[ad_1]
Shocking pictures reveal how a Ukrainian city has been reduced to a dystopian wasteland by Vladimir Putin‘s Russian forces.
Aerial footage reveals the ruins left of Maryinka, in Donetsk, where the front line runs through the little that is left of the town.
Grey ruins surrounded by mountains of debris create the illusion of a dystopian landscape where all life has been wiped out.
Maryinka has been a battleground long before the war started last year; when Russia first invaded Ukraine in 2014, the town was already under fire by the Russians.
But the intense fighting since the February 24 invasion last year has left no building in the town, which once housed 10,000 people, intact.
Aerial footage reveals the ruins left of Maryinka, in Donetsk, where the front line runs through the little that is left of the town
Grey ruins surrounded by mountains of debris create the illusion of a dystopian landscape where all life has been wiped out
Maryinka has been a battleground long before the war started last year; when Russia first invaded Ukraine in 2014, the town was already under fire by the Russians
Many are barely recognisable as buildings at all. Shellfire has also made matchsticks of the town’s trees — many of them ripped apart at the trunk.
Russian tank fire, filmed on February 19, further added to the destruction, pounding what appeared to be Ukrainian positions amid the ruins.
Maryinka’s police chief, Artem Schus, describes his town as ‘completely destroyed’.
Apart from soldiers, the town has been entirely evacuated ‘because there is no way for the civilian population to live there,’ he said.
Still, according to the police chief, dozens of townspeople have been killed and many wounded.
Schus believes that Russian forces are deliberately razing the ruins, blasting walls that still stand, to ‘destroy all cover, regardless of whether it is a civilian shelter or a military facility’.
He added: ‘They destroy everything because, with their tactics, they cannot defeat our troops, and resort to the destruction of all living things.’
The war has moved on and is currently raging in Bakhmut, 70 miles north.
Oleksandr Marchenko, the deputy mayor of Bakhmut, told the BBC that the remaining 4000 residents are holding out in shelters without gas, electricity or water, as Russians are trying to encircle the ‘almost destroyed’ city now laying in ruins like Maryinka and Mariupol.
The town, around 400 miles south east of Kyiv, has for months been a prime target of Moscow’s grinding eastern offensive in the war, with Russian forces and private Wagner Group surrounding Ukrainian units.
The city is almost surrounded, with Russian forces now occupying the east, north and south of the city and only one road out, a situation top Ukrainian commander Volodymyr Nazarenko described as ‘hell’.
It has now become too dangerous for the last remaining residents to make it out of the area by vehicle, with a woman killed and two men badly wounded by shelling as they tried to cross a makeshift bridge yesterday.
Putin‘s forces have been relentlessly attacking the small mining town as part of efforts that would give them a first major victory in more than half a year.
But both sides are said to have suffered huge losses during the fighting, with Kyiv officials claiming seven Russian soldiers have been killed for every Ukrainian troop who has died in the area, The Sunday Times reports.
But particularly the intense fighting since the February 24, 2022 invasion has left no building in the town, which used to be home to 10,000 people, intact
Many are barely recognizable as buildings at all. Shellfire has also made matchsticks of the town’s trees — many of them ripped apart at the trunk
Russian tank-fire, filmed on February 19, further added to the destruction, pounding what appeared to be Ukrainian positions amid the ruins
Ukrainian servicemen fire a 105mm Howitzer towards Russian positions, near the city of Bakhmut
Soldiers from a Ukrainian assault brigade prepare to fire a British made L118 105mm Howitzer on Russian trenches
Undertakers lower the coffin of Volodymyr Hurieiev, a Ukrainian soldier killed in the Bakhmut area
Much of the town has now been reduced to rubble following repeated shelling, with around 4,000 residents said to still be living in the area.
Bakhmut’s deputy mayor Oleksandr Marchenko has accused Russian troops of turning the town into a new Mariupol.
He told the BBC: ‘Not a single building remains untouched. They want to destroy Bakhmut like they did with Mariupol.’
Mariupol is now fully in the hands of Russian forces, having been cut off from the rest of Ukraine early in the war and subject to horrifying barrages and a siege.
Civilians were left without heat, food or water for weeks and described melting snow for something to drink before drinking from radiators when the snow ran out.
It was the scene of perhaps the deadliest single attack of the war when a Russian jet bombed a theatre with the word ‘children’ scrawled on the pavement outside, killing up to 600 people sheltering inside.
Thousands are known to have died in the siege, with their bodies often piled into mass graves hastily dug alongside roads.
Alexander Rodnyansky, an economic adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, noted that Russia was using the best troops of the Wagner Group to try to encircle the city, while Zelensky accused Moscow of throwing waves of men into Bakhmut with no regard for their lives.
Recent drone footage shows the scale of devastation in the city, while Zelensky has said it has been ‘destroyed.’
Flames and smoke rise into the sky from blazing buildings while constant gunfire and explosions ring out from within the city’s crumbling walls.
It comes amid fears of a looming withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from Bakhmut, with units having destroyed two key bridges in the past two days – including one linking it to the nearby town of Chasiv Yar along the last remaining supply route.
Britain’s Ministry of Defence said in a Twitter update that the destruction of the bridges came as Russian fighters made further inroads into Bakhmut’s northern suburbs
Bakhmut has for months been a prime target of Moscow’s grinding eastern offensive in the war, with Russian troops – including forces from the private Wagner Group – inching ever closer
The destruction of the bridges prevents Russian forces from taking them and gaining a pivotal supply route.
Britain’s Ministry of Defence said in a Twitter update that the destruction of the bridges came as Russian fighters made further inroads into Bakhmut’s northern suburbs.
The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think-tank, said Ukrainian troops may ‘conduct a limited and controlled withdrawal from particularly difficult sections of eastern Bakhmut’, while seeking to inhibit Russian movement there and limit exit routes to the west.
Capturing Bakhmut would not only give Russian fighters a rare battlefield gain after months of setbacks, but it might rupture Ukraine’s supply lines and allow the Kremlin’s forces to press toward other Ukrainian strongholds in the Donetsk region.
But Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the Ukrainian presidential office, said yesterday that its forces will not be leaving the area.
Some reports also told of plans for reinforcements, despite President Zelensky last week saying the situation in the town was becoming ‘more and more difficult’.
Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin, a rogue millionaire with longtime links to Putin, also said on Wednesday that so far he had seen no signs of a Ukrainian withdrawal from the city. He claimed that Kyiv has in fact been reinforcing its positions there.
A soldier from a Ukrainian assault brigade walks along a muddy road used to transport and position British made L118 105mm Howitzers
Ukrainian servicemen prepare munitions to fire with a 105mm Howitzer towards Russian positions in Bakhmut
‘The Ukrainian army is deploying additional troops and is doing what it can to retain control of the city,’ Prigozhin said. ‘Tens of thousands of Ukrainian soldiers are offering fierce resistance, and the fighting is getting increasingly bloody by day.’
Meanwhile, a defence source told The Sunday Times that, even if Bakhmut was to fall, it would ‘not make much difference strategically as Russian forces had already occupied the hills around [Bakhmut] but would certainly be totemic’.
After losing extensive territory in the second half of 2022, Russian forces have been replenished by hundreds of thousands of reservists.
Kyiv, for its part, has stuck mainly to defence over the past three months, hoping Russia’s assault will exhaust Moscow’s forces before Ukraine launches a counter-attack with new weapons promised by the West.
[ad_2]
Source link