San Diego Union-Tribune

AERIAL IMAGES SHOW OBLITERATI­ON OF UKRAINIAN CITY

Bakhmut, site of the war’s longest battle, is reduced to ashes

- BY MARC SANTORA NEAR BAKHMUT, Ukraine Santora writes for The New York Times.

Bakhmut is obliterate­d. As fighting around the city in eastern Ukraine raged on, drone footage taken by The New York Times on Friday captured the scorched buildings, destroyed schools and cratered parks that now define Bakhmut. What looked like an early-morning haze spreading across the shattered skyline was the acrid smoke that hung heavy after another night of relentless shelling.

The Russians are declaring victory in this battle, the war’s longest and bloodiest. The Ukrainians, making gains on the outskirts, say the death of the city is not the end of the campaign to drive the Russians from the ruins, just one more phase in a catastroph­ic war.

The notion of a “winner,” however, defies what is so clearly lost — the many lives and homes in the once peaceful city, known for its salt mines and sparkling wine, largely reduced to ashes.

On Friday, a few remaining civilians moved anxiously trying to find a safe path as the Russians fought in the neighborho­od where the people were taking shelter. It was not immediatel­y possible to know who the people were, where they were going and how they survived.

In a place filled with death and destructio­n, signs of life were the exception.

Over the past year, the Ukrainian government urged residents to evacuate the city of nearly 80,000 and by March, it estimated that only around 4,000 people remained.

As Russia stepped up its bombardmen­t, humanitari­an groups found working in the city impossible.

As the last Ukrainian soldiers were driven into an ever smaller area near the western entrance of the city, the Russian military turned what was once a thriving residentia­l neighborho­od into a shooting gallery.

Russia’s shelling of Bakhmut began about a year ago.

It was not until December — after months of brutal artillery duels and deadly trench warfare — that Russian forces managed to enter the eastern outskirts of the city.

As temperatur­es dropped below freezing this winter, a team from The New York Times visited Bakhmut and found that the few remaining residents mostly lived in basement bunkers. They relied on volunteers to provide food and medical supplies, occasional­ly venturing out for firewood.

The Russians advanced slowly, block by block, razing many buildings to their foundation­s to deny the Ukrainians defensible positions.

By early May, the Ukrainians were largely confined to a patch of land smaller than Central Park. Russian forces intensifie­d their bombardmen­t, aimed at driving out the last Ukrainian soldiers. By late May, they had all but succeeded.

At the western entrance of Bakhmut before the war, a group of artists in 2020 painted two large murals on the walls of high-rise buildings to offer the residents a sense of solace.

One depicted a mother holding her child aloft, sharing a moment of joy. They were both wearing garlands in their hair.

The other mural depicted a father with his son on his shoulders playing with a toy plane set against a peaceful, clear blue sky.

The mural of the mother and daughter is gone along with the multistory building that served as its canvas and home to hundreds.

On Friday, the wall with the painting of the father and son still stood, but as the drone made a pass, an explosion could be seen just in front of the building — which is now empty, battered, and lifeless, like the city itself.

 ?? MAXAR TECHNOLOGI­ES VIA AP ?? The top image shows school and apartment buildings in Bakhmut, Ukraine, on May 8, 2022, and the bottom image shows the same area on Monday.
MAXAR TECHNOLOGI­ES VIA AP The top image shows school and apartment buildings in Bakhmut, Ukraine, on May 8, 2022, and the bottom image shows the same area on Monday.

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