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TOPIC: donetsk

FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War

How Ukraine Crossed The "Surovikin Line" — A Breakthrough In The Counteroffensive

The area around Robotyne, in southeastern Ukraine, has been the centre of a fierce two-month battle. Ukrainian publication Livy Bereg breaks down how Ukrainian forces were able to exploit gaps in Russian defenses and push the counteroffensive forward.

Updated September 22, 2023 at 6:35 p.m.

ROBOTYNE — Since the fall of 2022, Russian forces have been building a series of formidable defensive lines in Ukrainian territory, from Vasylivka in the Zaporizhzhia region to the front in Vremivka in the Donetsk region.

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That Rare Mariupol Happy Ending: How One Ukrainian Couple Was Reunited

An estimated 700 soldiers who defended Mariupol remain in Russian captivity. As prisoner exchanges prove challenging, relatives wait nervously for news.

KYIV — Around 700 soldiers from the Azov battalion, who defended Mariupol, remain in Russian captivity. The exchange of prisoners of war is difficult, but the state and relatives are fighting for each Ukrainian soldier.

The heartache experienced by those who have lost husbands, sons, and fathers is beyond words. Equally distressing is the situation for those left waiting for their soldiers to return home. Often, they're left in the dark, with no updates on their loved ones' status. The agonizing uncertainty of whether they will ever reunite only amplifies their distress.

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Kateryna (29) and her husband, Azov soldier Valeriy (26) were born in Berdiansk — in the Zaporizhzhia region, currently occupied by Russian troops — where they dated for several years.

Before the war started, she worked as a cook, and he was a waiter in a neighboring restaurant.In 2016, he was called up for military service. He served for two years. When he returned in 2018, the young couple got married. At the same time, Valeriy decided to join the Azov.

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Far From Home, Never To Return: With Those Who Fled Mariupol's Hell

Almost immediately after the start of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, Mariupol found itself under siege. After weeks of devastating battle, the Russians took over the city. Ukrainian news analysis and opinion website Livy Bereg spoke to Inna Shumurtova, a member of the city's Jewish community, about her escape from Mariupol.

On Feb. 24, 2022, Inna Shumurtova, a resident of Mariupol, was awakened by a 4:30 am phone call from a friend in a nearby city.

"Inna, it's war," he said.

"What war?" Inna replied, still half-asleep. "Call me in three hours; I'm still sleeping."

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After dozing off for another half an hour, she woke up and checked the news feed, only to learn about the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine. On the same day, the Russian siege of Mariupol began.

Inna Shumurtova lived in the center of the Black Sea city. She worked for a public organization focusing on HIV prevention, belonged to the city’s Jewish community, and actively engaged in human rights activities where she supported the LGBT community. She is also the daughter of a soldier currently serving in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

The Russian invasion drastically altered her life. She witnessed death and suffering, going through what she describes as hell. Miraculously, she was able to leave the Russia-occupied city. Her recollections provide evidence of the existence of Russian fascism and the ruthless nature of the aggressor. Inna witnessed bodies being denied proper burial, corpses scattered in yards, Russian soldiers defecating in water and food containers, and the denial of food to the people. Additionally, she went through filtration camps in Donbas and Rostov, where she and her mother, who suffers from diabetes, was subjected to interrogation by the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB).

Inna Shumurtova's story is not merely an individual's account; it paints a vivid picture of the hellish conditions that the Russian army inflicted upon Mariupol.

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Worldcrunch Magazine #43 — A Kherson Replay?

July 24 - July 30, 2023

This is the latest edition of Worldcrunch Magazine, a selection of our best articles of the week from the best international journalists, produced exclusively in English for Worldcrunch readers.

>> DISCOVER IT HERE <<

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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War
Agenstvo

Is Ukraine's Counteroffensive On Hold?

Ukraine's counteroffensive has been marked by grueling combat. Independent Russian news site Agenstvo spoke to military experts who explain why progress is slow and how worrying the situation is for Ukraine.

-Analysis-

KYIV — The recent Ukrainian counteroffensive actions have made headlines in the past few weeks. But it remains unclear if this is the long-awaited counteroffensive that seeks to reclaim vast swathes of Russian-occupied territories or if the activities undertaken by Ukraine were probing attacks, aimed at assessing Russia's defensive capabilities.

While the true nature of the situation remains unclear amid the fog of war, it is evident that intense battles are taking place in eastern and southern Ukraine.

Military experts told the independent Russian news site agency.media (Agenstvo), that the Ukrainian counteroffensive has significantly slowed down. They say the reason is that the Russian army has strong defenses, air superiority and has improved its coordination and logistics.

According to the analysts, Kyiv is pausing its counteroffensive to reassess its plans and has not yet deployed around 85% of its prepared forces.

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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War
Viktor Kevliuk

One Week Into Ukraine's Counteroffensive — Here's The Day-By-Day Timeline

Ukraine's counter-offensive to liberate Russian-occupied regions has finally begun. Ukrainian news outlet Livy Bereg explains how it's playing out over the first seven days, as the first villages are liberated.

KYIV — Russian troops have been preparing the defense in the occupied territories of Ukraine for almost a year, so Ukrainian troops are facing a difficult task as they begin a long-awaited counter-offensive.

