The Citizen (Gauteng)

Kyiv exhibits ‘war trophies’

REMINDER: DOWNED RUSSIAN PLANE PARTS

- Kyiv

For Valeriy Stavichenk­o, the sight of mangled Russian war equipment perched along the pavement in downtown Kyiv triggers feelings of bliss in the heart of the 71-year-old Soviet Army veteran.

“I’m happy,” he said with a grin after inspecting the pockmarked tail of a downed Russian fighter jet.

“The more destroyed enemy vehicles we have, the closer victory is,” said Stavichenk­o, who stumbled on the bits and pieces of the Russian war machine on a recent walk in the Ukrainian capital.

The battered war trophies stood in stark contrast to the birdsong and blooming chestnut trees lining the quiet avenue in the capital’s government quarter.

The display outside the National Museum of Military History – featuring the fighter jet’s tail and a smashed infantry fighting vehicle – was unveiled last week as part of a project dreamed up by another Ukrainian veteran.

The exhibit’s curator, Pavlo Netesov, hopes the freshly destroyed equipment will serve as a visible reminder of the war’s toll to residents in downtown Kyiv – who have been largely spared from the harsh ground fighting that has erupted elsewhere in the country.

“I want people through those things to understand this war as I see it, as it’s going on,” Netesov told AFP.

For weeks, Netesov witnessed the brutal toll of the war firsthand as a volunteer member of the Ukrainian military deployed in Kyiv’s suburbs, where he helped beat back Russian forces while also collecting equipment, weapons and keepsakes from the battlefiel­d.

Along with the trophies on display in Kyiv, Netesov has decorated his personal office with an array of war memorabili­a amassed in Ukraine over the years, with lamps fashioned from mortar shells and shoulder-fired rockets adorning the walls.

In the future, Netesov hopes to line the entire avenue outside the military history museum with various war remnants, insisting that preserving the memories of the conflict’s brutal costs will be vital for Ukraine as the nation moves forward.

The sight of the conflict’s detritus just blocks from President Volodymyr Zelensky’s war-time headquarte­rs triggered a range of reactions from passers-by – blank stares, selfies and brief chuckles.

But not all were pleased with the presence of the battered war trash. Twenty-eight-year-old attorney Inna Hopaitsa said the remnants unearthed memories of the first dark days of the Russian invasion and the overwhelmi­ng fear that waylaid people across Ukraine.

“It’s really painful and hard,” said Hopaitsa, her voice cracking.

But she admitted that preserving the “heroic deeds” of the Ukrainian military was a necessary endeavour.

While looking over the shattered infantry vehicle, Inna’s husband Valeriy Hopaitsa also had a remark. “First, we have to win. Only then can we decide what to do with these vehicles and remains,” he said. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? WANTON DESTRUCTIO­N. Unexploded materials collected by miners are seen next to an Antonov An-225 Mriya – a cargo plane with an 88-m wingspan, the largest of any aircraft in operationa­l service.
Picture: AFP WANTON DESTRUCTIO­N. Unexploded materials collected by miners are seen next to an Antonov An-225 Mriya – a cargo plane with an 88-m wingspan, the largest of any aircraft in operationa­l service.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa