Zürcher Nachrichten - Near Black Sea, civilians flee southern Ukrainian city

EUR -
AED 4.26199
AFN 81.375697
ALL 98.005036
AMD 442.752446
ANG 2.076923
AOA 1064.212018
ARS 1359.598018
AUD 1.786681
AWG 2.091867
AZN 1.973384
BAM 1.956907
BBD 2.3157
BDT 140.269374
BGN 1.955957
BHD 0.437689
BIF 3415.518013
BMD 1.160537
BND 1.483333
BOB 7.953535
BRL 6.37761
BSD 1.146944
BTN 99.483866
BWP 15.50971
BYN 3.753275
BYR 22746.519498
BZD 2.303794
CAD 1.592459
CDF 3338.864126
CHF 0.941425
CLF 0.028682
CLP 1100.641424
CNY 8.332076
CNH 8.328777
COP 4739.63192
CRC 579.425381
CUC 1.160537
CUP 30.754223
CVE 110.327906
CZK 24.80184
DJF 204.23469
DKK 7.460284
DOP 68.118252
DZD 151.02003
EGP 58.842111
ERN 17.408051
ETB 154.458137
FJD 2.612132
FKP 0.861679
GBP 0.855223
GEL 3.156548
GGP 0.861679
GHS 11.812735
GIP 0.861679
GMD 82.980394
GNF 9936.57997
GTQ 8.824031
GYD 239.946812
HKD 9.110173
HNL 29.953821
HRK 7.531917
HTG 150.526098
HUF 402.385913
IDR 18978.256804
ILS 3.968918
IMP 0.861679
INR 100.014708
IQD 1502.44371
IRR 48887.60943
ISK 142.386468
JEP 0.861679
JMD 182.822666
JOD 0.822819
JPY 168.583061
KES 149.999396
KGS 101.446693
KHR 4597.324176
KMF 496.127726
KPW 1044.483066
KRW 1580.90606
KWD 0.354915
KYD 0.955737
KZT 599.036394
LAK 24741.894018
LBP 102760.82074
LKR 345.103796
LRD 229.37881
LSL 20.785472
LTL 3.426763
LVL 0.701997
LYD 6.245507
MAD 10.50629
MDL 19.704065
MGA 5098.863309
MKD 61.529862
MMK 2436.851405
MNT 4158.312381
MOP 9.273708
MRU 45.340461
MUR 52.664927
MVR 17.878114
MWK 1988.716781
MXN 22.12406
MYR 4.935186
MZN 74.228392
NAD 20.785472
NGN 1797.694952
NIO 42.2037
NOK 11.682781
NPR 159.174386
NZD 1.929352
OMR 0.446229
PAB 1.146854
PEN 4.129955
PGK 4.725654
PHP 66.022353
PKR 325.431149
PLN 4.265495
PYG 9154.140584
QAR 4.194091
RON 5.046946
RSD 117.239723
RUB 91.101792
RWF 1656.130014
SAR 4.354244
SBD 9.679374
SCR 17.031419
SDG 696.903766
SEK 11.102385
SGD 1.487094
SHP 0.912
SLE 26.054002
SLL 24335.878774
SOS 655.468084
SRD 45.076381
STD 24020.766764
SVC 10.035636
SYP 15089.157966
SZL 20.779669
THB 38.03137
TJS 11.32556
TMT 4.061878
TND 3.401139
TOP 2.718094
TRY 46.000559
TTD 7.794377
TWD 34.262873
TZS 3092.830152
UAH 48.06349
UGX 4138.359589
USD 1.160537
UYU 46.885925
UZS 14333.172418
VES 120.239518
VND 30374.147019
VUV 139.156273
WST 3.201468
XAF 656.325565
XAG 0.032231
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.136408
XDR 0.816258
XOF 656.325565
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.604403
ZAR 20.646527
ZMK 10446.218539
ZMW 26.647964
ZWL 373.692347
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Near Black Sea, civilians flee southern Ukrainian city
Near Black Sea, civilians flee southern Ukrainian city

Near Black Sea, civilians flee southern Ukrainian city

In Ukraine's southern city of Mykolaiv under Russian fire, Vitaliy Sobolev's apartment block stands punctured on one side, a metal door blown off and windows gaping empty.

Text size:

The man in his 70s says he was sleeping when the bombardment hit early Monday morning in his city near the Black Sea.

"The windowpanes started to shake. I plastered myself against a wall," said Sobolev, whose kitchen, near the impact point on the second floor was ravaged, though there were no casualties.

His fourth-floor neighbour, Liliana Sidorska, swore at the Russian forces who invaded Ukraine almost two weeks ago, and have since pounded her home city.

They are targeting not military targets but "people who have nothing and who no one is helping", she said.

"Why are the Russians coming here to bomb us? They're bastards, bastards."

Mykolaiv and the surrounding region have been the scene of intense clashes and bombardment in recent days.

The city of 500,000 stands between the Russians and the major port city of Odessa, just 130 kilometres (80 miles) to the west along the Black Sea coastline.

- 'We can't stay' -

Many tried to flee the city on Tuesday morning during a relative lull in the bombardment, despite sporadic shelling resounding across the streets.

A long line of cars several kilometres (miles) long snaked up to the bridge over the river running through the city, as desperate families drove west to safety.

Further along the road, cars waited bumper to bumper to be waved through a Ukrainian checkpoint, many with a sign in their window marked "children".

In front of the city's main hospital, Sabrina waited, surrounded by bags, for her mother to finish her kidney treatment inside.

"After that, we're leaving, as fast as possible, by bus," said the 19-year-old, holding a small dog on the end of leash and clutching a cat to her breast under her jacket.

"We can't stay any more, it's too dangerous," added the young woman, who had had no news from her husband on the frontline.

Inside, doctors have already started treating war casualties.

Oleksandr, a soldier in his 20s, had been rushed in with a broken leg and riddled with shrapnel, after Russians hit his barracks on Monday.

He said eight of his comrades had been killed, another eight had disappeared, and 18 more had been wounded. AFP could not independently verify these figures.

The hospital's leading surgeon, Dmytro Sikorsky, said he had lost count of how many people had been brought in for treatment since Russia invaded the country on February 24.

In the first days of the conflict, the hospital treated 160 soldiers, he said. These days however, patients were mostly civilians.

Asked if he had seen any wounded Russian soldiers, he said: "There were a few, but we cannot approach them. The military looks after them."

- 'Head really hurts' -

Among the civilians was Vira Pysmenna, a blue-eyed woman in her sixties, whose face was covered in dried blood. A large dressing clung to her forehead.

She had come from the village of Snigurivka, some 60 kilometres (40 miles) outside the city, where she said her nephew and two children were still hiding in a shelter.

"May our planes bomb the Russians for what they have done," she said, white hair framing her injured face.

In another room, Maksym Sokol waited for his head to be bandaged.

He said he was lobbing a Molotov cocktail at a Russian tank when he was hit by gunfire.

"It was two, three or four days ago, I can't remember. My head really hurts," said the young man. His torso and arms were covered in tattoos of a Kalashnikov, a dog, a dragon and a wolf.

He was not able to join the army due to health issues, his mother explained, so he had signed up to fight the Russians with the civilian volunteers instead.

In a weak voice, he teased his nurse, and asked her if she had been on a safari before.

"We'll go after the war," she promised, and he asked when.

"I don't know," she said.

B.Brunner--NZN