Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Critically stable': Ukraine's last stand for easternmost hub

EUR -
AED 3.766641
AFN 73.23806
ALL 98.213989
AMD 412.332779
ANG 1.856297
AOA 935.240708
ARS 1062.018763
AUD 1.66908
AWG 1.848433
AZN 1.747392
BAM 1.955481
BBD 2.079661
BDT 125.649516
BGN 1.955987
BHD 0.386137
BIF 3046.903275
BMD 1.025483
BND 1.40867
BOB 7.11684
BRL 6.280229
BSD 1.030032
BTN 88.642549
BWP 14.496637
BYN 3.37075
BYR 20099.463259
BZD 2.068963
CAD 1.479356
CDF 2943.136063
CHF 0.93984
CLF 0.037515
CLP 1035.163783
CNY 7.519562
CNH 7.551092
COP 4459.872923
CRC 519.91524
CUC 1.025483
CUP 27.175295
CVE 110.247027
CZK 25.104029
DJF 183.420098
DKK 7.46716
DOP 63.229692
DZD 139.334285
EGP 51.791557
ERN 15.382242
ETB 129.247629
FJD 2.398301
FKP 0.812164
GBP 0.840274
GEL 2.89703
GGP 0.812164
GHS 15.192523
GIP 0.812164
GMD 73.325971
GNF 8906.547999
GTQ 7.948704
GYD 215.494869
HKD 7.985999
HNL 26.19473
HRK 7.355692
HTG 134.558063
HUF 413.751951
IDR 16732.956986
ILS 3.785027
IMP 0.812164
INR 88.392009
IQD 1349.280032
IRR 43160.012072
ISK 144.839589
JEP 0.812164
JMD 161.513669
JOD 0.727482
JPY 161.772006
KES 133.328264
KGS 89.217365
KHR 4163.321269
KMF 490.232455
KPW 922.933964
KRW 1511.689901
KWD 0.316366
KYD 0.85836
KZT 543.59138
LAK 22474.336092
LBP 92236.063097
LKR 303.410536
LRD 192.6086
LSL 19.575809
LTL 3.027985
LVL 0.620305
LYD 5.09117
MAD 10.352112
MDL 19.250862
MGA 4877.204887
MKD 61.519971
MMK 3330.728196
MNT 3484.590487
MOP 8.259753
MRU 41.107298
MUR 48.023749
MVR 15.796269
MWK 1786.008834
MXN 21.244214
MYR 4.611088
MZN 65.532176
NAD 19.575809
NGN 1591.006216
NIO 37.903821
NOK 11.768944
NPR 141.827878
NZD 1.845655
OMR 0.394366
PAB 1.030032
PEN 3.875868
PGK 4.129327
PHP 60.512755
PKR 286.853535
PLN 4.269649
PYG 8087.681495
QAR 3.755088
RON 4.980877
RSD 117.065915
RUB 104.230108
RWF 1432.766421
SAR 3.849289
SBD 8.65448
SCR 14.727599
SDG 616.315522
SEK 11.50462
SGD 1.405223
SHP 0.812164
SLE 23.330115
SLL 21503.865086
SOS 588.604042
SRD 35.999613
STD 21225.423919
SVC 9.012531
SYP 2576.556598
SZL 19.571809
THB 35.613006
TJS 11.237268
TMT 3.58919
TND 3.306261
TOP 2.401787
TRY 36.336395
TTD 6.99186
TWD 33.955073
TZS 2592.477358
UAH 43.558099
UGX 3808.379134
USD 1.025483
UYU 44.972668
UZS 13345.82428
VES 55.18254
VND 26016.499127
VUV 121.747374
WST 2.833191
XAF 655.850079
XAG 0.033731
XAU 0.000381
XCD 2.771419
XDR 0.793171
XOF 655.850079
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.601965
ZAR 19.600823
ZMK 9230.579631
ZMW 28.453361
ZWL 330.205049
  • NGG

    -1.8500

    56.13

    -3.3%

  • RELX

    -0.4000

    46.37

    -0.86%

  • RBGPF

    60.4900

    60.49

    +100%

  • RIO

    0.2100

    58.84

    +0.36%

  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    22.92

    -0.79%

  • SCS

    -0.3300

    10.97

    -3.01%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.07

    -0.42%

  • AZN

    0.4300

    67.01

    +0.64%

  • GSK

    -0.6600

    33.09

    -1.99%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • BCC

    -1.5200

    115.88

    -1.31%

  • BTI

    -0.8400

    35.9

    -2.34%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    12.08

    -1.16%

  • BCE

    -0.6700

    22.96

    -2.92%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    8.05

    -1.99%

  • BP

    0.1700

    31.29

    +0.54%

'Critically stable': Ukraine's last stand for easternmost hub
'Critically stable': Ukraine's last stand for easternmost hub / Photo: Yasuyoshi CHIBA - AFP

