From VOA:
“Life Under Russian Occupation: Hunger, Fear
and Abductions”
(Demonstrators, some displaying
Ukrainian flags, chant 'go home' while Russian military vehicles reverse course
on the road, at a pro-Ukraine rally amid Russia's invasion, in Kherson, March
20, 2022 in this still image from video obtained by Reuters.)
Anhelina sat and prayed in the
basement of her home in Bucha after Russian forces overran her small town north
of Kyiv this month after fierce fighting. “There was no light, water, or gas.
It was impossible to go out because they shoot. People were being shot around
the house, which is a terrible sound, even scarier than the bombs,” said the
mother of a three-year-old daughter. That day Russian soldiers had broken into
her home and inspecting the mobile phones of her father and husband found text
messages to the local Ukrainian territorial defense forces. “They were taken
away for interrogation. And I just sat and prayed in the dark for their
return,” she told VOA in a text message. Anhelina was lucky. The men were
returned and a Russian commander who “loves children” told his men not to scare
the toddler. “They brought food, water and candy for the little one,” she says.
That was the only glimmer of hope in the terrifying days she spent under
Russian occupation. Chechen fighters “miraculously passed our house” one day.
The friendly commander told her if they had entered, they probably would have
killed her in revenge for the deaths of many of their men in a Ukrainian
ambush.
(Destroyed houses are pictured at
the border between Bucha and Irpin, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in
Irpin, March 11, 2022.)
Her story isn’t dissimilar to the
testimony of others trapped in occupied towns and villages. Ukrainians
disparagingly refer to their invaders as “orcs,” a reference to the malevolent
goblin-like beasts' author JRR Tolkien portrayed in his trilogy Lord of the
Rings.
Abductions, shots, threats
(People flee the Russia's
invasion of Ukraine, in Bucha, Ukraine March 12, 2022 in this screen grab taken
from a handout video. Video taken March 12, 2022.)
It wasn’t how Russian soldiers
expected to be greeted. Russian POWs have told their Ukrainian captors their
commanders told them they’d be welcomed as liberators. But they’re being met
with civilian protests and surliness, even in predominantly Russian-speaking
regions, to the surprise of the shunned intruders. And the occupying forces are
responding harshly — with threats, intimidation, shootings. At checkpoints men
are brusquely examined to see if their chests or backs display signs of
chaffing caused by wearing flak jackets. There have been allegations of
torture, and so far, unverified reports of rapes. Last week Ukrainian lawmaker
Lesia Vasylenko said women in some occupied towns near Kyiv had been subjected
to barbaric sexual assaults. Russian soldiers, many dispirited and demoralized,
are looting, say locals. “Orcs are hungry,” a woman in the southern town of
Kherson told VOA. “At first they would go house to house and ask for food, now
they just take it, and they steal food from passers-by and stores,” she said.
“They also take cars, trucks, and daub Z on them,” she added, in reference to
the Russian army invasion marking that’s become a pro-war Russian symbol. Locals
are split on the reasons for the looting. Some say it is a tactic of terror
aimed at breaking their will to resist; others suspect it is plain hooliganism
by ill-disciplined and hungry troops.
In Bucha, Veronika, who managed
to flee the town after living under Russian occupation for three days, told
VOA: “They use people’s houses like their own. Eat and charge up their
walkie-talkies and clean their guns. And when they leave, they steal a lot of
things also, they steal everything, even food blenders, do you understand? Even
blenders, carpets, everything. They're taking everything from our houses and
sometimes they burn houses for no reason.” She added: “Sometimes they kill
people. I don't know why. At the house of a friend, when the husband went to
the outhouse they killed him with three shots, one to the back, another one to
the stomach. I don't remember where the third one was. They never gave a
reason.”
Veronika said it got worse with
the second wave of soldiers who entered Bucha. The first wave seemed to be more
professional, more disciplined, but the soldiers who came later, many of whom
were from Chechnya, “really were beasts.” “The Russians disperse peaceful
protests with their guns. When people stand up to them, they often shoot,” the
woman in Kherson said. “One time they fired at the ground, causing ricochet
injuries. About five people were wounded,” she added. “A blogger, a girl, was
broadcasting live near them. She was stuffed into a car. Until now, nothing is
known about this girl,” she added. Kherson was encircled on February 27 and
endured a brief siege before Russia captured it on March 3, the first major
Ukrainian town to fall to Russian forces. The mayor, Igor Kolykhaiev, urged
troops who stormed a town hall meeting not to shoot civilians; he counseled
residents to heed the rules he managed to negotiate with the Russians. He
managed to persuade the invaders to allow the Ukrainian flag to remain flying
above the town hall.
(Live-streamed footage shows what
appears to be Russian troops standing in the distance with a Z-marked military vehicle
as people protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Kherson, Ukraine,
March 13, 2022, in this still image from a social media.)
