Few civilians, charred buildings in Ukraine's Lysychansk after capture
by Russia
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[July 05, 2022]
LYSYCHANSK, Ukraine (Reuters) - Up-ended
Ukrainian police cars, riddled with bullets, hulking local government
buildings scorched and holed by shells and the damaged golden dome of an
Orthodox church.
A Reuters reporter in Lysychansk, captured on Sunday by Russia and its
separatist allies, found few residents in a city that was once home to
nearly 100,000 people and widespread destruction, testament to the
ferocity of the battle to take it.
A few civilians, all women, surveyed the damage, armoured vehicles
manned by Russian-backed forces trundled around the streets and the red
Soviet victory banner - a World War Two symbol adopted by Russian forces
- hung above the entrance of a wrecked local government building, the
offices inside exposed to the elements.
The fall of Lysychansk to Russia and its proxies was hailed as an
important moment by Moscow which is now in total control of the wider
Luhansk region, one of the aims of what President Vladimir Putin calls
his "special military operation" to eliminate what he has cast as a
dangerous threat.
For Ukraine, the city's capture was a painful defeat in what it says is
an unjustified war of aggression designed to take swathes of its
territory and leave it smaller and weaker.
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It says the city is of little strategic value and that it was able to
hold off Russian forces trying to take it and a nearby city for weeks
while it took back some territory in the south of the country.
In Lysychansk on Monday, a Reuters reporter who visited with the help of
the self-proclaimed Russia-backed Luhansk People's Republic, found a
city that, bar the sounds of birds, was eerily quiet in some places
after most of its residents fled.
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A view shows a public building destroyed during Ukraine-Russia
conflict in the city of Lysychansk in the Luhansk Region, Ukraine
July 4, 2022. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
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Olga, a 67-year-old pensioner who had stayed behind,
welcomed the new-found calm.
"The situation is good now. We are only afraid of it (the fighting)
coming back," she said, saying the first thing she wanted to do was
to visit her children in Russia.
Otherwise, she said her goal was "to stay alive".
In other parts of the city, a scorched grey brick local government
building sporting the Ukrainian emblem stood empty, its upper floors
missing windows.
Burnt out cars littered the streets with the wreckage of at least
two police patrol vehicles, one upside down, its windscreen riddled
with bullets.
A long low-slung shopping centre had many of its glass-panelled
windows blasted out and the golden dome of an Orthodox church was
holed with the roof beneath it stripped back to its metal frame.
Some signs of the city's Ukrainian identity remained: a small pile
of bedraggled Ukrainian passports inside the roofless local
prosecutor's office and a Ukrainian flag abandoned on a road not far
from a crumpled van.
(Reporting by Reuters reporter; Writing by Andrew Osborn; Editing by
Janet Lawrence)
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