Berliner Boersenzeitung - Mechanics, hairdressers... Ukraine recruits train for attack

EUR -
AED 4.103904
AFN 76.480063
ALL 99.081454
AMD 432.90015
ANG 2.013888
AOA 1050.381473
ARS 1080.709609
AUD 1.622435
AWG 2.013944
AZN 1.899723
BAM 1.959371
BBD 2.256232
BDT 133.530959
BGN 1.955297
BHD 0.421153
BIF 3240.434417
BMD 1.117306
BND 1.43593
BOB 7.721209
BRL 6.076135
BSD 1.117446
BTN 93.53283
BWP 14.616769
BYN 3.656396
BYR 21899.201426
BZD 2.252445
CAD 1.506296
CDF 3201.082384
CHF 0.945789
CLF 0.036682
CLP 1012.169856
CNY 7.832204
CNH 7.799764
COP 4655.256262
CRC 586.674415
CUC 1.117306
CUP 29.608614
CVE 110.464334
CZK 25.140956
DJF 198.567519
DKK 7.456947
DOP 67.203073
DZD 147.886879
EGP 54.050918
ERN 16.759593
ETB 133.512806
FJD 2.443882
FKP 0.850895
GBP 0.833477
GEL 3.044671
GGP 0.850895
GHS 17.629444
GIP 0.850895
GMD 76.535827
GNF 9650.414312
GTQ 8.637819
GYD 233.790248
HKD 8.691922
HNL 27.759838
HRK 7.596577
HTG 147.610328
HUF 396.118791
IDR 16909.311958
ILS 4.122921
IMP 0.850895
INR 93.437356
IQD 1463.8809
IRR 47044.176983
ISK 150.69072
JEP 0.850895
JMD 175.446596
JOD 0.791836
JPY 162.082032
KES 144.132373
KGS 94.078358
KHR 4540.314973
KMF 493.98898
KPW 1005.574942
KRW 1472.732899
KWD 0.341013
KYD 0.931205
KZT 535.214964
LAK 24675.410525
LBP 100068.257103
LKR 334.953422
LRD 216.787016
LSL 19.214889
LTL 3.299115
LVL 0.675848
LYD 5.289545
MAD 10.808094
MDL 19.46064
MGA 5056.305194
MKD 61.503598
MMK 3628.966939
MNT 3796.606401
MOP 8.9548
MRU 44.207961
MUR 51.16169
MVR 17.150954
MWK 1937.665915
MXN 21.932732
MYR 4.60774
MZN 71.395349
NAD 19.214889
NGN 1847.351835
NIO 41.125684
NOK 11.787212
NPR 149.651066
NZD 1.766774
OMR 0.430093
PAB 1.117456
PEN 4.191676
PGK 4.441133
PHP 62.440644
PKR 310.3149
PLN 4.274467
PYG 8727.905864
QAR 4.072986
RON 4.975032
RSD 117.073555
RUB 103.479795
RWF 1510.366031
SAR 4.19088
SBD 9.276677
SCR 15.032231
SDG 672.059324
SEK 11.318636
SGD 1.434884
SHP 0.850895
SLE 25.527433
SLL 23429.346515
SOS 638.669637
SRD 34.126442
STD 23125.982409
SVC 9.777644
SYP 2807.265263
SZL 19.206174
THB 36.220806
TJS 11.884171
TMT 3.921745
TND 3.397121
TOP 2.616844
TRY 38.193202
TTD 7.584959
TWD 35.429221
TZS 3057.909535
UAH 46.004416
UGX 4126.557232
USD 1.117306
UYU 47.235237
UZS 14256.108134
VEF 4047500.389233
VES 41.12206
VND 27513.665057
VUV 132.648836
WST 3.125623
XAF 657.160501
XAG 0.035035
XAU 0.000418
XCD 3.019575
XDR 0.826714
XOF 657.142824
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.717582
ZAR 19.248616
ZMK 10057.092325
ZMW 29.417137
ZWL 359.772139
  • NGG

