Zürcher Nachrichten - Market day on Ukraine front charts Russia's advance

EUR -
AED 3.889183
AFN 71.737571
ALL 98.132997
AMD 409.225232
ANG 1.899671
AOA 964.599267
ARS 1057.242735
AUD 1.628259
AWG 1.900647
AZN 1.794683
BAM 1.955443
BBD 2.128312
BDT 125.956987
BGN 1.955461
BHD 0.399131
BIF 3112.860661
BMD 1.058857
BND 1.417054
BOB 7.283669
BRL 6.082285
BSD 1.054057
BTN 88.945449
BWP 14.380508
BYN 3.449002
BYR 20753.5882
BZD 2.124712
CAD 1.484088
CDF 3033.62413
CHF 0.936432
CLF 0.03737
CLP 1031.146428
CNY 7.663266
CNH 7.659053
COP 4663.087732
CRC 536.806992
CUC 1.058857
CUP 28.059698
CVE 110.244858
CZK 25.29501
DJF 187.704569
DKK 7.459216
DOP 63.508996
DZD 141.267524
EGP 52.372947
ERN 15.882848
ETB 130.479893
FJD 2.402755
FKP 0.835773
GBP 0.835965
GEL 2.895998
GGP 0.835773
GHS 16.811928
GIP 0.835773
GMD 75.178395
GNF 9083.426191
GTQ 8.143512
GYD 220.51971
HKD 8.242309
HNL 26.625387
HRK 7.553098
HTG 138.466009
HUF 406.533113
IDR 16770.699322
ILS 3.959404
IMP 0.835773
INR 89.367811
IQD 1380.912907
IRR 44583.154415
ISK 144.501697
JEP 0.835773
JMD 167.291015
JOD 0.750839
JPY 163.876581
KES 136.761754
KGS 91.596627
KHR 4259.262033
KMF 494.035988
KPW 952.970485
KRW 1475.569683
KWD 0.32563
KYD 0.878348
KZT 525.928877
LAK 23156.987783
LBP 94390.645726
LKR 307.096792
LRD 193.423794
LSL 19.089593
LTL 3.126528
LVL 0.640492
LYD 5.148302
MAD 10.553472
MDL 19.152682
MGA 4927.146315
MKD 61.523759
MMK 3439.124741
MNT 3597.994469
MOP 8.451855
MRU 42.025719
MUR 49.23062
MVR 16.358998
MWK 1827.783315
MXN 21.481182
MYR 4.744204
MZN 67.654933
NAD 19.089593
NGN 1766.204789
NIO 38.793279
NOK 11.664231
NPR 142.307344
NZD 1.799018
OMR 0.407745
PAB 1.054007
PEN 4.006468
PGK 4.240265
PHP 62.134004
PKR 292.816466
PLN 4.313576
PYG 8215.886871
QAR 3.844098
RON 4.975673
RSD 116.980344
RUB 105.624971
RWF 1447.949126
SAR 3.975036
SBD 8.88425
SCR 14.356313
SDG 636.917254
SEK 11.573079
SGD 1.41828
SHP 0.835773
SLE 23.958456
SLL 22203.697248
SOS 602.395628
SRD 37.488815
STD 21916.192572
SVC 9.223402
SYP 2660.408674
SZL 19.082694
THB 36.604709
TJS 11.21558
TMT 3.716586
TND 3.331491
TOP 2.479945
TRY 36.641203
TTD 7.15576
TWD 34.400131
TZS 2803.814207
UAH 43.653736
UGX 3870.292875
USD 1.058857
UYU 45.201741
UZS 13505.170252
VES 48.421804
VND 26910.838985
VUV 125.709576
WST 2.955894
XAF 655.843368
XAG 0.033979
XAU 0.000406
XCD 2.861613
XDR 0.801861
XOF 655.86814
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.581812
ZAR 19.005095
ZMK 9530.97796
ZMW 29.067062
ZWL 340.951374
  • CMSC

