Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Whispers of collaborat­ion with the Russians

In Ukrainian villages, rumors, suspicion fly

- By Robert Klemko and Isabelle Khurshudya

IVANIVKA, Ukraine — Olena peered out from her bedroom window to see what looked like her neighbor, a tall man nicknamed Girovka, step out of a car with Russian markings and begin sending flares into the night sky from the side of the road. The next day, Russian tanks and armored vehicles emerged from the woods in a long column, descending on this small village about 60 miles south of the Russian border, along the same road.

Days later, after the Russian retreat from northern and central Ukraine, four investigat­ors from theSecurit­y Service of Ukraine filed into 66-year-old Olena’s living room. She told them what she’d seen and showed them the spot where Girovka had stood and fired the flares. Other neighbors told investigat­ors Girovka had been seen walking to and from Ukrainian positions minutes before they were shelled by Russianfor­ces.

No one in the village has seen the neighborsi­nce.

“Maybe they did it for money?” Olena, whom The Washington Post is identifyin­g only by her first name out of concern about possible retaliatio­n against her, said of those suspected of collaborat­ing with Russia. “They were promised something. I’m wondering how it is possible to sell your conscience and dignity. I don’t know. I don’t get it.”

In small towns and villages across Ukraine that fell under Russian occupation in February and March and have since been liberated, the fog of war has been replaced by the fog of conspiracy and suspicion.

Ukraine’s armed forces declined to share how many Ukrainians accused of collaborat­ing with Russia have been identified or apprehende­d. Associated Press reported that about 400 people in the Kharkiv region suspected of collaborat­ing have been detained and could face prosecutio­n under new laws that make any action aiding Russian forces that results in deaths of Ukrainians punishable by life in prison. Dmytro Ivanov, deputy head of the Chernihiv regional civilmilit­ary administra­tion, said security services are investigat­ing cases of alleged collaborat­ors marking Ukrainian positions with phosphorus, which can be identified from thesky and has helped Russians target artillery fire on Ukrainian positions. He said others led Russians to food and supply storehouse­s. In some cases, he said, collaborat­ors had accepted food or cash from Russiansin exchange for informatio­n.

“We assume these people are still here,” Mr. Ivanov said. “Right now, special security services are working on it. Among locals, there are not that many cases, because communitie­s here are strong and united morethan ever before.”

In villages northeast of Ukraine’s Mykolaiv, a city of about 500,000 near the Black Sea coast, Russian occupiers were expelled after less than two weeks. But resentment and rumors of possible local collaborat­orsremaine­d.

In Pisky, which has some 800 residents, a man greeted Washington Post journalist­s by telling them that the town was full of “Ruscists” — a term Ukrainians have coined as shorthandf­or “Russian fascists.”

In March, the invading soldiers made Pisky’s school their base. People in the town still accuse the school’s director of unlocking the doors for the Russians and passing informatio­n to them. The Post could not verify those allegation­s.

“When the Russians came, she was saying to them, ‘Oh, we’ve been waiting for you for eight years so you could bring order!’ ” 70-year-old residentMa­rina Polyshuk said.

“Then after they left, she said, ‘Oh, I just misunderst­ood,’ ” Ms. Polyshuk said. “You live in Ukraine andyou misunderst­ood? Come on.”

Rumors and accusation­s take on lives of their own as they are told by emotional locals who are often traumatize­d. Villagers in Berezanka, near Chernihiv, told The Post of an employee of the State Forest Resources Agency whose home was raided by Russian forces. They took multiple guns, acting on a tip received from a local collaborat­or, according to a local rumor. Other locals said it was the employee, Oleh Nechypuren­ko, who willingly offered his weapons to the Russians. He had been arrested by Ukrainian security agents, they said.

Mr. Nechypuren­ko, 50, said none of it was true. Visited by a reporter at home with his wife, son and two dogs, he said Russians had come and taken his only gun — a smallcalib­er hunting rifle — before leaving peacefully. He said Ukrainian police interviewe­d him later but did nottake him into custody.

Onething struck him as peculiar, he said: The Russians visited only two homes on his street — the ones with registered firearms (Ukrainians are required to register all firearms with local authoritie­s).

“I’m not sure who did it, but it looks like someone tipped them off,” Mr.Nechypuren­ko said.

In nearby Yahidne, a married couple who are in their 50s said Russian soldiers came straight to their home on entering the village, raiding their house and storage shed for cash, jewelry and other valuables. The Minenkos are considered wealthy in the village of about 300; they think the Russians had inside informatio­nabout their status.

After raiding their home, Russian soldiers used the floor as a toilet before leaving, said Vitaliy Minenko, 58. “The war showed who is who, the other side of personalit­ies,” Mr. Minenko said of his neighbors. “Who we thought was good turned out to be bad. Who was angrybecam­e nice.”

Inside the school in Pisky, there was a poster praising local men and women who had served in the Ukrainian military, fighting in the country’s eastern Donbas region against Russian-backed separatist­s. Ms. Polyshuk’s son, Evhen Kostenyuk,was one of those pictured.

His service ended in 2017, and he said he didn’t know his picture and name were posted inside the school until Russian soldiers dragged him away from his mother’s home. They held him for 24 hours, beating him and torturing him, he said. Then they led him into a neighborin­g town’sforest and shot him, he said.

Mr. Kostenyuk said he dropped to the ground and kept still after the bullet hit his shoulder; it grazed a lung but did not kill him. The Russian troops apparently thought he was dead. They left him there, and when he heard the sound of car doors closing and then tires rolling away, he jumped up and eventually found a stranger who was willing to help, he said. The stranger helped himtie up his shoulder to stanch the bleeding, then drove him to a Ukrainianm­ilitary checkpoint.

Ms. Polyshuk said the school director left town when the Russians didbut has since returned.

“I told her that she won’t have a life after the war,” Ms. Polyshuk said. “I’ll strangle her with my own hands.”

 ?? Photo for The Washington Post by Serhiy Morgunov ?? Vitaliy Minenko, 58, a resident of Yahidne, Ukraine, said Russian soldiers damaged his cars. “The war showed who is who, the other side of personalit­ies,” Mr. Minenko said of his neighbors. “Who we thought was good turned out to be bad. Who was angry became nice.”
Photo for The Washington Post by Serhiy Morgunov Vitaliy Minenko, 58, a resident of Yahidne, Ukraine, said Russian soldiers damaged his cars. “The war showed who is who, the other side of personalit­ies,” Mr. Minenko said of his neighbors. “Who we thought was good turned out to be bad. Who was angry became nice.”

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