Zürcher Nachrichten - 'They bomb and they bomb': Anguish in Ukraine frontline city

EUR -
AED 3.880525
AFN 71.559771
ALL 97.888854
AMD 408.214835
ANG 1.894954
AOA 964.04986
ARS 1054.901151
AUD 1.626373
AWG 1.899061
AZN 1.791764
BAM 1.950615
BBD 2.122946
BDT 125.645993
BGN 1.95785
BHD 0.398191
BIF 3105.174851
BMD 1.056501
BND 1.413556
BOB 7.265686
BRL 6.091468
BSD 1.051395
BTN 88.72165
BWP 14.344731
BYN 3.440454
BYR 20707.429081
BZD 2.119356
CAD 1.481411
CDF 3032.158849
CHF 0.933345
CLF 0.037276
CLP 1028.556963
CNY 7.648651
CNH 7.648965
COP 4645.437024
CRC 535.476533
CUC 1.056501
CUP 27.997289
CVE 109.972658
CZK 25.289459
DJF 187.231393
DKK 7.459682
DOP 63.351591
DZD 140.914209
EGP 52.306436
ERN 15.847522
ETB 130.156503
FJD 2.398995
FKP 0.833915
GBP 0.836021
GEL 2.878942
GGP 0.833915
GHS 16.770419
GIP 0.833915
GMD 75.01102
GNF 9060.913217
GTQ 8.123405
GYD 219.975236
HKD 8.223221
HNL 26.559397
HRK 7.536299
HTG 138.122826
HUF 407.120205
IDR 16760.920614
ILS 3.955462
IMP 0.833915
INR 89.199049
IQD 1377.425329
IRR 44470.787022
ISK 145.290006
JEP 0.833915
JMD 166.877965
JOD 0.749375
JPY 162.817821
KES 136.819003
KGS 91.378443
KHR 4248.705592
KMF 491.008921
KPW 950.850935
KRW 1471.268122
KWD 0.324872
KYD 0.876163
KZT 524.625379
LAK 23099.593948
LBP 94156.701603
LKR 306.335663
LRD 192.937112
LSL 19.04228
LTL 3.119574
LVL 0.639067
LYD 5.135324
MAD 10.527415
MDL 19.105212
MGA 4914.888147
MKD 61.56442
MMK 3431.475608
MNT 3589.991985
MOP 8.430589
MRU 41.921559
MUR 48.895218
MVR 16.333456
MWK 1823.253214
MXN 21.410795
MYR 4.725732
MZN 67.536887
NAD 19.04228
NGN 1762.022587
NIO 38.697131
NOK 11.663032
NPR 141.95464
NZD 1.795886
OMR 0.406777
PAB 1.051405
PEN 3.996576
PGK 4.229756
PHP 62.25011
PKR 292.087973
PLN 4.331111
PYG 8195.175837
QAR 3.834606
RON 4.976909
RSD 116.999136
RUB 106.122062
RWF 1444.374067
SAR 3.966271
SBD 8.84241
SCR 14.388676
SDG 635.481738
SEK 11.588944
SGD 1.415247
SHP 0.833915
SLE 23.929725
SLL 22154.312867
SOS 600.908283
SRD 37.405455
STD 21867.447645
SVC 9.200455
SYP 2654.491523
SZL 19.035218
THB 36.535406
TJS 11.18736
TMT 3.697755
TND 3.323266
TOP 2.474429
TRY 36.534566
TTD 7.138025
TWD 34.258647
TZS 2803.935894
UAH 43.545131
UGX 3860.736936
USD 1.056501
UYU 45.090136
UZS 13471.189303
VES 48.317523
VND 26840.420194
VUV 125.429979
WST 2.94932
XAF 654.214793
XAG 0.033755
XAU 0.000402
XCD 2.855248
XDR 0.799866
XOF 654.211705
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.967209
ZAR 19.088895
ZMK 9509.780441
ZMW 28.993788
ZWL 340.193047
  • BCC

