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Life in occupied city: ‘We don’t want to live in Russia’

Panicked residents flee as invading force raises fears of annexation

- Chris Kenning

After six weeks under Russian occupation, Tetiana Danets decided it was time to flee her Ukrainian city of Kherson as the signs multiplied of Russia’s long-term control.

The Russian currency was set to be introduced and reports mounted that a sham referendum would be held to legitimize Russian annexation, she said. Military checkpoint­s are everywhere, and she began having panic attacks.

“If we don’t go now ... we go never,” Danets, 22, told USA TODAY by phone Monday from Romania two weeks after she fled by car. She couldn’t persuade her aging parents to join her.

Kherson, a southern city of about 280,000 and home to ship-building industry on the Dnieper River, became the first major Ukrainian city to fall to Russian forces March 2. Since then, Russia’s actions to cement control and warnings from U.S. and Ukrainian officials of possible annexation plans have ramped up fear and uncertaint­y in the strategic provincial capital.

“It’s terrible for people. We don’t want to live in Russia. People are worried, they cry. Many people leave Kherson, very many people,” Danets said.

Last week, the city’s mayor was replaced with a Russian appointee, and Reuters reported that a pro-Ukraine protest was broken up on April 27, a date that Ukrainian officials had said could mark a referendum toward creating a breakaway region.

Last weekend, Russia was scheduled to introduce its own currency. An internet outage hit the city. Service was restored but rerouted through Russian infrastruc­ture, which is “likely now subject to Russian internet regulation­s,

surveillan­ce and censorship,” the internet service disruption monitor NetBlocks said on its website.

On Monday, Michael Carpenter, the U.S. permanent representa­tive to the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe, warned of a push by Russia to “engineer a referendum” amid an effort to annex the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, along with Kherson. That followed a British intelligen­ce update that found Russia intends to “exert strong political and economic influence in Kherson over the long term.”

For Russia, Kherson’s transport links are important to its war effort and for control over Crimea, the British report said.

Fears about what that might mean – from the economic fallout to concerns that Russia intends to mobilize the population to support the war effort – have led more to flee Kherson.

In Odesa, Kherson residents show up each day to an aid center for evacuees, Nikolay Viknianski­y, who helps lead the volunteer aid center effort, told USA TODAY.

CNN reported a convoy of hundreds of people fled Kherson on Sunday, driving north toward the city of Kryvyi Rih. Some vehicles had white cloths wrapped around the door handles and side mirrors and banners with the word “children” written on them.

Oksana Hliebushki­na, 41, who led a Kherson nongovernm­ental organizati­on, said she felt in constant danger over two months of occupation amid shortages of medicine and streets that emptied out by the afternoon. It was the internet cell service cutoff that followed rumors of a referendum that led her to leave Monday.

“It was a difficult decision,” she said in a phone call Wednesday, lamenting that some residents had lost jobs and couldn’t afford to leave.

Danets, a sports trainer, traveled the clogged roads before she made it through Russian checkpoint­s to Romania, spending a night in Mykolaiv when it was hit by a bomb. She said she was grateful to be alive.

Many are turned back from heading east, she said, and travel to Crimea and Georgia before flying to Europe. Some can’t afford the expense, and others don’t want to leave homes and businesses.

Kherson resident Vladyslava Kulik, 17, said that when the war began, she piled into a home with 12 relatives as explosions boomed and jets roared overhead.

“We laid mattresses in the corridor and slept there ... away from the windows and hid behind the load-bearing walls,” she said.

Under occupation, Kulik said, she was afraid soldiers would break into their homes to rape or kill.

“I was scared to live with them,” said Kulik, a college student studying music. “When civilians went out to rallies, they fired into the air and threw tear grenades. Phones were checked on the streets. If there was any informatio­n about the war or a word about (Russian President Vladimir) Putin ... they shot phones.”

Fearing the fighting if there was a counteratt­ack, she and her fiancé and several others took a four-car convoy to Cherkasy in central Ukraine, she said.

As Russia makes moves for longterm control, she won’t return unless her home is liberated.

“My family will not live in Kherson if the city becomes Russia,” she said.

Residents hoped Ukrainian forces would liberate the city, but there were few indication­s of a counteroff­ensive. Others said they worry that Russian control will harm the economy, making it harder for businesses to operate.

The internet and cell outage left relatives in other countries fretting about family in Kherson, some of whom are struggling without work.

Yuliya Makiyevska­ya, who immigrated to the USA at age 14 and lives in Kentucky, has been in touch almost daily with her 58-year-old brother, Valeriy, who has been hunkered down in his Kherson apartment with his son, wife and daughter-in-law.

After running to shelters from overhead artillery fire, Valeriy wrote last month to Makiyevska­ya that prices for food had shot up and only one of his four household members still had a job.

Kherson suffers from a shortage of medicine, cash, dairy and other food products.

“My family will not live in Kherson if the city becomes Russia.”

Vladyslava Kulik, 17, College student

“I am worried,” Valeriy wrote to Makiyevska­ya, who shared the message with USA TODAY with her brother’s permission. “How does one survive? What will happen next? … There is a complete absence of future planning.”

Russia blocked all humanitari­an assistance except its own. With no cash deliveries to Kherson’s banks, the circulatio­n of Ukraine’s hryvnia currency is dwindling. Access to Ukrainian TV was blocked and replaced by Russian state channels. A strict curfew was imposed. Hliebushki­na said some farmers had equipment taken, which threatens their harvests.

Russia has not clarified whether a referendum will take place. If it does, U.S. officials fear Russia could declare a breakaway region similar to those in eastern Ukraine.

Danets wants to return to Ukraine and attend medical school but isn’t certain what’s ahead.

Her father, at 71, wants to stay in his home.

“Kherson will be occupied for (many) long years,” she said. “Putin seems to think that Ukraine is his territory.”

 ?? OLEXANDR CHORNYI/AP ?? People hold a Ukrainian flag with the message “Kherson is Ukraine” during a rally against Russian occupation of the city March 20. Many worry the Russians plan a permanent stay.
OLEXANDR CHORNYI/AP People hold a Ukrainian flag with the message “Kherson is Ukraine” during a rally against Russian occupation of the city March 20. Many worry the Russians plan a permanent stay.
 ?? OLEXANDR CHORNYI/AP ?? A woman wrapped in a Ukrainian flag stands in front of Russian troops during a protest against the occupation of Kherson on March 19.
OLEXANDR CHORNYI/AP A woman wrapped in a Ukrainian flag stands in front of Russian troops during a protest against the occupation of Kherson on March 19.
 ?? ?? SOURCE maps4news.com/©HERE JANET LOEHRKE/USA TODAY
SOURCE maps4news.com/©HERE JANET LOEHRKE/USA TODAY

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