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Your email address will not be published.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

Taylor Wimpey drops costly leasehold terms after investigation

Thousands will be freed from contracts where ground rent charges doubled every…

Scotland passes bill making it easier for people to legally change gender

MSPs vote in favour of plans to allow people to legally change…

Where the wild things are: a trip to Romania’s southern mountains

The reintroduction of bison to the Carpathians is a boon for nature…

Friends creator: ‘mistake’ to use wrong pronouns for Chandler’s trans parent

Marta Kauffman says she regrets the representation of the character Amanda Bing…