The Daily Telegraph

‘Hell in Donbas’ as invaders aim to destroy last Ukraine foothold

- By Roland Oliphant in Bakhmut

The last road of life to Severodone­tsk ends at a deathly silent crossroads framed by earthworks and tank traps. A few hundred metres away, a child herds a small group of cows, ignoring the distant artillery thumps.

But the ribbon of pot-holed tarmac disappeari­ng into the green summer haze is deserted.

And with good reason. Severodone­tsk, the town at the other end of this road, is the last Ukraine-controlled foothold in the Luhansk region and the epicentre of a bitter, weeks-long battle that Volodymyr Zelensky, the president, on Thursday said threatens to completely destroy this region.

And the Russians yesterday stepped up their efforts to cut it off, threatenin­g an encircleme­nt.

“In Donbas, the occupiers are trying to increase pressure,” he said in his nightly video address. “There’s hell, and that’s not an exaggerati­on.”

In March, after their assault on Kyiv had clearly failed, Vladimir Putin and his generals declared more limited war aims for their invasion of Ukraine: the “liberation” of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions – the two eastern coal-producing provinces together known as the Donbas.

Their grand offensive to achieve that began a month ago, sparking a battle comparable in geographic scale to those of the Second World War.

The main Russian effort in the Donetsk region has largely stalled around the town of Izyum in the face of determined Ukrainian resistance.

In Luhansk region, Severodone­tsk and Lisichansk, its sister town on the opposite bank of the Siverny Donets river, have become a mini-verdun, drawing in ever-increasing numbers of troops and from both sides as the Ukrainian try to hold up the slow but inexorable Russian advance.

If they fall, the Russians will quickly be able to say they have “liberated” the Luhansk region, achieving at least one of Mr Putin’s war aims.

And they are pouring vast amounts of men and firepower into the effort to cut this last, slender supply line.

They already have artillery within range of the road and Serhiy Haidai, the governor of what is left of the Ukrainian-controlled Luhansk region, says it is “50-50” whether daily humanitari­an convoys of armoured cars come under fire.

Yesterday morning there were reports that a Russian breakthrou­gh from Popasna, to the east of here, had brought them within a few miles of the road.

Mr Haidai denied that in the afternoon, saying that there had been no breakthrou­gh and the situation was “very serious but stable.”

But he confirmed Ukraine’s ability to keep the road open is increasing­ly precarious. “The shelling is the problem. We have all the humanitari­an aid we need, if only we can deliver it.”

When Mr Zelensky spoke of hell, he was not exaggerati­ng.

The human costs of the vast artillery duel unfolding across the Donbas, where shrapnel and shockwaves are more feared than bullets, are mounting rapidly.

In a military hospital behind the lines on Friday, surgeons and nurses scrambled to load and unload newly arrived casualties while the walking wounded smoked cigarettes outside.

Prone men under aluminium shock blankets arrived on stretchers. A soldier, his face twisted in agony, leaned on a comrade to limp into the overcrowde­d trauma unit.

The civilian cost is no less grim. Twelve were killed in Severodone­tsk on Thursday. Yesterday morning, three more died when a school, the basement of which was being used as a shelter, was hit, Mr Haidai said.

“I’ve got video, if you like,” he said, offering his phone. “But why would you want to see it? There’s been so many of those videos.” The shock of seeing neighbours and friends dismembere­d by explosives was an aspect of the war that had a particular impact on people, he reflected.

There have been plenty of examples in those towns to draw that lesson from over the past three months.

About 50,000 civilians remain in Ukrainian held territory, he said – largely a mixture of elderly people who refuse to move, those who stayed because they couldn’t quite conceive that “it could happen to them”, and a small number of people with separatist sympathies who would welcome the “Russian world”, he said.

But the destructio­n is not confined to the very front line.

The long-range artillery, cruise missiles, air strikes, and drones that define this war can deliver ordnance almost anywhere across the 50-mile wide Donbas salient.

On Thursday morning, Lyudmila Vyshepan had just finished checking on her daughter’s empty apartment in Bakhmut when she heard a loud explosion announcing another strike had landed somewhere in the city.

“I was down the stairs and the door had already shut when I heard it. But I didn’t think it was around here,” she said yesterday.

But sound can play strange tricks. When she rounded the corner she found that an air strike had taken out not only the flat she had just left, but the entire-five-storey section of the block of which it was a part.

By a miracle, neighbours said, no one was seriously hurt in the strike on number 4 Vasila Pershina street.

Some, like Lyudmila’s daughter and her family, had already evacuated Donbas. In the ground-floor flat, Tania Berizhnya was shaken awake, but like Mrs Vyshepan assumed the explosion had happened somewhere else – until she saw her balcony was hanging off.

She and her mother have resolved to leave. Mrs Vyshepan, like many people of her age, is refusing to.

“I’m not going anywhere. What will be, will be,” she said as she took a break from removing furniture from the precarious ruins of the flat, now without a wall or a kitchen.

“We will take this stuff to our place. They were so proud of this flat, spent two years renovating it. A new gas cooker, the floor,” she added, holding back tears.

Bakhmut today is not yet a front-line city. The nightmare at Severodone­tsk is 40 miles away.

On the market square, soldiers shop for lunch among civilians from neighbouri­ng towns waiting for evacuation buses.

But it could become a much more dangerous place in the weeks to come.

The Russian advance in this area may be slow, but it is undeniably making progress.

The prospect of the road being cut, and Severodone­tsk becoming encircled and falling is “unpleasant, but I am an adult. I understand it could happen”, said Mr Haidai.

‘We will take this stuff to our place. They were so proud of this flat, spent two years renovating it. A new gas cooker, the floor’

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