The Russians may have seized
Kherson, but the town has not kowtowed. There is still episodic peaceful civil
resistance in the form of protests, which the Russians respond to stony-faced
or with shots, threats and abductions. And that is how it is playing out in
other Ukrainian towns as the Russians install new political knyaz, or masters,
and puppet administrations, according to locals in occupied towns in southern
and eastern Ukraine. On Sunday thousands of protesters rallied in Kherson and
in occupied Enerhodar, where they demanded the release of the town’s deputy
mayor, who has been abducted. Video posted on social-media sites show Russian
soldiers in Berdyansk, a port town on the Sea of Azov, beating protesters as
they lay on the ground.
The mayor of Melitopol, Ivan
Fedorov, was abducted on March 11 by Russian troops. Local residents protested.
He was released last week in exchange for nine Russian POWs. Fedorov told
Current Time TV, a Russian-language television channel overseen by Radio Free
Europe and VOA: “It is a rather difficult ordeal when they take you for seven
hours with a bag on your head, not knowing where, and you don't trust the
people who took you.” His interrogators didn’t manhandle him — they didn’t need
to as there was a constant air of menace. “Or there was someone being tortured
in the next cell over — and you could hear the screams, which absolutely
pressured you, psychologically, so that it could definitely be compared with
intimidation, with torture, and so on. So all of these six days were quite
difficult,” he said. The mayor of the small southern Ukrainian town of
Dniprorudne, was also abducted last week, according to Ukrainian authorities.
His fate is unknown.
Protests Kherson’s mayor
hasn’t been dragged off. But on Thursday the Russians announced a new governing
authority for the town, using the same name as used for other puppet
administrations, the Rescue Committee for Peace and Order. In Kherson the new
knyaz are pro-Russian politicians with links to the party of former Ukrainian
president Viktor Yanukovych, who was ousted in 2014 by the Maidan uprising.
Most of the town’s residents remain uncooperative. “Kherson's attitude to the
Russian world had been neutral before the war,” said a local woman, who asked
not to be named. “But after the events of February 24, it changed.
Numerous demonstrations show this. People show remarkable courage and bravery
during these protests,” she said. “The city is full of [pro-Russian]
separatists. These separatists are despised. Most are corrupt officials from
previous city administrations. They try to cajole people. They promise
benefits; they blackmail; they intimidate,” she added. Another said: “You can’t
complain, or they’ll put you on an enemies list.” Homes of suspected
political activists are raided. There are checkpoints across Kherson and
frequent Russian patrols stop, search and interrogate residents, checking
mobile phones. “We are seeing it a lot,” a Kherson resident said. “A lot of
people have deleted their social-media accounts or they clean up their messages
in Viber or Telegram before leaving home,” they added.
Igor Kolykhaiev, Kherson’s legal
mayor, has been trying to oversee emergency repairs and get some rudimentary
basic services functioning. The new knyaz are at a loss and issue half-baked
orders, locals say. That is reminiscent of what happened eight years ago in
Donetsk, one of the two eastern Ukrainian oblasts seized in 2014 by pro-Moscow
separatists, as this correspondent witnessed when reporting from the city. The
Moscow-backed insurrectionists who seized control of Donetsk were ignorant of
the basic mechanics of practical politics. When they stormed the local city
treasury to seize money, the treasurer had to explain that tax proceeds were
not stored in actual cash in the building. According to locals, pharmacies are
almost empty, and so. too, food stores. Despite shortages, most people won’t
accept Russian humanitarian aid that’s trucked in. “The Russians just wanted a
pretty propaganda picture,” said a local. Ukrainian humanitarian aid conveys
have been rebuffed by the Russians.
Trying to escape from occupation
isn’t easy. On March 10 Anhelina and her family heard a humanitarian corridor
was being opened up for Bucha. On the journey out, she spent a night with her
relatives and others in another basement, where a sewer broke. “and so in the
stench, cold, sitting, we waited for the morning.” “Wheelchair, white flag, a
minimum of things and we set off. We walked past the corpses of civilians [how
many of them there were]. I didn’t explain anything to the child, because I
didn’t know what to say,” she says. “Every few meters Russians ordered us to
stop and put our hands up. Later we noticed my three-year-old was also raising
her hands,” she says. At a checkpoint a civilian car sped by and hit a mine.
“There was almost nothing left,” she says. Anhelina then explained what
happened next: “You can't go back, only forward, men in front, I’m with the
wheelchair behind. Passed mines, corpses, shattered military equipment, we made
our way to freedom.” “We are safe now, but nothing will be the same. We try to
talk normally, even joke a little, but when I close my eyes, I see a road of
dead people, and how we stood with our hands up, waiting for the Russians to
decide about us.”
^ Sadly thousands of Ukrainians
are now living under harsh Russian Occupation yet they continue to resist the
Russians the same way they did the Nazis. ^
https://www.voanews.com/a/life-under-russian-occupation-hunger-fear-and-abductions-/6494205.html
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