Strikes on the capital have caused few casualties but residents face a new ‘psychological terror’

When the air raid alarms go off at around 3am, the first things exhausted Kyvians do is reach for their mobile phones, check the news, message family and friends – and start listening to the explosions that almost certainly follow.

“You wake up, go to a safe space, maybe a shelter, holding your phone. You cannot work, you cannot read; you sit and look around and wait. In the worst case, you hear a distinctive noise, maybe like a motorcycle passing by,” said Kira Rudik, a Ukrainian MP and leader of the liberal Holos party.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

You May Also Like

This is justice of a kind. But don’t forget Ahmaud Arbery’s killers almost got away | Akin Olla

The verdict is welcome, but it rings hollow given the underlying systems…

Can fleeing Tories be turned into quality TV? | David Mitchell

With more than 40 Conservatives seeking new employment before the next election,…

British foreign policy is in flux – we need more than Sunak’s pragmatic blandness | Martin Kettle

The country is not a superpower, its strategic future lies in Europe,…