• The Ukrainians Trapped in Between

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jun 28 12:17:31 2022
    The Ukrainians Trapped in Between
    By Alisa Sopova, June 25, 2022 , WSJ

    Once known as the vibrant “city of a million roses,” Donetsk has over the past 8 years turned into a showcase for what Russia has in store for the Ukrainian territories it occupies. Major infrastructure—notably, the international airport—was
    destroyed in fighting, and years of neglect and plunder have taken a toll. Visiting my family every summer, I have seen the progressive deterioration: uncollected garbage piles, disappearing public transportation, dim or absent street lighting.

    Back in 2014, many of my middle-class friends underestimated the threat that the separatists posed, assuming that they were too marginal to cause real change or that the police would deal with them. Last time I visited Donetsk in 2021, a friend who is an
    accountant in her 30s shared her regrets with me: “If only I realized what was coming back then, I would have trained to fight them off, physically if need be.”

    Even those who were initially indifferent or ambivalent toward the new order quickly became disillusioned as the city stagnated, growing lawless and isolated, with the overall atmosphere of a terror enclave run by warlords. People gradually moved away in
    search of better and safer lives. Those who stayed were often stigmatized as traitors and collaborators in Ukrainian public discourse, even though many remained to tend to elderly or disabled family members.

    Perhaps more people would have left if they had felt welcome elsewhere. Not a single country opened its doors to Ukrainians from Donetsk, Luhansk and Crimea in 2014, as they have done in 2022. In Ukraine itself, citizens with residence records in the
    occupied territories were often discriminated against. Some rental ads openly specified “People from Donetsk and Luhansk need not apply,” and displaced citizens struggled to obtain mortgages or compensation for their destroyed homes. Since 2014,
    organizations such as UNHCR, OSCE and the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative have published numerous reports calling attention to the human rights of civilians fleeing from the occupied territories. They document that many of the internally displaced have
    difficulty moving around Ukraine and face unequal access to jobs, grueling procedures of document verification, surprise home visits from the authorities and hostile attitudes in their new communities.

    Civilians from the occupied territories were still Ukrainian citizens, but to their countrymen outside of Donbas, they had become scapegoats for the boiling rage over Russian aggression. Because the residents of the Russian-controlled parts of Donetsk
    and Luhansk lived under occupation and spoke Russian, the story went, they likely had pro-Russian sentiments, which made them a fifth column. Hundreds of thousands of Russophones currently fighting for Ukraine against Russian invasion are living
    testimony to the falsehood of these claims.

    With the onset of the larger invasion this winter, the situation inside occupied Donbas has deteriorated further. Separatist authorities round up for military conscription every man on the street who doesn’t look old or disabled. Untrained and ill-
    equipped, these men are deployed to the front lines as cannon fodder. Many who surrender to Ukrainian government troops end up prosecuted for treason. This month one of them, 26-year-old Nikita Baenko, was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. The
    Ukrainian prosecutor explained: “Nikita says he had no choice, he was forced to [join the separatist forces]. But it’s easy to refute. He is a person who has been living for 8 years in the so-called ‘Donetsk People’s Republic’—the occupied
    territory of Ukraine—while seeing perfectly well what was going on there.”

    Those who managed to avoid conscription did so by not leaving their homes for months, not opening doors, not picking up the phone, hiding even from neighbors and relatives, entirely dependent on trusted females for survival. The result has been a
    peculiar all-female public space. Traditionally male jobs such as moving furniture or driving taxis are now done exclusively by women or not at all.

    Inside Donetsk, a city of a million people, water has all but stopped running because the front line has cut the water supply route. Some neighborhoods have tap water rationed for two hours every other day, others have none at all. A resident of downtown
    Donetsk told me that, during recent shelling near her apartment building, she had to choose between taking cover or taking a shower while the water was still running (she showered). To do laundry, she and her girlfriends have shared tips on manually
    pouring water into their washing machines. Such tricks might not be enough, however, to maintain hygiene in the coming summer heat.

    Russia cited the suffering of Donbas’s people over the past eight years as the reason for its February aggression. What the Kremlin forgot to mention was that Russia itself was the primary cause of this suffering and that the invasion would only
    aggravate it. By using people from Donbas as a pretext for the invasion (without ever asking their opinion), Russia made them complicit, disqualifying their voices and their suffering. As a result, I dare not even mention that my family lives under
    rocket attacks and lacks access to water for fear of sounding like Russian propaganda.

    Populations living under occupation are often seen as dangerously ambiguous. Are they hostages or collaborators? Will they turn into a Trojan horse once reintegrated? For Ukraine, these questions are only becoming more vexed, as the size of the occupied
    territories has rapidly increased during the current phase of the invasion, and millions more Ukrainians now find themselves living with that terrible ambiguity. These people must not be branded as traitors or enemies from within. As Ukraine aspires to
    regain control over its occupied territories, it should plan to reintegrate their populations with dignity. Unlike Russia’s autocracy, Ukraine’s democracy should embrace diversity as its greatest strength.