'Critically stable': Ukraine's last stand for easternmost hub

The dozen jumpy and exhausted soldiers cowering under a bridge from incoming shellfire formed Ukraine's last line of defence against Russia's assault on this easternmost city still held by Kyiv.

Text size:

Behind them lay the smouldering remains of what was once a 100,000-strong industrial hub filled with Soviet-era apartment towers and a major chemicals plant.

But their eyes were trained on a field on the opposite side of the bridge from which the Russians had spent the night firing missiles at the last defenders of Severodonetsk.

If the city falls on Sunday, it would mean the Kremlin has gained de facto control of Lugansk -- the smaller of the two republics comprising the Donbas war zone -- in time for Russia's annual Victory Day celebrations on Monday.

The heavily-armed combat soldiers manning the underpass on the northern edge of the city were anxiously shouting commands into their walkie-talkies next to a burnt-out van.

A few anti-tank missiles lay next to a kettle they kept over an open fire to fill their thermoses with tea.

The eerily empty road leading toward the Russians was strewn with the twisted remains of munitions and power lines ripped off their posts by incessant blasts.

The soldiers looked too tired to put on a brave face.

"I would rather not guess how long we can hold on. All I can say is that we are here now," said their unit commander under condition that his name not be used on security grounds.

"The best way to describe the situation? Critically stable," he said with a sardonic laugh.

- Communication blackout -

A clear pattern has emerged on Ukraine's eastern front in the third month of Russia's assault on its pro-Western neighbour.

Ukrainian units are counterattacking and making gains to the east of the northern city of Kharkiv.

But the Russians are chewing up territory roughly 100 miles (160 kilometres) to the southeast of the Ukrainian push.

The two forces are converging for an even bigger battle that could determine if the Russians can capture Ukraine's eastern administration centre in Kramatorsk.

The frontlines are shifting across open fields and valleys dotted with industrial towns and rural settlements that have lost almost all links to the outside world.

Severodonetsk has been transformed into a moonscape of roads filled with craters and buildings charred by mortar and missile attacks.

Some locals braved the fighting to try and knit together the ripped power lines by climbing their wooden poles.

"We have had no power or water for two weeks," said welder Gennady Lastovets while waiting for a car that promised to evacuate his 81-year-old father.

"But I honestly have no idea how the war is going," the 55-year-old said. "There are rumours, but we have no internet, no phone service."

- Losing hope -

All Galina Abdurashikova knew was that she was still alive after crawling out barefoot from under a missile strike on her apartment and then spending the next five days alone in an abandoned car.

But 65-year-old was slowly losing hope.

"I have nothing to eat or drink. I had a bottle of water, but not anymore and my mouth is dry," she whispered.

Her beat-up Lada was the lone vehicle left on a major street running through an industrial zone in which no one -- neither soldiers nor civilians -- seemed willing to step outside.

"Now I am not afraid of anything anymore," she said of the bangs that erupted every few seconds from various part of the city as she spoke.

"At first I was afraid that those things would would kill me, but now I am not afraid. If it hits me, it hits me."

- 'They fled' -

The city is now run by a civil-military administration that operates out of a building that once housed more than half a dozen US and European relief agencies.

But the foreign aid workers were forced to comply with evacuation orders issued by their respective governments before the war broke out on February 24.

The remaining volunteers -- including a few from Europe -- feel abandoned and betrayed. Much of their work now depends on support from Ukrainian soldiers who help sort and distributed the food.

"They fled and they never looked back," British humanitarian aid volunteer Philip Ivlev-York fumed while showing off the looted office of one of the European relief agencies.

City administration chief Oleksandr Stryup was busy in the building's basement leafing through papers to determine where to send the remaining supplies.

A salvo of missile-defence fire from a fortified position in front of the building shattered his concentration and forced him to look up from his desk.

"The situation is getting tenser because the attacks are becoming more frequent," Stryup conceded.

"They are trying to take the city. And we are defending it."

U.Ammann--NZN