Kharkiv metro is a 'city' where hundreds shelter from bombardment
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[March 11, 2022]
By Vitalii Hnidyi
KHARKIV, Ukraine (Reuters) - Deep under the
streets of Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine hundreds of people are sheltering
from fierce Russian bombardment, occupying the Heroiv Pratsi metro
station where they do what they can to get comfortable.
From tiny babies to the elderly, residents sit or lie on mattresses and
blankets arranged on the ground beside ticket machines, on platforms and
inside trains halted alongside.
Some look at mobile phones, others do laundry which they dry on the
handrails of the train, mothers feed toddlers and a man hurries past
with a kettle full of water.
The scenes are similar on transport systems across the worst-affected
areas of Ukraine, although in Kharkiv, the country's second city that
has suffered some of the heaviest shelling since the invasion began, the
numbers are high.
Above ground, where people go and stand in line for food and supplies
when it is safe enough, the snow falls on near-empty streets.
Nastya, a young girl lying on her makeshift bed on the floor of the
train carriage, said she had been in the shelter for more than a week.
She said she was unable to move around much as she was sick with a virus
that had being going around.
Asked what she will do when the fighting stops, she replied: "I'll
return home, and at last have a good sleep. This is something I'm
longing for at the moment. I also want it to be over as soon as
possible.
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People shelter from shelling in a metro station, as Russia's attack
on Ukraine continues, in Kharkiv, Ukraine March 10, 2022. REUTERS/Vitalii
Hnidyi/File Photo
"I'm scared for my home, for the
homes of my friends, very scared for the whole country, and scared
for myself of course."
Valentyna, an elderly resident of Kharkiv, said she had fled to the
underground because the area where she lived was under constant
attack from artillery fire and air strikes.
The city's mayor said on Friday that Kharkiv was under relentless
bombardment from Russian forces.
"As of today, 48 (of the city's) schools have been destroyed," said
Ihor Terekhov. The city has a peacetime population of about 1.4
million, though many have fled to the relative safety of the west of
Ukraine and beyond into neighbouring countries.
Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a "special military operation"
to disarm and "de-Nazify" the country. It denies targeting
civilians.
Ukraine and its allies accuse Moscow of an unjustified invasion that
has caused a humanitarian catastrophe in which hundreds of civilians
have been killed and millions more displaced.
(Writing by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Alison Williams)
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