Orlando Sentinel

In liberated city, civilians still pay price of war

- By Samya Kullab

IZIUM, Ukraine — In this war-scarred city in Ukraine’s northeast, residents scrutinize every step for land mines.

Behind closed doors, survivors wait in agony for the bodies of loved ones to be identified.

The hunt for collaborat­ors of the not-so-long-ago Russian occupation poisons tightly knit communitie­s.

This is life in Izium, a city on the Donets River in the Kharkiv region that was retaken by Ukrainian forces in September, but still suffers the legacy of six months of Russian occupation.’

The brutality of the Russian invasion in this one-time strategic supply hub for Russian troops counts among the most horrific of the war.

Ukrainian civilians were tortured, disappeare­d and were arbitraril­y detained. Mass graves with hundreds of bodies have been discovered and entire neighborho­ods were destroyed in the fighting.

Izium is a gruesome reminder of the human cost of the war.

Six months after it was liberated, residents say they continue to pay the price.

Large red signs warning “MINES” rest against a tree between a church and the city’s main hospital, which is still functionin­g despite heavy Russian bombardmen­t.

In this city, everyone has a mine story: Either they stepped on one and lost a limb or know someone who did. The mines are discovered daily, concealed along riverbanks, on roads, in fields, on the tops of roofs, in trees.

Of particular concern are anti-infantry high-explosive mines, known as petal mines. Small and inconspicu­ous, they are widespread in the city.

Human Rights Watch has

documented that Moscow has used at least eight types of anti-personnel mines, prohibited by the Geneva Convention­s, throughout eastern Ukraine.

In a January report, the rights monitor also called on Kyiv to investigat­e the Ukrainian military’s apparent use of thousands of banned petal mines in Izium.

“No one can say now the total percentage of territory in Kharkiv that is mined,” said Oleksandr Filchakov, the region’s chief prosecutor. “We are finding them everywhere.”

Most are careful, keeping to known paths. But even then, they are not safe.

“We have an average of one person a week with wounds” from mines, Dr. Yurii Kuzentsov said. “I don’t know when I will ever go to the river or the forest again, even if our lives are restored because, as a medical profession­al, I have seen the consequenc­es.”

One patient stepped on mines twice: First in June when he lost part of his heel and the second time in October when he lost the entire foot.

Most of Kuzentsov’s patients said they had been cautious.

“They were sure this would never happen to them,” he said.

Oleksandr Rabenko, 66, stepped on a petal mine 200 yards from his house while walking down a familiar path to the river to fetch water.

His son, Eduard, had de-mined a narrow path with a shovel.

Rabenko had walked down it several times, up until Dec. 4, when he lost his right foot while clearing some sticks.

“I still don’t know how it got there, maybe it was the snow melting, or the river carried it,” he said. “I thought it was safe.”

Rabenko still feels excruciati­ng pain from the foot

that is no longer there.

“The doctor said it will take months for my brain to grasp what happened,” he said.

Halyna Zhyharova, 71, knows what happened to her family of eight.

A bomb struck her son Oleksandr’s home last March, killing 52 people sheltering inside the basement. They included eight of Zhyharova’s relatives — her son and his entire family, including two daughters.

Seven relatives’ bodies were exhumed in September in a severe state of decay. It took months to identify them, she said.

Now she is waiting for just one more identifica­tion — of her granddaugh­ter.

Of the 451 bodies exhumed in Izium, including nearly 440 found in mass graves, 125 have still not been identified, said Serhii Bolvinov, head of the Investigat­ions Department of Kharkiv’s National Police.

Some are so decomposed

it’s difficult to extract a DNA sample, he said. Other times, authoritie­s are unable to find a match among relatives.

The scale of destructio­n in Izium, with a prewar population of 50,000, is breathtaki­ng. Ukrainian officials estimate 70% to 80% of residentia­l buildings were destroyed. Many bear black scorch marks, punctured roofs and have boarded-up windows.

Slowly, residents are returning, horrified to discover their homes uninhabita­ble or their possession­s stolen. They seethe with anger, knowing the Russian advance into Izium was made possible by the help of local collaborat­ors who supported Moscow.

“There were cases in the beginning of the war when collaborat­ors led Russian armed forces units through secret routes and led them to the flanks and rears of our units,” said Brig. Gen. Dmytro Krasylnyko­v, commander of the joint forces in the Kharkiv region. “This happened in Izium.”

“Many of our soldiers died because of this, and we were forced to leave Izium for a while, and now we see what the city has turned into,” he said.

In the village of Kamyanka near Izium, every house bears the scars of war. Twenty families have returned, and many have directed their venom at Vasily Hrushka, the one who remained. He has become the village pariah.

“They say I was a collaborat­or, a traitor,” Hrushka, 65, said. “I did nothing wrong.”

Hrushka says he stayed while Russians overtook it because he didn’t want to abandon his cows and three calves, fearing they would die in his absence. He sent his family away and took refuge in the cellar.

Russian soldiers knocked on the door, asked him if any Ukrainian servicemen lived in the house. When he replied no, they sprayed the place with bullets just to make sure.

Later, they came by with an offering of canned food. He gave them milk. Once they asked him if he had any alcohol.

Residents saw this as treason. They asked why he didn’t do more to help Ukrainians by finding a way to give away Russian positions. But Hrushka said there was no way to do that — the Russian soldiers destroyed his phone lines.

“I was living in madness,” he said. “I did what I did to survive.”

He was called in for questionin­g by the SBU, Ukraine’s security service. They said they heard rumors he was living the life of a chief in Kamyanka.

“I was the chief only of my own home,” he told them. They let him go. In November, his fortunes took another turn.

Foraging for firewood as temperatur­es dropped, he stepped on a petal mine and lost his left foot.

 ?? VADIM GHIRDA/AP ?? Oleksandr Rabenko, who stepped on a mine Dec. 4, talks about how it happened Feb. 19 from his son’s home near Izium, Ukraine. Rabenko, 66, lost his right foot while clearing some sticks 200 yards from his home while fetching river water.
VADIM GHIRDA/AP Oleksandr Rabenko, who stepped on a mine Dec. 4, talks about how it happened Feb. 19 from his son’s home near Izium, Ukraine. Rabenko, 66, lost his right foot while clearing some sticks 200 yards from his home while fetching river water.

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