Berliner Boersenzeitung - Bucha survivors haunted by 'nightmare' of Russian occupation

EUR -
AED 4.110351
AFN 76.096216
ALL 99.428451
AMD 433.481096
ANG 2.017528
AOA 1048.002013
ARS 1080.09173
AUD 1.62057
AWG 2.014319
AZN 1.901655
BAM 1.967432
BBD 2.260263
BDT 133.770877
BGN 1.95766
BHD 0.421716
BIF 3239.696415
BMD 1.119066
BND 1.442629
BOB 7.735735
BRL 6.100138
BSD 1.119418
BTN 93.651887
BWP 14.709968
BYN 3.663459
BYR 21933.695934
BZD 2.25644
CAD 1.502106
CDF 3206.687523
CHF 0.942052
CLF 0.037057
CLP 1022.524069
CNY 7.868178
CNH 7.832153
COP 4642.725561
CRC 581.135779
CUC 1.119066
CUP 29.655252
CVE 111.168271
CZK 25.082977
DJF 198.880169
DKK 7.457552
DOP 67.563656
DZD 148.143362
EGP 54.498858
ERN 16.785992
ETB 134.371808
FJD 2.444544
FKP 0.852235
GBP 0.833464
GEL 3.049477
GGP 0.852235
GHS 17.73706
GIP 0.852235
GMD 76.669658
GNF 9649.707208
GTQ 8.653159
GYD 234.20466
HKD 8.709242
HNL 27.831171
HRK 7.608543
HTG 147.934616
HUF 394.157586
IDR 16923.525012
ILS 4.203716
IMP 0.852235
INR 93.52679
IQD 1465.976616
IRR 47104.290072
ISK 151.085367
JEP 0.852235
JMD 176.654412
JOD 0.793083
JPY 160.08915
KES 144.359263
KGS 94.250206
KHR 4560.194496
KMF 494.570961
KPW 1007.158873
KRW 1482.00167
KWD 0.341461
KYD 0.932916
KZT 536.874096
LAK 24711.780603
LBP 100268.324254
LKR 339.185324
LRD 216.95894
LSL 19.404488
LTL 3.304311
LVL 0.676912
LYD 5.315697
MAD 10.824751
MDL 19.539521
MGA 5086.155823
MKD 61.593404
MMK 3634.683103
MNT 3802.586622
MOP 8.977074
MRU 44.449127
MUR 51.331175
MVR 17.189019
MWK 1942.69882
MXN 21.614782
MYR 4.631254
MZN 71.452277
NAD 19.404796
NGN 1829.240621
NIO 41.153644
NOK 11.631551
NPR 149.842898
NZD 1.761852
OMR 0.430774
PAB 1.119418
PEN 4.220031
PGK 4.383662
PHP 62.592742
PKR 310.932422
PLN 4.254024
PYG 8712.509917
QAR 4.07424
RON 4.975034
RSD 117.085668
RUB 103.84706
RWF 1501.786732
SAR 4.198393
SBD 9.299138
SCR 14.240151
SDG 673.120186
SEK 11.28248
SGD 1.434889
SHP 0.852235
SLE 25.567642
SLL 23466.251229
SOS 638.986366
SRD 33.850598
STD 23162.409279
SVC 9.794909
SYP 2811.687125
SZL 19.404575
THB 36.492596
TJS 11.899552
TMT 3.916731
TND 3.421549
TOP 2.620961
TRY 38.179742
TTD 7.617033
TWD 35.495101
TZS 3056.169973
UAH 46.251547
UGX 4141.485201
USD 1.119066
UYU 46.675957
UZS 14284.878873
VEF 4053875.805824
VES 41.14179
VND 27534.62186
VUV 132.857778
WST 3.130546
XAF 659.8582
XAG 0.03485
XAU 0.000421
XCD 3.024332
XDR 0.828096
XOF 659.689004
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.100935
ZAR 19.318718
ZMK 10072.939276
ZMW 29.692548
ZWL 360.338834
  • NGG

    -0.3700

    70.11

    -0.53%

  • RBGPF

    3.1000

    60.1

    +5.16%

  • CMSC

    0.0299

    25.1

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.07

    +0.14%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    13.12

    +0.84%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    48.53

    -0.68%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    40.98

    +0.29%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    25.12

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    10.09

    -0.2%

  • BCC

    0.1300

    141.78

    +0.09%

  • AZN

    -0.2700

    76.87

    -0.35%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    38.1

    +0.52%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    35.13

    +0.09%

  • RIO

    2.8400

    67.42

    +4.21%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.42

    +0.89%

  • BP

    -0.0300

    32.83

    -0.09%

Bucha survivors haunted by 'nightmare' of Russian occupation
Bucha survivors haunted by 'nightmare' of Russian occupation / Photo: Genya SAVILOV - AFP

Bucha survivors haunted by 'nightmare' of Russian occupation

When Vitaliy Zhyvotovskyi closes his eyes, he sees captives wearing white bags over their heads just like the people that Russian troops led into his house at gunpoint.