    -0.0400

    70.06

    -0.06%

  • SCS

    0.3300

    13.21

    +2.5%

  • RBGPF

    63.3000

    63.3

    +100%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.46

    +0.52%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    34.83

    -0.2%

  • BCC

    2.2400

    140.31

    +1.6%

  • GSK

    0.3400

    40.9

    +0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.1400

    37.82

    -0.37%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    25.11

    +0.08%

  • RIO

    3.0800

    70.75

    +4.35%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    7.1

    +0.42%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    10.04

    -0.2%

  • RELX

    -0.2800

    48.09

    -0.58%

  • CMSD

    0.0450

    25.11

    +0.18%

  • AZN

    0.6400

    78.18

    +0.82%

  • BP

    -0.8900

    30.79

    -2.89%

Mechanics, hairdressers... Ukraine recruits train for attack
Mechanics, hairdressers... Ukraine recruits train for attack / Photo: Sergei SUPINSKY - AFP

Mechanics, hairdressers... Ukraine recruits train for attack

"Hold on to the rope, look at me," the instructor says, coaxing 28-year-old lawyer Iryna Gorobiyovska who is nervously about to abseil down a building.

Text size:

Brimming with motivation but lacking experience, the Ukrainian, whose nom de guerre is Bunny, ends up sliding, somewhat awkwardly, to the ground.

Like thousands of others, she signed up to the territorial defence unit, a support force to the regular Ukrainian army, immediately after Russia invaded.

Open to all nationals, the only requirement is being aged between 18 and 60.

Some members already have military experience acquired after Moscow's annexation of Crimea in 2014 and in the conflict with pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine that began the same year.

They immediately deployed to the war effort, but many others, like Gorobiyovska, did not know how to handle a weapon or apply a tourniquet.

While the capital Kyiv was under siege by Russian forces earlier in the war, they mostly helped build barricades or hand out humanitarian aid.

Russian soldiers are now focused on the south and eastern regions of Ukraine, but -- anticipating a drawn-out conflict -- Kyiv has stepped up the training of its new recruits so they are ready to face the enemy if and when needed.

- Taught 'how to attack' -

Training sessions have been held every week since March, says Mykhailo Shcherbina, deputy director of defence affairs for the Department of Municipal Security at Kyiv City State Administration.

He says that between 8,000 and 10,000 people have been trained since March.

"It's a crime to send people who aren't prepared to a frontline. Everyone has to be trained even (to a) minimum," he tells AFP.

It's all the more crucial now, he adds, as after largely defensive operations, Ukrainian forces have begun going more on the offensive, such as in the area around the northern city of Kharkiv.

"And we have to teach people how to attack, how to liberate the cities," he says.

- 'Defend my country' -

Deep in the forest, away from the capital, an old hut formerly used by the Pioneers, the Soviet version of the Scouts, is now a training ground.

Over five days, mechanics, construction workers, hairdressers and the likes are put through their paces, learning how to navigate a minefield, evacuate the wounded under fire, shoot an automatic weapon -- or escape through the window of a multi-storey building.

It's the latter that causes difficulty for Gorobiyovska.

"It was so scary because I didn't understand what should I do," says the woman with khaki painted fingernails afterwards.

"I agree to defend my country. But I hope I won't have to climb down from a high storey" to do it, she adds.

In another training exercise, the recruits must take back a site held by the enemy.

Advancing in single file, their weapons trained as they pass open areas, a small group enters an abandoned building.

"Contact", "contact," one of them shouts out amid the crackling of weapon fire -- in this case, their amunition is small white plastic pellets.

"Our task is to teach them to do fighting correctly in buildings, to know how to clear them and annihilate the enemy," an instructor, who declines to give his name, says.

"And remain alive."

- 'A chance' -

Konstantin, a 27-year-old municipal employee, knows the stakes only too well.

He joined the territorial defence unit after fighting got close to his home in March, he says.

"I couldn't not do anything, so I joined the territorial defence to protect my town, my country," he explains.

He acknowledges however: "If I'd gone straight to the frontline, I wouldn't have survived."

Now, having undergone his training, he believes he "has a chance".

Nevertheless the baby-faced young man wonders how he'll react when on the ground in a real-life situation.

"Training is training, but when you see real blood it's different. Is it going to stop me in my tracks, or give me a rush of adrenaline?" he says.

Doctor Demian Popov, 53, tries to provide the recruits with methods of overcoming battle stress and teaches them about post-traumatic stress disorder and the role of intuition in battle.

He says that despite them being highly motivated "there is no methodology to find out who will leave the battle and who will not".

"It will be known only when the person will get there if he/she can fight or not," he adds.

(P.Werner--BBZ)