Philippine Daily Inquirer

Pension funds reach elderly on shell-battered Ukrainian front

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MAYAKY, UKRAINE—Postwoman Iryna Fedyanina’s laughter drowns out the mortar fire ringing out as she hands out pensions to the frightened masses near a river splitting Ukrainian and Russian forces.

A sullen driver takes her Ukrainian post office van past barricaded checkpoint­s and positions so dangerousl­y exposed to Russian fire that soldiers try to blend into the surroundin­g forests.

He then leaves her parked on a patch of grass for hours on end while she counts out the cash owed to every pensioner and writes down their names in a complicate­d ledger.

Fedyanina giggles at her utter helplessne­ss in the face of the overwhelmi­ng danger posed by the thuds and blasts echoing across the verdant hills.

“I tell myself in the morning that everything will be alright and hope that God will protect me,” the smiling 50-year-old says from inside her van.

“I pray and then I drive out to the front. What else can you do? We cannot leave our people without money. If we do not pay them, who will?”

The answer worrying Ukrainians is that the Russians would be delighted to hand out the pensions should they manage to push south past the Siverskiy Donets River and seize settlement­s such as Mayaky.

Fedyanina’s unspoken duty thus involves winning over the Russian-speaking elderly who comprise the vast majority of people still clinging on to their homes in the war zone—and whose attachment to Kyiv’s pro-Western leaders is wavering.

She must do this with everyone’s nerves fraying and instant death a random but real possibilit­y at any moment.

Rocket and missile fire has already killed dozens of civilians gathered in crowds in cities such as nearby Kramatorsk and the more distant Kharkiv.

Both sides have accused the other of shelling civilians fleeing in evacuation buses.

Ears covered

The few dozen people crowded around Fedyanina’s van sighed and grumbled among themselves at particular­ly threatenin­g blasts of incoming and outgoing fire.

Some simply covered their ears and patiently waited.

“Of course I am afraid. We have had so many cases like this, when a shell flies right into a crowd of waiting people,” said pensioner Larisa Zybareva.

“Every time they come here to hand out pensions, they start shelling again,” the 63-year-old former farmhand said.

“Last month, we did not even think they would come,

there was so much fighting. But in the end, they still came.”

Not everyone is as sensitive to the danger.

Ukrainian soldiers occasional­ly stop off at Mayaky’s two tiny shops and Sunday market to stock up on cigarettes and candy.

An intelligen­ce officer who agreed to be identified as Misha

was basking in the sun with an assault rifle on his lap and telling tales of his troops’ rising morale and the futility of the Russian offensive.

Front-line river dip

“Now that the West has started to help, we have had no problems with supplies or weapons. We have everything,”

said Misha.

“The only real problem is with uniforms and cigarettes. We wear uniforms from all over the place in one unit.”

Misha then stretched his back and pulled off his shirt before running down to the ravine and diving head first into the front-line river at the heart of the latest wave of battles.

“Since the war started, this is my first dip,” he shouted after coming up for air. “It feels good to get the summer season started.”

His trousers and assault rifle rested unattended on a picnic table while he splashed around.

Relative safety

But rumors were filtering in from further out east that the Russians had made their first serious break across the river Misha was splashing in near Mayaky.

The ultimate target of the battalion tactical groups Russia has fanned out across the northeaste­rn front appears to be Ukraine’s main administra­tive center in Kramatorsk—the home base of Fedyanina’s postal unit.

The bespectacl­ed Russian and Ukrainian speaker may be one of the first civilians to know how close the Kremlin’s forces are really getting to her symbolical­ly and strategica­lly important city.

“I visit one village after another. And by the end, I end up visiting each one of them once a month to pay the pensions,” she said of her front-line travels.

“We go where it is safe— or at least, relatively safe. We cannot enter places with active fighting.”

 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? MAKING A RUN FOR THEIR MONEY Elderly people wait to receive their pension from a postal delivery van that braved the fighting to reach the front line as the sound of mortar fire continues in Mayaky, eastern Ukraine, on May 6, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
—PHOTOS BY AFP MAKING A RUN FOR THEIR MONEY Elderly people wait to receive their pension from a postal delivery van that braved the fighting to reach the front line as the sound of mortar fire continues in Mayaky, eastern Ukraine, on May 6, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
 ?? ?? UNDER FIRE A woman covers her ears from the sound of mortar fire as people brave Russian shelling to queue and collect pensions from a postal delivery van.
UNDER FIRE A woman covers her ears from the sound of mortar fire as people brave Russian shelling to queue and collect pensions from a postal delivery van.

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