Royal Oak Tribune

Civilians escape Kherson after strikes on freed city

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KHERSON, UKRAINE » Fleeing shelling, civilians on Saturday streamed out of the southern Ukrainian city whose recapture they had celebrated just weeks earlier.

The exodus from Kherson came as Ukraine solemnly remembered a Stalin-era famine and sought to ensure that Russia’s war in Ukraine doesn’t deprive others worldwide of its vital food exports.

A line of trucks, vans and cars, some towing trailers or ferrying out pets and other belongings, stretched a kilometer or more on the outskirts of the city of Kherson.

Days of intensive shelling by Russian forces prompted a bitterswee­t exodus: Many civilians were happy that their city had been won back, but lamented that they couldn’t stay.

“It is sad that we are leaving our home,” said Yevhen Yankov, as a van he was in inched forward. “Now we are free, but we have to leave, because there is shelling, and there are dead among the population.”

Poking her head out from the back, Svitlana Romanivna added: “We went through real hell. Our neighborho­od was burning, it was a nightmare. Everything was in flames.”

Emilie Fourrey, emergency project coordinato­r for Doctors Without Borders in Ukraine, said an evacuation of 400 patients of Kherson’s psychiatri­c hospital, which is situated near both an electrical plant and the frontline, had begun on Thursday and was set to continue in the coming days.

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