Time running out for Ukrainians fleeing Russia's advance
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[July 05, 2024]
By Anna Voitenko and Alina Smutko
TORETSK, Ukraine (Reuters) - In the devastated eastern Ukrainian town of
Toretsk, time is running out for anyone wanting to leave.
Russian forces are advancing slowly but surely, pummeling the town night
and day with rockets, artillery fire and air attacks, part of a broad
advance in the Donetsk region that Ukraine has been unable to stop.
Piles of rubble lie where buildings once stood, burned out apartment
blocks have become unliveable, a church tower has fallen and plumes of
smoke rise in the near distance from incoming shells.
In a residential courtyard a group of mainly elderly residents gather to
listen to Ivan, a police officer in camouflage fatigues who is trying to
convince them to leave Toretsk with his evacuation team.
Hundreds of officers like him and Ukrainian volunteers are trying to do
the same in towns and villages along the frontline before they are
reduced to rubble and subsumed into territory held by the Russians.
"Are you all staying?" he asked, speaking firmly and quickly. "Can you
not see how the situation is changing? If you think you will sit it out
- this is not going to happen."
His offer has been taken up by some and turned down by others. Many
people who remain do not want to leave for an uncertain life in safer
parts of Ukraine. Others refuse to be separated from elderly relatives
and friends.
"It is just me that is left, everyone else is buried," said Valentyna, a
former school headmistress who gave only her first name. "Planes are
flying in every night and attacking, especially the last two days,"
added the 75-year-old, crying.
'ALL COVERED IN BLOOD'
A woman next to her shouted: "God has given us earth and sky, and they
(the Russians) trampled all over it, covered it in blood. It is all
covered in blood. And the young boys..."
Some 5,000 people remain in Toretsk, according to Tetyana Nikonova, a
representative of the local military administration, speaking as
residents wanting to evacuate gathered around minivans with a few
personal belongings.
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Local residents react as they refuse to be evacuated, amid Russia's
attack on Ukraine, in the town of Toretsk, near a front line in
Donetsk region, Ukraine July 3, 2024. REUTERS/Alina Smutko/File
Photo
That compares with an estimated population of some 35,000 a decade
ago.
"Many people refuse to leave. We talk to them, the boys try to
convince them, but they do not want to go," she said. "We offer them
all that we can, accommodation, transport, all for free, but people
hide in basements."
Oleksandr is going to evacuate, but before he does he and members of
the police force release the chickens from their coop in his yard
and a dog and goats off their leashes.
Valentyna Natyazhko, 88, fled Toretsk earlier, but is back briefly
to collect the refrigerator from her apartment because she needs it
in her new home in the nearby town of Kostiantynivka.
"All the food got spoiled there, I had to throw away sausage,
mayonnaise, butter," she said. "I came to take this fridge. Fridges
are expensive, where will I get money to buy one?"
Sergiy and Iryna, a couple sitting together on a bench outside their
apartment, discussed whether or not to leave. Police officers told
them to be at the same place the following morning to be collected
if they decided to go.
"I worry we will not be able to come back, no one will let us back
here," said Sergiy, 65.
"But we will leave, Sergiy Yuriyevych, won't we?" asked Iryna in
tears, turning to him and touching his hand.
"We'll leave," he sighed. We'll leave."
(Writing by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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