    Ms. Sopova is an independent journalist and a Ph.D. candidate in anthropology at Princeton University. Her reporting and research focus on civilian experiences of the war in Ukraine.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-ukrainians-trapped-in-between-11656129660

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  • From Oleg Smirnov@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 30 07:17:24 2022
    By Alisa Sopova, June 25, 2022 , WSJ

    Once known as the vibrant "city of a million roses," Donetsk has over the past 8 years turned into a showcase for what Russia has in store for the Ukrainian territories it occupies.

    Brazen lies in the very first sentence, as usual. If one wants to
    see "a showcase for what Russia has in store" then it's possible to
    see it in Crimea. Crimea has become improved a lot for eight years
    and the vast majority of the locals doesn't feel any nostalgia for
    life under Kiev rule.

    Donetsk cannot be a showcase because it still remains a front-line
    city, which is under shelling regularly. Local infrastructure is
    so that in 2014 the troops of the Kiev regime managed to entrench
    near the city. Since then they have created there a well-fortified multi-layered defense system.

    The necessity to get rid of the regular shelling of Donetsk was
    one of the reasons to start the military operation in February.
    Military command says that a head-on storm of this well-fortified
    line of defense would be impractical, but one day the spot will be
    eventually encircled. The troops sitting there currently know that
    denouement is approaching, they have no chance to take Donetsk, so
    they have intensified shelling, seeking to produce as much damage
    as possible. Given that the city has long been vulnerable, there's
    no any military depots etc. The Kiev troops are simply shelling
    its residential areas. Many people have been evacuated from there,
    but not all, so there are regular reports about killed civilians.

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  • From Oleg Smirnov@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jul 6 14:50:37 2022
    Donetsk cannot be a showcase because it still remains a front-line
    city, which is under shelling regularly. Local infrastructure is
    so that in 2014 the troops of the Kiev regime managed to entrench
    near the city. Since then they have created there a well-fortified multi-layered defense system.

    The necessity to get rid of the regular shelling of Donetsk was
    one of the reasons to start the military operation in February.
    Military command says that a head-on storm of this well-fortified
    line of defense would be impractical, but one day the spot will be
    eventually encircled. The troops sitting there currently know that
    denouement is approaching, they have no chance to take Donetsk, so
    they have intensified shelling, seeking to produce as much damage
    as possible. Given that the city has long been vulnerable, there's
    no any military depots etc. The Kiev troops are simply shelling
    its residential areas. Many people have been evacuated from there,
    but not all, so there are regular reports about killed civilians.

    Before February 2014, Western media were paying very little
    attention to the shelling of Donbas by the Kiev troops and to
    the casualties caused by it. Some "international organizations"
    included such information in their reports carefully worded so
    as not to explicitly blame the Kiev regime. And here's a very
    recent example on how British popular newspaper accuses Russia
    of shelling of Donetsk:

    | Russia In Blitz On Donetsk
    | PLUMES of smoke rise above Donetsk in Eastern Ukraine
    | yesterday after a vicious Russian bombardment. Moscow's
    | forces have turned their attention to battering the city with
    | the remaining Donbas region .. <https://archive.is/SJqch>

    And even more prominent British "The Daily Telegraph", in its
    printed version, disinforms that "Putin sends troops deeper into
    Donbas with Donetsk in sight", i.e. implying Donetsk as a target
    (may be seen through pressreader.com <https://tinyurl.com/2n668jq6>
    select "13 World News", and you'll see it).

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  • From Oleg Smirnov@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jul 6 15:00:41 2022
    Donetsk cannot be a showcase because it still remains a front-line
    city, which is under shelling regularly. Local infrastructure is
    so that in 2014 the troops of the Kiev regime managed to entrench
    near the city. Since then they have created there a well-fortified
    multi-layered defense system.

    The necessity to get rid of the regular shelling of Donetsk was
    one of the reasons to start the military operation in February.
    Military command says that a head-on storm of this well-fortified
    line of defense would be impractical, but one day the spot will be
    eventually encircled. The troops sitting there currently know that
    denouement is approaching, they have no chance to take Donetsk, so
    they have intensified shelling, seeking to produce as much damage
    as possible. Given that the city has long been vulnerable, there's
    no any military depots etc. The Kiev troops are simply shelling
    its residential areas. Many people have been evacuated from there,
    but not all, so there are regular reports about killed civilians.

    Before February 2014, Western media were paying very little

    Correction: February 2022

    attention to the shelling of Donbas by the Kiev troops and to
    the casualties caused by it. Some "international organizations"
    included such information in their reports carefully worded so
    as not to explicitly blame the Kiev regime. And here's a very
    recent example on how British popular newspaper accuses Russia
    of shelling of Donetsk:

    | Russia In Blitz On Donetsk
    | PLUMES of smoke rise above Donetsk in Eastern Ukraine
    | yesterday after a vicious Russian bombardment. Moscow's
    | forces have turned their attention to battering the city with
    | the remaining Donbas region .. <https://archive.is/SJqch>

    And even more prominent British "The Daily Telegraph", in its
    printed version, disinforms that "Putin sends troops deeper into
    Donbas with Donetsk in sight", i.e. implying Donetsk as a target
    (may be seen through pressreader.com <https://tinyurl.com/2n668jq6>
    select "13 World News", and you'll see it).

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