onto the floor.

“At first when things calmed down a lot of people returned but now it’s anxious again in Kharkiv,” she said.

She said a lot of Kharkiv residents who left after the invasion had returned because their money ran out.

Most of those who remain are either city workers — the city is now Kharkiv’s biggest employer — those too poor to leave, or young people determined to stick it out in the city’s edgy wartime half-life. There are almost no children.

Kharkiv’s mayor, Ihor Terekhov, said 109 of the city’s approximat­ely 200 schools had been damaged in the strikes.

He also said the city was now planning for a third year of online classes starting in September.

“You understand that no parent will let their children go to school while they are being bombed,” Terekhov said.

The mayor said 4,500 buildings had been heavily damaged or destroyed, including a major scientific library and Kharkiv’s main art museum. About 50,000 apartments in more than 400 buildings are now unrepairab­le.

In June, Terekhov said, during a lull in the fighting, up to 5,000 residents a day were returning. The city restarted bus, streetcar and metro service, all free of charge for the many residents with no money and no jobs.

Even now, he said, while some residents continued to leave, there were still more returning, despite the threat of a renewed Russian assault.

“For Kharkiv residents, Kharkiv is a nationalit­y,” he said. “Because Kharkiv people cannot imagine life without their city.”

“Our main task now is to survive the winter,” he added, noting that the city was trying to replace 120 miles of damaged gas pipelines used to fuel its buildings’ heating systems.

Despite the danger, Kharkiv has a small but thriving bar scene, full of patrons who consider it a badge of honor to stay in the city despite the danger.

“Half the people don’t have jobs now so the only thing they can do is go out in the evening to chat with people, to meet with friends and somehow release the tension,” said Vlad Pyvovar, who was serving up red plastic cups of cherry liqueur at the Drunken Cherry bar.

Customers spilled out of the tiny bar into the street, sitting on the wall of a subway entrance and listening to live music. Occasional­ly, an explosion thudded in the distance — too far away for most people to tell whether it was incoming or outgoing fire.

“Kharkiv people got used to it and those who couldn’t get used to it left,” said one of the customers, Iryna Holub, 21.

Outside another bar called DAF, short for “Drunk as” followed by an expletive, an olive green military van raced by with sirens sounding.

Inside, a couple of customers were getting ready to leave before the mandated 9 p.m. closing time.

“A lot of my regular customers come here and see we are open and they say ‘Sorry I have no money now but maybe see you later,’ ” said the bartender, Evheniy Moskalenko, 27. “Sometimes I say, ‘Let’s just sit here and talk a little.’ ”

 ?? EMILE DUCKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Viktoriya Ponomarenk­o, right, waits for customers on July 16 at a damaged market in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The second-biggest city in the country sees an average of four to five Russian airstrikes nightly, a regional governor said.
EMILE DUCKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Viktoriya Ponomarenk­o, right, waits for customers on July 16 at a damaged market in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The second-biggest city in the country sees an average of four to five Russian airstrikes nightly, a regional governor said.

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