@Woland @Dmitry
Could you please share with people, how is life currently in Ukraine? How conditions are in daily life?
How whole cities of Ukraine struggling with electricity and heating problems due to putler terrorizing electric stations?
And how people worried of coming cold winter ?
Supporters of Putin fascism and Russian imperialism must hear it from you.
Well, I live in Zaporizhia (not far from the front line). Electricity in Zaporizhia has never been turned off, although there were hits in electrical substations.
It is not known if the heating season will start this year. Now I have 19 degrees in my apartment and 9 degrees outside and it's comfortable. The weather is favorable for Ukraine so far. If the winter is cold, we will be warmly dressed at home. Some Ukrainians have country houses with stoves where they can wait out the winter. I don't have it But, as one of the Ukrainian politicians said, we would rather live in the cold, but not in Russian occupation.
Ukrainians experienced similar cold winters in the 1990s, when there was an economic crisis in the country and there was nothing to heat the boiler houses. Well, the current generation will experience it too, it will only harden it.
I have not heard from any of my acquaintances the thought of starting negotiations for surrender. For now. The most difficult tests are ahead.
The most active missile attacks were a week ago - these are shelling from the S-300 (which the Russians use to attack ground targets) from the territory of Tokmak, which our air defense cannot intercept because it is very close. There were up to 15 hits per night, which I personally got used to, despite the fact that my house shakes even with a very distant hit. Many people (neighbors) of my house spend the night in basements.
The closest missile hit to me is 500 meters away. Then the Skoda car dealership was destroyed.
I also heard Iranian drones, they really sound like a flying moped (they were called so by the people - Iranian mopeds). But in terms of impact force and blast wave, they cannot be compared with a rocket hit.
It so happened that Zaporizhia became a shelter and a transit point for hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians fleeing the war from the Donbass. Now, many are leaving Zaporizhia due to the missile terror and moving further west or Kyiv
Most of the damage was done to civilian infrastructure with human casualties. I will provide some photos with the results of the hits.
Skoda cardealer center
school
Residential buildings
Old mill - built by the German Mennonites
Hotel in the park
Attachments
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