Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'God spared us': Fleeing occupation by dinghy under Russian fire

EUR -
AED 4.017264
AFN 74.035505
ALL 98.80091
AMD 423.453295
ANG 1.972361
AOA 1000.197601
ARS 1066.098777
AUD 1.623516
AWG 1.970601
AZN 1.857219
BAM 1.957285
BBD 2.209657
BDT 130.779242
BGN 1.955765
BHD 0.412273
BIF 3228.520448
BMD 1.093715
BND 1.429472
BOB 7.58969
BRL 6.089914
BSD 1.09442
BTN 91.97361
BWP 14.52349
BYN 3.58137
BYR 21436.813352
BZD 2.205893
CAD 1.50598
CDF 3144.430228
CHF 0.937707
CLF 0.036769
CLP 1014.562892
CNY 7.729306
CNH 7.735933
COP 4605.57904
CRC 565.323828
CUC 1.093715
CUP 28.983447
CVE 110.348738
CZK 25.293285
DJF 194.8761
DKK 7.46093
DOP 65.888192
DZD 145.583226
EGP 53.123047
ERN 16.405725
ETB 131.049554
FJD 2.432148
FKP 0.832928
GBP 0.837129
GEL 2.980354
GGP 0.832928
GHS 17.461091
GIP 0.832928
GMD 74.372539
GNF 9442.165199
GTQ 8.462035
GYD 228.961654
HKD 8.499505
HNL 27.221035
HRK 7.43618
HTG 144.188099
HUF 400.858539
IDR 17044.235302
ILS 4.111433
IMP 0.832928
INR 91.94889
IQD 1433.648602
IRR 46034.463088
ISK 149.094942
JEP 0.832928
JMD 173.26148
JOD 0.775012
JPY 162.929566
KES 141.165822
KGS 93.516132
KHR 4446.211403
KMF 493.757722
KPW 984.34285
KRW 1477.497288
KWD 0.335267
KYD 0.911959
KZT 529.860284
LAK 23996.332038
LBP 98001.37242
LKR 320.343093
LRD 211.220285
LSL 19.123912
LTL 3.229456
LVL 0.661577
LYD 5.238928
MAD 10.731944
MDL 19.314951
MGA 5028.632073
MKD 61.656788
MMK 3552.343549
MNT 3716.443409
MOP 8.759367
MRU 43.325878
MUR 50.420692
MVR 16.799439
MWK 1897.722738
MXN 21.23382
MYR 4.689303
MZN 69.861053
NAD 19.123387
NGN 1772.366795
NIO 40.269822
NOK 11.741932
NPR 147.160982
NZD 1.794261
OMR 0.421047
PAB 1.09439
PEN 4.076619
PGK 4.304266
PHP 62.606978
PKR 303.789631
PLN 4.289495
PYG 8541.28633
QAR 3.989891
RON 4.974873
RSD 117.005312
RUB 105.105533
RWF 1473.564324
SAR 4.107467
SBD 9.039584
SCR 14.896265
SDG 657.866685
SEK 11.357415
SGD 1.42831
SHP 0.832928
SLE 24.988437
SLL 22934.650375
SOS 625.448889
SRD 35.123607
STD 22637.691614
SVC 9.576267
SYP 2747.991596
SZL 19.11672
THB 36.443128
TJS 11.666046
TMT 3.828002
TND 3.369057
TOP 2.561592
TRY 37.496678
TTD 7.428365
TWD 35.189515
TZS 2980.37349
UAH 45.065698
UGX 4022.015337
USD 1.093715
UYU 45.764729
UZS 13973.603886
VEF 3962039.925446
VES 41.127334
VND 27146.00548
VUV 129.848038
WST 3.059627
XAF 656.431126
XAG 0.034993
XAU 0.000413
XCD 2.95582
XDR 0.81411
XOF 656.455152
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.866474
ZAR 19.102716
ZMK 9844.744663
ZMW 28.918681
ZWL 352.175773
  • BCE

