When Russian soldiers started going from house to house shooting people, Igor Pedin set off with his dog Zhu-Zhu to Zaporizhzhia

The aim was to be the invisible man, says Igor Pedin, 61. It was to drift, as if a ghost, with his small trolley bag of supplies and dog Zhu-Zhu, a nine-year-old mongrel terrier, through the hellscape of the besieged port city of Mariupol, out into the badlands of Russian-occupied territories and on to the relative safety of the Ukrainian-held city of Zaporizhzhia – a mere 225km walk away.

The equivalent of walking by foot from London to Sheffield but through a war unseen in its scale in Europe since 1945 and towards the oncoming convoys of tanks, armoured vehicles and nervous trigger-happy Russian soldiers racing towards Mariupol; it meant sidestepping mines and crossing destroyed bridges with his dog and luggage, where an erring step would lead to a 30ft drop to certain death; he would have to pass the smouldering homes and weeping men and women with their heartbreaking stories of death and suffering and their loss of will to live on.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

You May Also Like

EU sanctions Alisher Usmanov’s sister

Saodat Narzieva held 27 secret Swiss bank accounts linked to the Russian…

Derek Chauvin trial: Minneapolis police chief expected to testify – live

Murder trial of former officer Chauvin enters second week Police chief Medaria…

Key Madeleine McCann witness says Met police ignored tipoff for nine years

German man says he first contacted Scotland Yard about suspect Christian Brückner…

Steve Rowe’s warts and all M&S farewell just enhances credibility for investors | Nils Pratley

Outgoing CEO spelled out what still left undone, but retailer in better…