In the temporarily occupied Genichesk of the Kherson region, the Russians are forming lists of real estate whose owners have evacuated from the region.
This is reported in the Center of National Resistance.
The occupiers distribute leaflets in apartment buildings and the private sector.
Residents are required by the collaborators to bring the documents of the “property owner” to the “Territory Development Fund”. The occupiers distribute leaflets in apartment buildings and the private sector.
Residents are required by the collaborators to bring the documents of the “property owner” to the “Territory Development Fund”.
“According to the practice of other cities, it is not difficult to predict that if the owner is not found, then his real estate will be declared “ownerless”, i.e., subject to “nationalization”. Note that at the same time, arbitrary occupation of housing by relatives of collaborators and owners of Russian passports, which were “evacuated” from the right bank of the Kherson Region. They were already given tacit permission for this by the occupation authorities,” the Center writes.
The temporarily occupied territories of the Kherson Region are restless: the enemy is constantly prowling the residential quarters of the coastal cities, and the Armed Forces of Ukraine cover the enemy’s positions in response.
The coastal areas on the left bank of the Dnieper in the Kherson region are a solid hot spot: the Russians shell the areas controlled by them in order to “give nightmares” to the local population and blame the Armed Forces. In response, Ukrainian fighters strike the hidden positions of the enemy.
Thus, the Kherson telegram channels report on powerful explosions in the Kakhovsky district, in particular in Velyka Lepetis, which rang out in the morning of December 28. During the night and at dawn it was loud in Kherson itself, which the occupiers covered with “Grada”, as well as in Golya Prystan.
And late in the evening of December 27, the Russians received an unpleasant answer from the Armed Forces: an airstrike on a probably important military facility (headquarters or a large barracks) in the village of Kostogrizove. This is evidenced by the panic in the ranks of the occupiers and the mobilization of additional forces to the site of the hit.
In addition, during the previous day, several more targeted strikes were carried out on enemy positions in the Kherson region:
Also, in the morning of December 28, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine confirmed the effective fire damage to the enemy’s positions in the Chaplynka area of the Kherson region, which happened two days earlier: the losses of the occupiers amounted to about 50 dead servicemen.
In addition, the military blogger, Colonel of the ZSU Anatoliy Shtefan (Stirlitz), citing his own sources, announced on the evening of December 27 the news of another effective attack on the Russian headquarters: 12 eliminated senior officers and 7 “sanitary casualties” of the enemy. However, the location and direction have not yet been disclosed. It may be, in particular, about the Kherson region, since recently the headquarters in Zabaryn was affected there.
At the same time, the coastal settlements on the left bank of the Dnieper increasingly become objects of bombing by the occupiers: the Russians mainly hit residential areas. Photos showing the consequences of the recent shelling of Oleshok were posted on his channel by the mayor Yevhen Ryschuk.
According to the General Staff, in the Kherson direction, the enemy continues mortar and artillery shelling of populated areas along the right bank of the Dnipro River. In particular, Chervonogrihorivka of Dnipropetrovsk region was affected; Antonivka of the Kherson region and the city of Kherson. Unfortunately, there are victims among the civilian population.
On December 27, residents of Kherson and Novaya Kakhovka heard several explosions, and there were also reports of airstrikes on Russian positions near Oleshok.
On Wednesday, December 28, Russian occupiers shelled the village of Kizomys in the Belozer community of the Kherson region. Three people were injured, including a teenager.
Deputy Head of the Office of the President Kyrylo Tymoshenko reports this.
“Three people were injured due to enemy shelling. Among them is a 14-year-old child with a mine-explosive injury,” he wrote.
According to him, all the wounded were taken to hospitals.
On the morning of Wednesday, December 28, explosions were also reported in Kherson.
Russian troops shelled the Kherson region about 50 times in the past day. As a result of enemy attacks, at least three people were injured.
Thirteen-year-old Nika Selivanova waved goodbye to her best friend Inna, who was leaning against the glass partition that separates the hall of the Kherson station from the waiting area.
A few minutes ago, they hugged and cried. Inna kissed Asia – a dachshund wrapped in a warm blanket, which Nika carried in her arms.
The girls do not know when they will see each other again.
Nika’s family is traveling from Kherson. First – to Khmelnytskyi, hoping that they will be helped there, but where to go further – they themselves do not yet know.
The last few days in the city were very difficult, it was the last straw for Nika Elena’s mother.
“Earlier, Russian troops fired at us 7-10 times a day, now – 70-80, 24/7. It’s very scary,” says Olena. “I love Ukraine and my city. But we are forced to leave.”
