From AP/Yahoo:
“Ukrainian
resistance grows in Russian-occupied areas”
In a growing
challenge to Russia's grip on occupied areas of southeastern Ukraine, guerrilla
forces loyal to Kyiv are killing pro-Moscow officials, blowing up bridges and
trains, and helping the Ukrainian military by identifying key targets. The
spreading resistance has eroded Kremlin control of those areas and threatened
its plans to hold referendums in various cities as a move toward annexation by
Russia. “Our goal is to make life unbearable for the Russian occupiers and use
any means to derail their plans,” said Andriy, a 32-year-old coordinator of the
guerrilla movement in the southern Kherson region.
A member of
the Zhovta Strichka — or “Yellow Ribbon” — resistance group, Andriy spoke to
The Associated Press on condition of not being fully identified to avoid being
tracked down by the Russians. The group takes its name from one of the two
national colors of Ukraine, and its members use ribbons of that hue to mark
potential targets for guerrilla attacks.
Ukrainian troops
recently used a U.S.-supplied multiple rocket launcher known as HIMARS to hit a
strategic bridge on the Dnieper River in Kherson, severing the Russians' main
supply link. The city of 500,000 people, seized by Russian troops early in the
war, has been flooded with leaflets from the resistance, threatening
Moscow-backed officials. Just before the bridge attack, leaflets appeared,
saying, “If HIMARS can’t do it, a partisan will help.” “We are giving the
Ukrainian military precise coordinates for various targets, and the guerrillas'
assistance makes the new long-range weapons, particularly HIMARS, even more
powerful,” Andriy told the AP. “We are invisible behind the Russian lines, and
this is our strength.”
As Ukrainian
forces step up attacks in the region and reclaim some areas west of the Dnieper
River, the guerrilla activity also has increased. They coordinate with the
Ukrainian military's Special Operations Forces, which helps them develop
strategies and tactics. Those forces also select targets and set up a website
with tips on how to organize resistance, prepare ambushes and elude arrest. A
network of weapons caches and secret hideouts was established in occupied
areas. Bombs have been placed near administrative buildings, at officials'
homes and even on their routes to work. An explosive placed on a tree went off
as a vehicle carrying Kherson prison chief Yevgeny Sobolev passed by, although
he survived the attack. A police vehicle was hit by a shrapnel bomb, seriously
wounding two officers, one of whom later died. The deputy head of the local
administration in Nova Kakhovka died of wounds after being gunned down over the
weekend. Guerrillas have repeatedly tried to kill Vladimir Saldo, the head of
the Kherson region's Russia-backed temporary administration, offering a bounty
of 1 million hryvnias (about $25,000). His assistant, Pavel Slobodchikov, was
shot and killed in his vehicle, and another official, Dmytry Savluchenko, was
killed by a car bomb.
The attacks
have prompted Moscow to send anti-guerrilla units to Kherson, Saldo said. “Every
day, special units from Russia detect two or three caches with weapons for
terrorist activities,” Saldo said on his messaging app channel. “The seizure of
weapons help reduce the threat of sabotage.” Early in the occupation, thousands
of residents staged peaceful protests. But the Russian military quickly
disbanded them and arrested activists, radicalizing the resistance.
Wedding
photographer-turned-activist Oleksandr Kharchikov, 41, of Skadovsk, said he was
beaten and tortured after being arrested in a Russian security sweep. “The
Russians tortured me for a long time. They beat me with a baseball bat, they
pinched my fingers with pliers and tortured me with electric shocks,”
Kharchikov said in a telephone interview. “I suffered a concussion and a broken
rib, but I didn't give them any information, and that saved me.” Kharchikov
spent 155 days under Russian occupation until he escaped. “The repressions are
intensifying. They are creating unbearable conditions for the Ukrainians,
making it increasingly difficult to survive under Russian occupation,” he told
the AP.