Viktor Kevliuk, an expert at the Ukrainian Center for Defense Strategies, explains the development of the Ukrainian offensive.

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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War
Oleksandr Kalinichenko

When Will Ukraine Join NATO? All Eyes On Vilnius, And The Frontline

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has accepted an invitation to attend the next NATO summit in July, but he will arrive with expectations that the alliance is ready to pave the way for the country's accession to the military alliance, even as the state of the war itself remains crucial to the decision.

-Analysis-

KYIV — After years of unsuccessful efforts, Ukraine seems closer than ever to joining NATO — but debate within the alliance on Ukraine's membership is heated, and developments on the battlefield may shape Ukraine's path. With the next summit for the Western military alliance set for July in Vilnius, Lithuania, what does Kyiv now expect of NATO?

Ukraine has been trying to become a member of the Western military alliance since 2008. Constant promises of membership without specific deadlines have become a political trap that a full-scale war could only level.

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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War
Olga Kirylenko

From The Trenches Of Avdiivka, Ukraine's Hell On Earth

Journalists from Ukrainska Pravda report directly from the trenches near Avdiivka, one of the oldest settlements in the eastern Donetsk region of Ukraine, where troops are facing near-constant Russian fire.

“Get down!”

Machine gun fire whistling overhead is interrupted by the shout of a combat medic named Petro. Five people, including three soldiers and two journalists from Ukrainian publication Ukrainska Pravda fall to the snow.

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The sound of ringing bullets seemed distant to Petro's team and, as those under fire always hope, didn't come too close to hitting.

“Are you all good?” Petro asks after a few seconds.

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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War
Iryna Gamaliy

Ukrainians In Occupied Territories Are Being Forced To Get Russian Passports

Reports have emerged of children, retirees, and workers being forced by the Russian military and occupying administration to obtain Russian Federation passports, or face prison, beating or loss of public benefits.

It's referred to as: "forced passportization." Reports are accumulating of police and local authorities in the Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine requiring that locals obtain Russian passports. Now new evidence has emerged that Ukrainians are indeed being coerced into changing their citizenship, or risk retribution from occupying authorities.

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Ever since late September, when President Vladimir Putin announced Russia hadd unilaterally annexed four regions in eastern and southern Ukraine (Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson), Moscow has been seeking ways to legitimize the unrecognized annexation. The spreading of Russian passports is seen as an attempt to demonstrate that there is support among the Ukrainian population to be part of Russia.

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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War
Irina Dolinina

"Pacifism Is Not An Option" — Meet The Anti-Putin Russians Supplying Drones To Ukraine

Russians who oppose the war in Ukraine face a tough moral question: How far are they prepared to go? Around the world, a group of Russians are organizing and raising money to send much-needed drones to help Ukrainian forces fight the Russian invasion.

Many Russians feel deeply conflicted by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Some have walled themselves off from the news, believing that they are powerless to change anything. Others have refused to fight, left the country and stopped paying taxes — and others have sent humanitarian assistance to Ukrainians. A small few, however, have decided to help the Ukrainian army directly.

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Members of the Ukrainian Drone Forces volunteer group, which is run by Russians and supplies civilian drones to the Ukrainian Armed Forces, tell Russian independent news site Vazhniye Istorii (Important Stories) why they believe Russians must do more to help Ukraine.

When Russia began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, many Russians disassociated themselves from their country’s actions, stepping back from what was going on and remaining silent.

“Most Russians that I speak to are not prepared to financially support the Ukrainian army,” says Gleb, a 30-year-old sociologist. “I suppose I should be grateful that at least they don't give money to the Russian army. Yet the strangest argument for me, personally, is when people hide behind pacifism: ‘I am a pacifist. I will not give money to the army.’ But it’s a problematic position to take, because a person who refuses to interfere in the battle between the strong and the weak automatically takes the side of the strong.”

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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War
Pierre Haski

Blood Of Bakhmut: Why Both Sides Are Ready To Die For A Deserted City In Donbas

Fighting has been fierce for the city of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine. What is the price of a victory that is, above all, symbolic?

-Analysis-

PARIS — The name of Bakhmut will go down in history as one the fiercest, most contested battles in the Ukraine war. Fighting has been raging for weeks, in this city of the Donetsk region, in eastern Ukraine's Donbas. The toll of victims is rising considerably.

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What’s at stake today is less strategic than symbolic — which is not a trifling thing in this type of conflict. There is something about Bakhmut that’s reminiscent of World War I, where men die to conquer a house or a neighborhood only to lose it again the next day. The weapons, of course, differ: 21st-century drones, geo-location, missiles.

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In The News
Cameron Manley, Bertrand Hauger and Emma Albright

Brittney Griner’s Whereabouts Unknown

Representatives for U.S. basketball star Brittney Griner, detained in Russia since February, have confirmed they do not know her current whereabouts. This comes after her attorneys said the courts had ordered her transferred to a Russian penal colony on Wednesday.

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“Our primary concern continues to be Brittney Griner’s health and well-being,” the WNBA player’s agent Lindsay Colas said in a statement. “As we work through this very difficult phase of not knowing exactly where she is or how she is doing, we ask for the public’s support in continuing to write letters and express their love and care for her.”

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