Explosion reported at Russian proxy’s house in occupied Kherson Oblast.
An explosion was reported on July 22 in the house belonging to Heorhii Zhuravko, the Russia-installed mayor of occupied Oleshky in Kherson Oblast, the exiled mayor Yevhen Ryshchuk told[1] Suspline on July 23. It's unclear whether Zhuravko was at the site, according to the report. The exiled mayor said Zhuravko no longer lives at this house, adding that the locals spotted him at the site the same day prior to the explosion.
Russia installed Zhuravko as the Oleshky mayor in May 2022, three months into the occupation of the city, which sits just across the Dnipro River from the regional capital. Reports of collaborators being targeted in the Russian-occupied territories emerged since the beginning of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Zhuravko's uncle, who also was collaborating with the Russian forces, was killed in an explosion in late September last year.
Russia hasn't commented on the explosion in Oleshky. However, Ukrainian authorities have repeatedly said that resistance is ongoing in the occupied regions.
A glance into Kherson's underground resistance during Russian occupation Editor's Note: We don't reveal the real names of the people interviewed for this story due to the sensitive nature of their activities that puts them in direct danger.
In the story, names were assigned to them for storytelling purposes. KHERSON - Kherson was liberated because Ukraine forced Russia...
[2] Alexander KhrebetReporter
Alexander Khrebet is a reporter with the Kyiv Independent. He covers Ukraine's foreign policy, alleged abuse of power in the country's military leadership, and reports on the Russian-occupied territories.
Alexander is the European Press Prize 2023 winner, the #AllForJan Award 2023 winner and Ukraine's 2022 National Investigative Journalism Award finalist. His was published in the Washington Times and Atlantic Council.
References
- ^ told (suspilne.media)
- ^ A glance into Kherson's underground resistance during Russian occupationEditor's Note: We don't reveal the real names of the people interviewed for this story due to the sensitive nature of their activities that puts them in direct danger. In the story, names were assigned to them for storytelling purposes.
KHERSON - Kherson was liberated because Ukraine forced Russia...
(kyivindependent.com)