After the flood
One year on from the destruction of the Kakhovka dam, residents of Russian-occupied Kherson describe their new reality

The Kakhovka dam, built on the Dnipro River in southern Ukraine, collapsed in the early hours of 6 June 2023, leaving thousands of Kherson residents without homes and devastating the region’s natural life. While Kyiv has accused the Russians of a carrying out a “deliberate and premeditated crime” and vowing to bring Moscow to justice for destroying the dam, Russia maintains that it Ukraine blew up the dam, despite the havoc it unleashed on hundreds of square kilometres of Ukrainian-controlled territory.
One year on, the true scale of the destruction and the death toll are still unknown, as much of the flooded area remains under Russian occupation. Novaya Europe has reached out to local residents who have spoken to us in the past to hear their accounts of life since the flood.
I’m glad I was alone. I wouldn’t have managed with the children. My house was under water within a couple of hours, only part of the roof was left exposed.
If you have money, you’ll find a way. If you don’t, then too bad. And the cycle never ends. It only stops when there’s heavy shelling and when I’m asleep, although I sleep very badly.
I’m waiting for the war to end. We’re part of Russia now. Anyone who doesn’t like that has gone to Ukrainian-controlled areas. How long can we be shelled, drowned and shelled again?
I’d join the army today, but I have a dilapidated house it will be hard to survive the winter in. My mother-in-law is disabled, my wife has complex health issues and my child is at school.

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