    -2.7300

    138.81

    -1.97%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4400

    59.75

    -0.74%

  • AZN

    0.2550

    63.645

    +0.4%

  • GSK

    -0.2560

    33.434

    -0.77%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    61.98

    -0.23%

  • BCE

    -0.1350

    27.095

    -0.5%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    13.04

    -1.23%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.23

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.0500

    36.63

    -0.14%

  • NGG

    0.2900

    63.19

    +0.46%

  • RELX

    -0.0300

    45.01

    -0.07%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    24.37

    -0.08%

  • BP

    -0.3800

    29.04

    -1.31%

  • CMSC

    -0.0090

    24.615

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    -0.0550

    8.865

    -0.62%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    6.65

    -3.01%

'They bomb and they bomb': Anguish in Ukraine frontline city
'They bomb and they bomb': Anguish in Ukraine frontline city / Photo: ARIS MESSINIS - AFP

'They bomb and they bomb': Anguish in Ukraine frontline city

Maksym Katerin was red-eyed Monday as he showed the fresh graves of his mother and stepfather, scattered with rose petals, in his garden in Ukraine's frontline city of Lysychansk.

Text size:

On Sunday afternoon at around 5 pm, a shell ripped through his peaceful garden with its piglets and chickens, instantly killing his mother Nataliya and her husband Mykola, both 65, leaving their mutilated bodies on the ground.

"I don't know who did this, but if I knew, I would tear off their arms," said Katerin.

After months of shelling, the strategic city in eastern Ukraine is massively damaged with no water, electricity or phone signal.

Ukrainian artillery uses its high ground to exchange fire with Russian forces fighting for control of Severodonetsk, just across the river.

Katerin's neighbour Yevgeniya Panicheva wept, saying Katerin's mother "was lying here, her stomach was ripped and her guts were falling out. She was a very good, kind and helpful woman. Why did they do this to her?"

"They bomb and they bomb and we don't know what to do."

Their leafy street lined with mulberry and cherry trees lies close to Russian forces just across the river, with Ukrainian artillery positioned nearby. One house was completely obliterated by earlier shelling and an unexploded device could be seen sticking out of the road.

They were not the only Lysychansk residents to die Sunday: a six-year-old boy was also killed, police told AFP, showing a photo of the crater from the shell, which scattered deadly shrapnel.

In the city centre, severed power cables lay in the street, with burnt-out shopping malls and the acrid smell of smoke in a yellow sky.

In one street, smoke rose from charred, roofless houses.

Soldiers and police drove cars with missing windows and AFP saw police haul in three youths with sacks full of looted goods.

- 'The pits' -

One policeman described the situation as "the pits".

"Shells are flying in and hitting the city centre," he said, while his colleague added: "It's 24/7."

"With every day, you see for yourself that the shelling doesn't diminish, it is only intensifying," Oleksandr Pokhna, a lieutenant-colonel in Lugansk region's police special forces, told AFP.

Pokhna said police were trying to encourage as many residents as possible to go to evacuation points to be taken to safer parts of the country.

The boom of shelling was almost non-stop, and AFP journalists also heard the prolonged thundering of Russian multiple rocket launcher systems.

At the entrance to the city, the roadside had craters from shelling and a cluster bomb stuck up from the ground. There were burnt-out cars at a checkpoint.

The few people out were on foot or bicycles.

Residents standing in line for greenish non-drinking water at the fire station said they were unable to leave, blaming lack of money or relatives, or the need to look after small children and pets.

"We have small (twin) babies of five months and so we can't leave anywhere, we sit in the cellar," said Sergiy, a metal worker.

Some called for negotiations to end the conflict.

"Can't we come to an agreement, without weapons? We need to make an effort to make an agreement," said a woman named Galina.

Many, seeing only Ukrainian forces and completely cut off from sources of information, insisted that Kyiv's troops were responsible for the shelling.

One angry woman, who declined to give her name, said: "It's the Ukrainians bombing us. They don't consider us to be people. They call us separatists."

"It was our own people -- the Ukrainians," an elderly man agreed.

Many locals in the Donbas coal-mining region feel little connection to Kyiv, and talk of taking "trips" to Ukraine.

Special forces police officer Pokhna acknowledged this mood but stressed: "The Ukrainian army is only defending itself."

B.Brunner--NZN