The eastern city of Bakhmut – where soldiers suffer bitter cold and lack of supplies – is now the war’s most violent front

When Nazar and his fellow soldiers came to the village outside the key city of Bakhmut that they had been ordered to attack, they thought they would be there for a single day. They arrived without sleeping bags or extra rations, as snow lay on the ground.

Instead of the 15 Russians they had been warned to expect, they encountered 50 of them, dug into the tree line, triggering a fight that lasted several days. “In places we were only 100 metres apart,” recalls Nazar. “We were on one low hill and they were on another. Sometimes, we could even hear their laughter.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Stop overfishing or we’ll buy elsewhere, top UK fish firm warns European states

Young’s Seafood joins calls for sustainable quotas of mackerel, herring and blue…

Raducanu leaves Melbourne with no regrets but new desire to ‘stay at the top’

Briton says experience will help her strive for more success ‘You have…

Who’s a good boy? The unbreakable bond between humans and dogs

Our centuries old love of dogs has never been stronger. So what…

Consent review – a horribly timeless tale of male sexual violence

Channel 4’s unflinching new drama paints a terrifying picture of digital misogyny…