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Market day on Ukraine front charts Russia’s advance

AFP . Ukraine
30 May 2022 00:00:00 | Update: 30 May 2022 00:59:07
Market day on Ukraine front charts Russia’s advance

The Ukrainian farmer thought it was fear that made her neighbours age so much in the week since she saw them come out for market day on the eastern front.

The Russians had pushed a lot closer to her town of Soledar since Tetyana Barshchevska last set out her stall on the opposite side of the street from an already-destroyed grocery store.

The local salt mine now had a chunk of it smashed in by a missile and the main road where the buses once stopped was being torn apart by artillery fire. But Barshchevska was mostly worried about what the fourth month of Russia’s invasion might do to her pigs and cows.

“I have invested everything in them. All my labour has been poured into the farm,” the 47-year-old said from behind a foldout table laden with slabs of meat and jars of sour cream.

A few elderly women and stern looking men swapped horror stories about their sleepless nights and narrow escapes.

Barshchevska looked closely at her friends and then back down at her table full of meat.

“It really struck me today how much everyone has aged in the past week,” she said during an afternoon lull in battles on three sides of her town.

“It is from fear. You can see it in their eyes. Their eyes are older.”

Left behind

A deep new trench south of Soledar cuts to the core of locals’ concerns.

The Russians have crept up to Ukraine’s historic salt mining centre in a pincer movement that threatens to ensnare some of its toughest troops.

The road leading northeast -- now under intermittent Russian control -- ends in two besieged and deserted industrial cities that Ukraine refuses to formally cede.

Soledar’s next-door neighbour Bakhmut has seen the Russians creep up to within three kilometres (two miles) of its eastern edge.

The road leading northwest is cut off by a Russian advance aimed at seizing the symbolicly important twin cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk -- Ukraine’s centre for the eastern war zone.

But very few Ukrainian reinforcements are moving along any of these shelled highways.

The trenches to the south suggest that Ukraine is preparing to fall back to a new defensive position that leaves places such as Soledar behind.

The locals gathering at the town’s tiny market are sounding an increasingly fatalistic note. “If it kills me, it kills me,” pensioner Volodymyr Selevyorstov said of the rocket and artillery fire that could smash into his stall at any moment.

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