Texarkana Gazette

Ukrainians on front lines say ‘we aren’t leaving’

- Trudy Rubin TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

MARIUPOL, Ukraine — The airport in Ukraine’s second-largest port is shut. A Moscow-led “rebellion” around the city in 2014 made it too dangerous for planes to fly in.

At that time, Mariupol repelled the Russian-backed ”rebels.” But the city still sits adjacent to the front line, separated from a Russiancon­trolled enclave in eastern Ukraine only by military checkpoint­s that bar most vehicles — and by a buffer zone of wrecked seaside homes.

On a visit a week ago, as I spoke with locals and refugees from nearby Russianocc­upied territory, I could easily imagine the future Vladimir Putin envisions for Ukraine. If Russia can gain control of the entire country via a second invasion, or can at least expand the eastern enclaves that Moscow already controls to include Mariupol, the outlook is grim.

Although the city is calm for the moment, the drama swirling around it is the most momentous crisis to beset Europe since the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union. It will test whether, 30 years later, Putin can re-create the heart of the Soviet empire by threatenin­g or using force.

To reach Mariupol from the capital, Kyiv, I had to take a 15-hour night train that passed interminab­le stretches of flat farmlands separated by rows of ash and cottonwood trees. The city itself is dominated by two massive steelworks and by the rail tracks on which rolled metal sheets are carried to loading docks on the Sea of Azov.

The city’s port is operating at only around 50% to 60% capacity because Russia now illegally controls the narrow entrance to the Azov and often blocks the entry of internatio­nal ships that export Ukraine’s steel and grain to the world.

In better days, Mariupol was a tourist destinatio­n, with modest beach resorts and a small, attractive historic downtown centered on the Greek revival-style drama theater in the main square.

Then came 2014, when Russia sent thuggish Ukrainian “separatist­s” from Moscow to eastern Ukraine to lead the rebellion against the Kyiv government. (During a 2014 visit to nearby Donetsk, I interviewe­d some of the separatist leaders and they made no secret of their Moscow affiliatio­ns.)

Separatist militias lobbed shells at a market place in the eastern section of Mariupol in 2015, killing dozens of civilians. I stopped at two poignant stone memorials on the spot where the innocent victims were blown apart as they shopped at vegetable stalls, including a mother who famously died saving her small daughter, though the child lost an arm.

Local fighters drove out Moscow’s armed minions at the time. But when I interviewe­d Kseniya Sukhova, secretary of the Mariupol City Council, I learned that her office is still in a temporary location, because the original city hall remains a wreck, gutted by the invaders.

“Unfortunat­ely, we have been living for the past eight years under a slow-burning conflict,” she told me. She is gamely trying to pro

Civic activists are mobilizing to be ready in case the wors materializ­es. Kateryna Sukhomlyno­va was one of thousands of civilians who rose to the occasion in 2015 when the separatist­s attacked an unprepared

Ukrainian army that was barely functionin­g, without uniforms or food. “We tried to help any way we could,” she said. “We cooked borscht and soup for them,” she added, starting to cry at the memories.

Now, aided by the Maltese Red Cross, she has organized several projects to ensure that volunteers are prepared to aid a far better organized Ukrainian army as well as local civilians, in case of another invasion.

“The reality is so different now,” she said, standing in her office under paintings of civilians tortured and murdered by the invaders in 2015. “People from all over Ukraine are sending food. Even babushkas [grannies] are sending the last [cents] from their pensions.

“Medical aid is now being sent from Germany and Poland,” she continued, “to help train local people in first aid in case another war starts. We’re not as helpless as we were in 2014.”

However, Sukhomlyno­va is worried that City Hall has not notified citizens schoolkids, or teachers of where they can shelter in case of an air attack.

Yet, she said, locals will not flee if the fighting starts again.

“We would like the world to know this is our land, our hometown, and we are not leaving,” she said firmly.

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