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Fired with S-300 missiles and guided aerial bombs: the Russians struck dozens of strikes in the Zaporizhzhia region

On August 2, the Russian military shelled 20 settlements in the Zaporizhzhia region. The Russians struck with guided aerial bombs, fired from rocket salvo systems and S-300 anti-aircraft missile systems, and attacked with unmanned aerial vehicles. The invaders mainly attacked the residential infrastructure of the region.

This is reported by the National Police of the Zaporizhzhia Region.

The Russian military launched another missile attack on the Zaporizhzhia district. This time there were no victims or destruction.

The military continues to drop guided aerial bombs on Orihiv. Nearby settlements are shelled with artillery and rocket launchers.

A 58-year-old local resident died as a result of artillery shelling of Preobrazhenka. Houses and farm buildings were damaged by the blast wave and shrapnel.

The Russians are taking Russians to Melitopol to change the ethnic composition of the population

Russians are lured to the city with high salaries. According to the reports of the chairman of Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov, the Russians are importing many citizens of the Russian Federation to Melitopol in order to change the ethnic composition of the region’s population. According to Fedorov, workers, teachers and doctors from Crimea and the Russian Federation are lured by very high salaries. The average salary of doctors in military hospitals in Melitopol is five times higher than in Crimea. “Workers are brought in from all over the “great and mighty” and involved in the construction of defense structures, promising tens of thousands of rubles. But at the same time, local unqualified traitors in some structures have not been paid their salaries for several months,” Ivan Fedorov notes.

The chairman also emphasizes that in this way the Russians are doing everything so that no one can resist in the occupied territories.

Detention and torture of hundreds of people, mining of territories: what is happening in occupied Energodar

Almost a year and a half ago, Russian troops occupied Energodar. The Russians take local residents with a pro-Ukrainian position “to the basement”. To date, more than a thousand people have been tortured, and several hundred people are permanently detained by the Russians. Employees of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant are also under constant pressure.

Dmytro Orlov, chairman of Energodaru, told about it.

At the beginning of March 2022, Russian invaders captured Energodar and the largest nuclear power plant in Europe. Today, the Russians are covering the perimeter of the Zaporizhzhia NPP to hide equipment and personnel.

Ukrainian personnel continue to work at the station. According to Dmytro Orlov, energy workers took their families en masse to Zaporizhzhia, and returned themselves, because most of them feel a personal responsibility not only to the country, but also to the whole world.

“Such specialists are simply hard to find. In order to prepare a block shift supervisor, he is trained at the factory for 15 years, not including training at a higher educational institution. The Russians have no personnel potential. It is impossible to replace the station employees with the first-best traitor who went to collaboration. In addition, they receive a license separately for each reactor unit, because the first power unit is different from the sixth,” Orlov noted.

He also confirmed that the Russian military had mined the entire perimeter of the station and the coast. Wild animals often end up on power lines near the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

According to the chairman, more than 1,000 energy donors were tortured. The Russian military is constantly detaining several hundred people. Electric currents and beatings are used practically every day: “At first, only activists were taken away, so that a general opinion was formed that this could happen to anyone who expresses a pro-Ukrainian position. They had to neutralize such active citizens, because then the general mass is easier to control and plant their propaganda. Then they began to take away even those who had even a hint of the presence of Ukrainian symbols.

The Russians see them as terrorists, and sometimes even throw up weapons. Previously, they also recorded provocative videos, forcing people to sing the Russian national anthem or confess to sabotage planned by the Central Intelligence Agency. People were often released after such videos.” During the occupation in Energodar, six Gauleiters have already changed. Dmytro Orlov noted that three of the 200 employees of the executive bodies went to cooperate with the Russian troops. And these are people not from high positions and not those who had great experience or expertise in a certain field. Out of three thousand educators, 5% went for cooperation. “For the most part, these are people who were unable to realize themselves earlier and went for positions, having neither knowledge nor education, but they do not stay in those positions for a long time,” said Orlov.

In Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, and Kyiv, where the largest number of displaced persons are from Energodar, assistance centers for evacuated residents were created. Most of the people who come to the centers are determined to return to the city after de-occupation, many of them still have family, friends and property there. According to Dmytro Orlov, people often turn to an issue that cannot be resolved — evacuation from uncontrolled territory.

“Currently, it is very problematic: the Russians do not release people and do not allow the delivery of any aid or medicine,” the chairman of Energodar noted.

Dmytro Orlov also noted that after deoccupation of the city, it will be most difficult to return people.

“People will not return to the city without communications, infrastructure, Internet and roads, schools and hospitals. I understand that the Russians will take everything they can from everywhere, and it will be necessary to enter with a certain material and technical component and personnel potential, because there will be a lot of work. I can’t even predict how many years we will be able to return to the pre-occupation period. But we will all work hard on it,” said the chairman.