    -0.4500

    32.86

    -1.37%

  • SCS

    -0.4300

    12.6

    -3.41%

  • BCC

    -3.4400

    138.95

    -2.48%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    65.68

    +0.08%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    24.59

    +0.28%

  • GSK

    -1.0300

    39.21

    -2.63%

  • RIO

    0.4900

    66.84

    +0.73%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.77

    +0.36%

  • AZN

    -0.6350

    76.87

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    35.11

    -1.05%

  • RBGPF

    63.3500

    63.35

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.3500

    46.36

    -0.75%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    6.94

    +0.86%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.22

    0%

  • BP

    0.3600

    32.34

    +1.11%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.74

    +0.1%

'God spared us': Fleeing occupation by dinghy under Russian fire
'God spared us': Fleeing occupation by dinghy under Russian fire / Photo: BULENT KILIC - AFP

'God spared us': Fleeing occupation by dinghy under Russian fire

The tractor driver and the nurse who became his wife during the war think they must have helped 2,200 villagers cross a river under Russian shelling to Ukrainian-held land.

Text size:

Neither knows how -- or why -- the Russians never killed them before fleeing the upper stretches of the flashpoint Kherson region on Ukraine's southern front one month ago.

The retirement-age couple felt watched the entire time by the forces occupying their village of Arhanhelske on the Inhulets River.

"God spared us," tractor driver Anatoliy Maystrenko said with a glance at the gloomy sky.

Around him lay the booby-trapped ruins of a battle marking one of the turning points of the eight-month war.

Bloodied Russian uniforms littered curbsides and the stench of death wafted in from garages lining the mangled pavement.

Heavy thuds of controlled explosions echoed every few minutes across fields dotted with cluster munitions and mines.

Silent Ukrainian troops hauled heavy shells from the blackened remains of a highrise the Russians had used as their base.

The invaders abandoned their stockpiles while fleeing a Ukrainian counteroffensive.

What they left behind was either too dangerous to touch or blasted apart by artillery and rocket fire.

- 'They were watching' -

Nurse Antonina Voytseshko tried to play down her role in the villagers' escape over a six-month stretch starting in April and ending in the Russians' own flight.

The 59-year-old led small groups of people who had snuck out from nearby hamlets to a secret spot where her new husband lay in wait.

The tattooed 63-year-old tractor driver would then load the frightened people onto rubber dinghies and row with all his might.

"The shells would fall on the banks while we were in the water. All sorts of things would happen," Maystrenko said.

He would occasionally smuggle Ukrainian sabotage and reconnaissance squad soldiers to the Russian-held side of the river on his return trip.

Maystrenko said one of the Ukrainian soldiers but none of the civilians he had ferried across died.

The nurse used the couple's farmstead near the river as a safe house where villagers gathered before making their final escape.

"The Russians didn't let cars leave but they somehow let us go by river," Voytseshko said.

"We still don't know why. They obviously saw us. They were watching us the whole time."

- Hemmed in -

The west bank of the Inhulets River marked the staging post for the Ukrainians' push into Kherson from its northern reaches.

Their breakthrough at Arhanhelske on October 3 followed a counterstrike around the northern city of Kharkiv that put Russia on the back foot for the first time in the war.

The Kremlin's forces soon found themselves stranded between two rivers on the Kherson front.

The Inhulets to the west and the Dnipro to the east left the Russians woefully exposed in their defence of the region's eponymous capital in this pocket's southern end.

A simultaneous Ukrainian push into Kherson from the west has left the Russians in danger of losing control of the biggest city they have captured during the war.

- Disbelief -

Store owner Tamara Prokopiv laughed at the idea that she was standing on Russian land -- a claim made by Moscow when it announced the annexation of four Ukrainian regions in September.

The 59-year-old snuck out her two daughters across the river escape route set up by the Arhanhelske couple and then stayed behind in her next-door village of Vysokopillya.

The remains of Vysokopillya today are also comprehensively booby-trapped.

Military officials said 12 civilians had been hospitalised after touching various hidden explosives in the past week alone.

At least one of them is known to have died.

Prokopiv now runs a kiosk selling everything from candy to tea pots out of the entrance of a de-mined building on the village's main street.

"They degraded your dignity. You were nothing to them and they were the owners," she said of the Russian soldiers.

"They never hurt or beat me. But they also never offered me anything to eat. I was hungry and wanted to eat."

She said she shook in disbelief when her neighbour told her that she saw Ukrainians soldiers on the other end of the street.

"The soldiers hugged me so hard. I felt like they were my children," she said through tears.

"I now cry from happiness and from grief."

(A.Berg--BBZ)