In Mariupol, temporarily occupied by the Russian army, pensioners did not receive their pensions in December, their complaints are ignored by the Russian “authority”.
This was stated by Petro Andryushchenko, adviser to the Mariupol chairman.
He published the relevant messages of elderly people from local chat rooms, where they describe their appeals to various authorities up to the offices of officials in Moscow, but their complaints and requests remain unanswered.
“In December, half of the city’s people of retirement age did not even receive the despicable 10,000 wooden ones (prices in Mariupol are higher than the Moscow average),” Andryushchenko wrote. He reminded that currently in Mariupol there is no heating in the houses, there are problems in the apartments with mold, problems with electricity, water supply, as well as dirt on the streets and at the same time insane prices for communal services, and now – the lack of timely payments of salaries and pensions. “I don’t know where to turn, and no one knows,” one of the Mariupol women writes in the chat room after a long list of her wanderings and correspondence with officials in her desire to get an answer about the lack of pension payments.
This is the reality of Mariupol residents under occupation, emphasizes the mayor’s adviser.
As reported, Russia’s aggression caused one of the biggest humanitarian disasters in Mariupol. The city is almost 90% destroyed as a result of enemy shelling, there is still no normal supply of electricity, water, or gas. Prices in stores are high, most residents do not have enough money to buy food.
The Russians are turning Mariupol and surrounding villages into a military-logistics hub.