The Russians
were offering 10,000 rubles ($165) to anyone applying for Russian citizenship
to strengthen their grip on the region, he said. Moscow has introduced the
ruble, set up Russian cellular networks and cut off Ukrainian television in the
area. Giant screens showing Russian TV broadcasts have been placed on the main
squares of cities. Melitopol Mayor Ivan Fedorov, who also spent a long time in
Russian captivity, told the AP that about 500 Ukrainian activists were
detained, with many tortured. Some vanished for months after their arrest. In
May and June, guerrillas blew up two railway bridges in Melitopol and derailed
two Russian military trains, Fedorov said. “The resistance movement is pursuing
three goals — to destroy Russian weapons and means of supplying them,
discrediting and intimidating the occupiers and their collaborators, and
informing Ukrainian special services about enemy positions,” he added.
Russia
responded by bolstering patrols and conducting regular sweeps for those
suspected of guerrilla links. During such raids, they check phones and arrest
those with Ukrainian symbols or photos of relatives in military uniforms. “In a
mopping-up operation, the Russians seal the entire neighborhood, halt traffic
to and from it, and methodically go from one apartment to another. If they find
any Ukrainian symbols or any link to the Ukrainian military, they put all
family members in a filtration camp,” Fedorov said. “In the best case, people
are told: ‘Get out of here if you are against Russia,’ but it also happens that
some people disappear,” he said. Of Melitopol’s prewar population of 150,000,
more than 60,000 people have left. Pro-Moscow officials are preparing for a
possible referendum on Melitopol and other occupied areas joining Russia,
conducting security raids and handing out Russian passports, Fedorov said. “We will thwart the Russian referendum. We
won't allow voting under Russian gun barrels,” he said, adding that no more
than 10% of the population sympathizes with Moscow, and half has fled. Guerrillas
have tied yellow ribbons on buildings where voting is to be held, warning
residents that they could be targeted by bombs during balloting.
The resistance
ranges from radical activists to teachers and retirees who sing Ukrainian songs
in parks and secretly wear yellow and blue ribbons. “The Russians were
expecting that they would be met with flowers, but they faced the fact that
most people consider themselves Ukrainians and are ready to offer resistance in
various forms — from collecting information to burning and blowing up the
occupiers,” said Oleksii Aleksandrov, who owned a restaurant in the southern
port of Mariupol. In one recent gesture of defiance in Mariupol, a young man
wrapped in a Ukrainian flag stood on a street next to the theater destroyed by
Russian bombs. The photo spread through Ukrainian media, and President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy hailed him in an address to the nation. “It was a very
brave thing to do, and I would like to thank him for his action,” Zelenskyy
said. “This man is one of many people who are waiting for Ukraine's comeback
and won't accept the occupation under any circumstances.”
Although
pro-Moscow sentiment is strong in Ukraine's mostly Russian-speaking industrial
heartland of the Donbas, a guerrilla movement also has emerged there. Luhansk
Gov. Serhiy Haidai said six Russian troops were wounded last month when their
vehicle was blown up by guerrillas in the city of Sievierodonetsk soon after
its seizure. They also have targeted railways, disrupting Russian munitions
shipments and other supplies. “The guerrillas have acted quite successfully,”
Haidai told the AP. “They haven't only spread leaflets. They also have
destroyed infrastructure facilities. It helps a lot to slow down the Russian
attacks and advances.” Observers say the guerrilla movement varies by region
and that it is in the interest of both sides to exaggerate its scope. “The
Russians do it to justify their repressions on the occupied territories while
the Ukrainians seek to demoralize the Russian forces and extol their
victories,” said Vadim Karasev, head of the Kyiv-based Institute of Global
Strategies think tank. “It's hard to believe the tales about Ukrainians feeding
Russian soldiers with poisoned cakes, but sometimes myths work better than
facts.”
^ Ukrainian
Partisans fought the Germans in Occupied Ukraine during World War 2 and caused
a lot of damage and deaths.
Ukrainian
Partisans are fighting Russians in Occupied Ukraine during Russia's War and are
causing a lot of damage and deaths. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/ukrainian-resistance-grows-russian-occupied-070538566.html
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