Text size:

His home in the town of Bucha, now synonymous with accusations of war crimes, became the base for some of Moscow's soldiers and a hellish prison for him, his daughter and a neighbour whose husband was killed.

"We were trembling not because of the cold, but due to fear because we could hear what the Russians did to the captives," he told AFP standing in front of his burned home.

"We had no hope," he said, recalling the sound of the victims' screams.

Their city drew worldwide attention after the discovery of at least 20 bodies in civilian clothes on a stretch of its Yablunska (Apple Tree) Street.

Many more locals survived, however, and what they witnessed and lived through will haunt them forever.

"What can you feel? Just horror," said Viktor Shatylo, 60, who documented the violence from his garage window in pictures. "It's a nightmare, simply a nightmare."

Before Russian troops captured Bucha, days into their invasion of Ukraine, it was a small but steadily growing town near Kyiv's north-western edge that became a key prize on the way to the capital.

Days into the attack, a Russian armoured vehicle roared into Zhyvotovskyi's yard on February 27 and began shelling a neighbouring apartment building, where fire subsequently ripped through its upper floors.

It was nearly a week later though that troops took control of his home and confined him and his daughter Natalia, 20, to the basement with a warning that they would be killed if they tried to leave without permission.

- 'I'll throw a grenade in' -

The soldiers ate, slept and ran a field hospital as well as an operations centre in the home built by Zhyvotovskyi's family, and which sits a minute's walk from Yablunska.

His sole focus was keeping him and his daughter alive, so the 50-year-old did things like speaking only Russian to the troops and talking about his family and belief in God to humanise himself.

It was not long before he saw the soldiers leading a hooded captive into the house, a scene he said he heard or saw on at least seven occasions –- followed by interrogations, beatings and screaming.

Traces of the occupation are everywhere in his destroyed home: Russian ration packs, a camouflage-covered combat manual and a small wooden bat with "MORAL" scrawled on it in Russian.

About midway through their ordeal, the Zhyvotovskyis' trauma intersected with that of their neighbour across the street, Lyudmyla Kizilova, 67.

Russian troops shot her husband dead on March 4 and she was left alone in her house, she told AFP.

She came to stay for several days in Zhyvotovskyi's basement after he urged the Russians to allow her safe passage across the street, while she was still dazed from a killing that she heard take place.

It happened when her husband, Valerii Kizilov, 70, emerged from their cellar where they had taken shelter. She heard shooting, then silence and an order shouted to her.

"If there is someone down there, come out or I'll throw a grenade in," she said, recalling the soldier's words.

- Search for slain husband -

She showed herself, but Russian troops refused to say what happened to her husband, and instead sent her back into the cellar with strict instructions not to come out –- an impossibility while her spouse was missing.

Kizilova waited until dark and then crept around her property with a light until she located his body: "He was laying there shot in the head, there was a lot of blood. But I found him."

It was Russian soldiers who buried the body in her garden on March 9, and after it was done, they poured some of the whisky they had looted from her house into one of her glasses and offered it to her –- she refused.

The next day she evacuated the area and plunged into a new life without her husband.

"I don't know how I will recover without him. Everything starts now from zero," she said. "If I was young, there would at least be hope to rebuild something."

Zhyvotovskyi and his daughter escaped the same day, but only after lying to the Russians by saying they were going to another family member's house but would be back.

When Zhyvotovskyi went upstairs to get approval he stumbled onto a horrific sight in his own kitchen -– three prisoners on their knees with bags over their heads, hands tied behind their backs.

- Never forget -

When he allowed AFP to visit his home, which was heavily damaged in a fire that started sometime after he left, there was what appeared to be a dried layer of blood in the same spot on the floor where the captives had kneeled.

For some reason the Russian troops allowed him and his daughter to leave together on the promise they return, with the threat the house would be blown up if they didn't keep their word.

"God forbid someone experience something like this," Zhyvotovskyi said. "We are alive just by chance."

For survivors across Ukraine like Zhyvotovskyi and Kizilova, the war trauma they suffered will manifest itself in personal ways and may not come immediately.

"Some people already have post-traumatic syndrome, and some others are still at the stage when they will feel it later," said Alyona Kryvulyak, a coordinator with the Ukrainian branch of La Strada, a women's rights organisation.

"But each of us will be traumatised by the war in our own way," she added.

Yet for Shatylo, the Yablunska street local who filmed the violence on his road, remembering what happened is perhaps the most important thing.

He risked his life to take photos so "children and grandchildren can see what was happening, so that they know not from television, but in real life.

"But many have already seen it and I think they will remember it for hundreds of years."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)