The Irish Mail on Sunday

As the Russians roll in, one lone family strolls in Mariupol’s ruins

- By Mark Hookham news@mailonsund­ay.ie

A FAMILY walk through what was once a bustling residentia­l street in the city of Mariupol. Now it is just another scene of almost apocalypti­c destructio­n in Ukraine.

Passing twisted trees, blackened homes and abandoned vehicles, the mother appears to clutch the hand of her child, perhaps fearful that another deadly barrage of Russian shells or rockets is seconds away.

After three weeks of relentless bombardmen­t and a merciless siege, Vladimir Putin’s forces this weekend appeared on the brink of capturing the south-eastern port city on the Sea of Azov.

Russian troops have finally broken into the centre of Mariupol and are battling Ukrainian forces street by street. One video showed feared pro-Putin Chechen special forces troops pouring machine-gun fire into a high-rise building.

Pictures yesterday showed an armoured vehicle, with pro-Russian troops on board, rolling through the city.

Shelling has hampered efforts to rescue hundreds of civilians, including women and children, who are believed trapped in the bombed ruins of the Drama Theatre, destroyed by a Russian air strike on Wednesday. Capturing this strategica­lly important city will allow Moscow to forge a land corridor between Crimea, annexed in 2014, and the Russian separatist areas of Eastern Ukraine.

With 80% of the city’s buildings destroyed or damaged, and with no running water, families resort to drinking melting snow to survive. With no heating, women crouch around make-shift barbecues to cook what they can scavenge. Bodies litter the street as it is too dangerous to recover them for a dignified funeral.

Officials say 2,500 have perished since Russian forces poured across the Ukrainian border on February 24. About 35,000 people are believed to have escaped in recent days, many on foot and under Russian fire, but 300,000 remain. As Russia’s defence ministry said its forces were ‘tightening the noose’ around the city, a woman called Svitlana gave a harrowing account of her flight from the city – and the horrors faced by those who have chosen, or been forced, to stay.

‘People with torn limbs bleed in their yards and no one can help them,’ she wrote in a social-media post. ‘These are peaceful people, our acquaintan­ces and relatives. The dead are simply being covered by soil where they lie.

‘My family was in the bomb shelter of High School No.2. Three days ago a shell shattered some of the windows. A woman was wounded in her hip. She laid all night on the first floor asking for someone to give her poison so that she would not feel the pain.’

Ukrainian police now advise families to leave the dead bodies of their loved ones on the balconies of their apartments, she added.

Svitlana said: ‘Every day and every night there are fire shots, whistles, shaking walls and horror. Where will it hit? There is no food, no medicine. When there will be no more snow people won’t be able to go out for water. The dead are not taken out. The police recommend to open the windows and put the corpses on the balcony.’

Ukrainian MP Dmytro Gorin, whose parents are trapped in the city, said the Russians have dropped hundreds of bombs on the city, adding, ‘People are out of food and, more importantl­y, out of water’.

Meanwhile, more than 480km west along the coast in Mykolaiv, at least 50 Ukrainian soldiers died when their base was destroyed by a missile bombardmen­t. Rescue teams were last night searching for bodies after three missiles hit a barracks on the northern edge of the city on Friday.

 ?? ?? A CITY DESTROYED: Residents take advantage of a break in Russia’s bombing campaign to walk through the wreckage of Mariupol – where the dead are simply ‘covered by soil’
A CITY DESTROYED: Residents take advantage of a break in Russia’s bombing campaign to walk through the wreckage of Mariupol – where the dead are simply ‘covered by soil’

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