For eastern Ukrainians, the ordeal of war is entering its second decade
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[December 01, 2023]
By Max Hunder
CHASIV YAR, Ukraine (Reuters) - Yevhen Tkachov, a volunteer aid worker
and devout Pentecostal from Ukraine's eastern Donbas region, spent much
of his life travelling to the world's war zones helping civilians in
need.
Nearly 10 years ago, his own homeland erupted into conflict, and the war
never went away.
"Right now I think it makes the most sense to help my own people," said
the 54-year-old, who is also a qualified veterinarian, after making his
daily dash to deliver aid to the residents of Chasiv Yar, a once-sleepy,
tree-lined town of 12,000 where he grew up.
It is now close to the front line between Ukrainian and Russian forces,
and many of its buildings are damaged or destroyed. The air is
frequently pierced by the crash of incoming artillery and boom of
Ukrainian cannons nearby.
Like most people from Chasiv Yar, Tkachov has moved further from the
fighting though some remain.
All of them have lived through nearly a decade of war, a reminder that
for millions in eastern Ukraine the conflict has rumbled on since 2014,
long before Russia's full-scale invasion in February last year grabbed
the world's attention.
Tkachov returns to the town each day delivering water and animal feed to
mostly elderly residents who have stayed on despite persistent
encouragement to flee.
On a recent trip, Reuters accompanied Tkachov on a visit to an
84-year-old, bedbound woman who had changed her mind and agreed to be
taken to safety.
Tkachov lifted and carried her to his pickup truck as the crackle of
gunfire broke out nearby - Ukrainian troops firing into the sky at a
Russian drone.
"I love the smell of napalm in the morning," he grinned, quoting from
the film "Apocalypse Now" and opening a fizzy drink can as the shooting
grew louder.
BUILD-UP
Ukraine and its Western allies say Russia infiltrated eastern Ukraine
with fighters and intelligence operatives to stage a coup in Donbas in
2014 which Moscow subsequently supported with regular troops.
Russia denied those allegations at the time, describing the events as a
local rebellion against a government it accused of hostility to Russian
speakers, which most Donbas residents were.
President Vladimir Putin subsequently acknowledged Russian personnel had
carried out "certain tasks" in Ukraine, and Reuters reporters found
evidence that Russian soldiers had been sent into Ukraine.
The region, comprising the provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk, was home to
over 6 million people when war broke out, many working in vast coal
mines and steel mills.
It suffered devastating economic collapse after the fall of the Soviet
Union, but by the early 2010s its fortunes were recovering. Nobody
thought war was on the horizon.
"People were renovating (homes), there were queues for workmen to put in
new windows or heating," Tkachov recalled. "Nobody thought something
like this would happen."
A popular uprising in early 2014 against pro-Russian President Viktor
Yanukovych forced him to flee to Russia by helicopter. He was from
Donetsk province and popular in the area. Many locals were suspicious of
the government that replaced him.
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Yevhen Tkachov, 54 year-old, volunteer and local citizen, carries
Nelia, 85 year-old, to a shelter for internally displaced people (IDPs)
in Kostiantynivka, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Donetsk
region, Ukraine November 8, 2023. REUTERS/Alina Smutko
Although Tkachov is pro-Ukrainian, he said many others in the region
did not share that view in 2014. Few before the war were openly
pushing to join Russia, he said, but some people did not feel fully
Ukrainian.
CRIMEA AND DONBAS
After its ally Yanukovych was ousted from Kyiv, Russia annexed
Crimea, the southernmost part of Ukraine which was also home to
Moscow's Black Sea fleet.
Armed militants also began seizing government buildings and declared
"people's republics" in Donetsk and Luhansk, and, after an initial
period of shock, Kyiv sent in an army hollowed out by decades of
neglect.
"People saw all these rustbuckets breaking down on our roads, and so
few people bet on Ukraine," recalled Tkachov, referring to old
military vehicles deployed at the time. He began to deliver clothes,
food and medicine to Ukrainian soldiers.
He said that, while delivering aid and helping evacuate people from
the then-separatist controlled city of Sloviansk in July 2014, he
and his friend were arrested, detained and accused of helping target
Ukrainian artillery and being foreign spies.
"We laughed at them, really," he added.
A verdict at his trial never came. The Ukrainian army, by now
bolstered by volunteers and donations, was on the attack and their
captors locked the men in cells and rushed off, vowing to return.
Reuters was unable to verify the events independently, but Tkachov
said he eventually discovered the separatists had fled.
"An old man with a torch opened the cell door and said: guys, come
out, there's nobody here," he said.
FULL-SCALE WAR
The U.N. human rights office estimated that more than 14,000
military personnel and civilians were killed in eastern Ukraine from
early April 2014 to the end of 2021.
Unlike some of his neighbours, Tkachov took warnings that Russia
could launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 seriously, and
prepared the old people's home he ran in Chasiv Yar for a lengthy
blockade.
When Russia did attack on Feb. 24, 2022, one thing stunned him: the
response of other locals was one of defiance and resistance, a
marked contrast to 2014.
"I was so surprised by the patriotism," he said. "I didn't think
that thousands of people would join territorial defence units!"
Tkachov put the change down to a generational shift: teachers who
learnt Ukrainian history after independence and the fading influence
of those who pined for a return to Soviet ways.
Still, the war is not over. Tens of thousands of Russian troops are
trying to smash through Ukrainian lines across Donetsk and Luhansk.
"I am currently pessimistic, although a year ago I was optimistic,"
Tkachov said, when asked about the region's future.
(Reporting by Max Hunder; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Timothy
Heritage)
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