The Ukrainian army liberated Kherson from the Russian occupation on November 11, but Russian troops are still on the left bank of the Dnieper, and the distance between these banks is only 500 meters in some places.
Since then, the Ukrainian military claims, Russia has been terrorizing the city and striking civilian objects.
On the eve of Christmas, Kherson was again under attack. After that, more than 400 people from Kherson left the city, among them – Elena and her three daughters.
At the exit from Kherson, a queue of cars with hundreds of frightened civilians formed.
“We can’t stand it anymore. Very heavy shelling. We stayed all this time and thought it would pass, we would be lucky. But then it flew into the neighboring house, and my father’s house was also shelled,” Iryna Antonenko says with tears in her eyes. who is going to visit relatives in Kryvyi Rih.
Last month, joyful people of Kherson met the Ukrainian army. They independently removed Russian symbols and other traces of the presence of the enemy from the streets and buildings.
But the retreat of the Russian troops does not mean that they gave the city peace. The Russians regularly shell Kherson, trying to provoke a humanitarian catastrophe.
On the eve of Christmas, Kherson was again under attack, 11 people died, more than half a hundred were injured. “The city center, a day off, many people on the street,” wrote the deputy head of the president’s office Kyrylo Tymoshenko.
Among the dead are a social worker, a butcher and a woman who sold mobile SIM cards. Ordinary people who worked at the central market or came there for purchases.
Kherson Oblast is a strategically important region that is called the gateway to Crimea. Many analysts say that now Russia is forced to take a defensive position here.
It is difficult to understand what she hopes to gain from the shelling of Kherson. In addition to mortar shells, we also saw here incendiary ammunition designed to set fire to buildings and infrastructure facilities.
There is almost constant mortar shelling in the city.
56-year-old Serhii Breshun from Kherson died in his sleep. A shell hit his house.
The day after Serhiy’s death, we met his mother, 82-year-old Tamara, who came to look for his passport among the rubble. She needed a document to collect her son’s body from the morgue.
“That day, I must have felt that something was going to go wrong. We talked to him, I convinced him not to stay in the house. He didn’t leave, and that’s it. Our life is ruined,” she said and cried.
We barely had time to talk to her when new loud explosions rang out.
Now everywhere in Kherson is dangerous, and an elderly mother who wants to say goodbye to her son in a dignified way is taking a great risk.
39-year-old Red Cross volunteer Victoria Yaryshko died as a result of a mortar shell explosion near the organization’s base in Kherson.
Her mother Lyudmila Berezhna showed the order that was presented to Victoria.
“I’m so happy that she helped so many people. She was so kind. But it hurts so much. Now I’m going to raise her two children. I tell them, you should be proud of your mom because she’s a hero.”
Victoria lived in an underground shelter of the Red Cross with two children – 17-year-old Olenka and 12-year-old Sashkо. The children remained there after the death of their mother – under the protection of volunteers who became their family.
“When a loved one dies, it’s hard. But if we gave up and stopped, her death would be in vain. We work so that people live. Everything else is secondary,” says Dmytro Rakytskyi, a volunteer and friend of Victoria.
But this is difficult to do, knowing that your family is in danger every minute.
When, a few minutes later, explosions are heard again, Dmytro walks back and forth, trying to call his wife, his face is tense. He has two children.
“They don’t want to go. They worry about me, and I worry about them. That’s how we live,” he says.
“What angers me the most is that Russian troops always hit civilian infrastructure.
Houses, high-rise buildings, boiler houses. It is impossible to understand the logic of these attacks,” Dmytro is indignant.
“We almost always have no electricity or water. Sometimes it appears for a short time and disappears again due to shelling. It’s very scary at night. But there is gas, and we can keep warm,” says Larisa Revtova from Kherson.
Tens of thousands of civilians remain in the city. Just this week, the regional administration twice urged them to leave, because Kherson continues to suffer from constant shelling and attacks.
Due to constant and intense shelling of the Korabel microdistrict in Kherson, the authorities want all the residents who remained there.
This was stated by the head of the city’s military administration, Galina Luhova.
She reported that she had received appeals from the heads of district councils, including Korabelnaya, with a request to announce a mandatory evacuation for residents of this microdistrict.
“The enemy is pressuring this area day and night. And considering that there are no necessary things for life support, I turned to the head of the Kherson Regional Military Administration with this request. We have to take care and think about evacuating these people from this area,” said Lugova.