Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
The Fight For Survival On The New Front Line In Ukraine
The Independent
|July 06, 2022
War has now arrived in the city of Kramatorsk in Donetsk, as Russia vows to push further into Ukrainian territory. For its residents, every day is a battle to stay alive, reports Bel Trew
-
Olena and her husband Nikolai were trying to bury an elderly neighbour when the sky cracked open, spitting shards of shrapnel that split open their teenage daughter’s head.
Nikolai, 52, was a little further up the hill in the Ukrainian frontline village, and still holding the neighbour’s body, which he used to shield himself from the worst of the blast. Cowering under a corpse, he could only watch powerless with horror as his wife and his child Anastasia, 15, were shredded by the Russian strike in their own back garden.
Their village in Donetsk is quite literally on the front line of the ferocious war that started with Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February. Located just a few metres into patchily held Ukrainian territory, it may soon be engulfed by Russian troops, who have pressed on with an advance into Donetsk after capturing the whole of the adjacent Luhansk region.

And so it is a hellish no man’s land, where villagers cower in their basements as the tug of war rages above them.
“I was screaming Anastasia’s name, I was screaming Anastasia’s dead,” Olena, 51, says in tears from her hospital bed in Kramatorsk, a city that is itself under attack, around 18 miles south of the village. Medics tending to her say she received severe wounds to her head, arms and legs in the bombing, which took place the day before the interview.
“My daughter’s head had been cracked open; you could see her brain. She is my only child,” Olena adds before breaking off.
Bu hikaye The Independent dergisinin July 06, 2022 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Independent'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Independent
NBA returns with glamour, glitz and a glaring problem
The breathless action on court was accompanied by constant pageantry, politics in the form of anti-Trump shouts... and plenty of empty seats
4 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
This year's Traitors are the only ones worth rooting for
January often feels about six weeks long, but it seems like just days ago that Claudia Winkleman reappeared on our screens on New Year's Day, clad in her finest knitwear, to welcome 22 contestants to The Traitors’ Ardross Castle. And now, suddenly, the series is in its final week.
3 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
Why merging police forces may prove to be a dead end
Two of the country's most senior police officers have voiced support for a mass merger of the present 43 separate police forces in England and Wales into as few as 15 or even 10 regional organisations.
2 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
Transfer slip-up sent Guehi along the East Lancs Road
Having come so close to signing the England international over the summer, Liverpool must now swallow the bitter pill of having been out-thought by Man City
4 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
Threatening language shows an abusive husband-in-chief
The US president's leaked letter to Norway's prime minister, Jonas Gahr Store, isn't just “typical” Trump – it's toxic, too.
3 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
You are wrong to threaten tariffs, Starmer tells Trump
PM urges calm amid fears trade war could spark recession
4 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
SOME LIKE IT HOT
Tech critic David Phelan picks the top smart thermostats
4 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
President's ambition meets its match in solid Starmer
In refusing to retaliate, the prime minister has become the immoveable object of global politics
3 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
The grim reality of being (and having) a lodger today
More people are taking in boarders to make ends meet, but there's a price to pay on both sides
7 mins
January 20, 2026
The Independent
A social media ban will do teens more harm than good
When Keir Starmer said yesterday morning, in response to a question at his press conference about Greenland, that “no options are off the table” for protecting children online, he was doing what politicians do: sounding decisive while the details stay vague - at least for now.
3 mins
January 20, 2026
Translate
Change font size

