The waiting game
A year after Ukraine partially retook control of the Kherson region, residents on both sides of the Dnipro tell their stories

One year ago Ukrainian forces liberated the city of Kherson, as the Russian military withdrew to the left bank of the Dnipro River. Those still under Russian occupation on the other side of the river continue to await their liberation. Kherson residents on both banks of the river share their experiences over the past year as well as their hopes for the future.
There are problems with locals, too — there are still collaborators among us. There was an aid distribution point in Kherson. It wasn’t publicised to prevent ‘visitors’ from identifying it, but someone from our side leaked the coordinates. A Shahed drone landed there and destroyed a school.
That turned out to be a stroke of luck — otherwise I would have been taken ‘to the basement’ like some of my friends. After Kherson was liberated, we met up and they told me about the horrific torture they’d been subjected to.
We can look back and laugh about it now, but at the time it was psychologically very difficult. The constant danger was exhausting. Boats of ‘visitors’ would often come cruising down the Dnipro, and while they’d usually just pass us by, those bastards once came onto the lake and stole our fishing nets and catch.
My children and I are now homeless. Our house collapsed. We live in my friend’s house; she left. My parents' house survived the flood, but only the walls are left — we had to throw everything away. I often think how lucky it is that my mother passed away before the war and that she didn’t see all this horror. My husband has been in Odesa since the start of the war. He was in the territorial defence, then enlisted to join the army, but they’re keeping him in reserve for now.


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