    0.1100

    24.68

    +0.45%

  • GSK

    0.3800

    33.73

    +1.13%

  • SCS

    0.0250

    13.255

    +0.19%

  • RBGPF

    1.6500

    61.84

    +2.67%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    27.15

    +1.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    6.85

    +1.02%

  • BCC

    1.0450

    141.135

    +0.74%

  • RIO

    1.2100

    62.19

    +1.95%

  • VOD

    0.1550

    8.925

    +1.74%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    24.42

    -0.08%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.21

    +0.83%

  • BP

    0.5150

    29.495

    +1.75%

  • NGG

    0.1400

    62.89

    +0.22%

  • BTI

    0.2850

    36.675

    +0.78%

  • RELX

    0.6700

    45.12

    +1.48%

  • AZN

    0.3050

    63.535

    +0.48%

Market day on Ukraine front charts Russia's advance

Market day on Ukraine front charts Russia's advance

The Ukrainian farmer thought it was fear that made her neighbours age so much in the week since she saw them come out for market day on the eastern front.

Text size:

The Russians had pushed a lot closer to her town of Soledar since Tetyana Barshchevska last set out her stall on the opposite side of the street from an already-destroyed grocery store.

The local salt mine now had a chunk of it smashed in by a missile and the main road where the buses once stopped was being torn apart by artillery fire.

But Barshchevska was mostly worried about what the fourth month of Russia's invasion might do to her pigs and cows.

"I have invested everything in them. All my labour has been poured into the farm," the 47-year-old said from behind a foldout table laden with slabs of meat and jars of sour cream.

A few elderly women and stern looking men swapped horror stories about their sleepless nights and narrow escapes.

Barshchevska looked closely at her friends and then back down at her table full of meat.

"It really struck me today how much everyone has aged in the past week," she said during an afternoon lull in battles on three sides of her town.

"It is from fear. You can see it in their eyes. Their eyes are older."

- Left behind -

A deep new trench south of Soledar cuts to the core of locals' concerns.

The Russians have crept up to Ukraine's historic salt mining centre in a pincer movement that threatens to ensnare some of its toughest troops.

The road leading northeast -- now under intermittent Russian control -- ends in two besieged and deserted industrial cities that Ukraine refuses to formally cede.

Soledar's next-door neighbour Bakhmut has seen the Russians creep up to within three kilometres (two miles) of its eastern edge.

The road leading northwest is cut off by a Russian advance aimed at seizing the symbolicly important twin cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk -- Ukraine's centre for the eastern war zone.

But very few Ukrainian reinforcements are moving along any of these shelled highways.

The trenches to the south suggest that Ukraine is preparing to fall back to a new defensive position that leaves places such as Soledar behind.

The locals gathering at the town's tiny market are sounding an increasingly fatalistic note.

"If it kills me, it kills me," pensioner Volodymyr Selevyorstov said of the rocket and artillery fire that could smash into his stall at any moment.

"The other day my neighbour's cow was killed by shrapnel and I had to pull it out of the yard so that it would not stink," he recalled with a wry smile.

"I am waiting for my own two cows to get blown up today or perhaps tomorrow. That is how we live."

- 'Where can I run?' -

Soledar's bigger neighbour Bakhmut was once a frontline oasis that provided a home for Western relief groups.

Its roads are now littered with destroyed government buildings and warehouses that the Russians hit with daily rocket and missile fire.

Mobile Ukrainian units strike back from various positions in and around the largely emptied town.

They then try to move before the Russians have a chance to locate them and return fire.

This deadly cat-and-mouse game is wearing on the nerves of retired Bakhmut banker Valentyna Pavlenko.

The 69-year-old was tugging a two-wheel cart past the jagged remains of a school that residents say briefly housed a Ukrainian military unit.

"Where can I run? They are shooting everywhere you go, so where can you possibly run?" she asked in exasperation.

"If something explodes near me, my only wish is not to become disabled. I do not want to be bedridden. If it hits, I want it to be quick."

- Alive to danger -

Factory worker Denis Aleksandrov felt more alive exposed to the dangers of shellfire.

The 42-year-old had lost his job months ago because of the fighting and was now helping clean potatoes at one of the Soledar market stalls.

He was as resigned to the possibility of instant death as most of his neighbours.

But he was was also extremely tired of being nagged by fear.

"Why even hide?" he asked while cleaning his potatoes. "If the shell comes flying in, it can hit anywhere, no matter where you hide."

He sounded relieved to have something to occupy his hands and mind in wartime.

"You cower in a basement like a fool, with crazy thoughts running through your head," he said.

"Out here, you can talk to people. We all know each other by now. So it makes it a little easier."

O.Pereira--NZN