Ukrainian authorities start mandatory evacuation from Kupiansk district.

Due to increased Russian attacks, the local authorities began[1] a mandatory evacuation of civilians from 37 settlements in the Kupiansk district, Kharkiv Oblast. According to the Kupiansk City Military Administration, residents will be relocated to safer Ukrainian regions. The evacuation will take place in the communities of Dvorichna and Petropavlivka as well as in parts of the Kindrashivka, Kurylivka, and Kupiansk communities.

In the city of Kupiansk, locals residing near the Zaoskillia train station on the east bank of the Oskil River will be evacuated, the authorities wrote on Aug.

10.

Trained in the heat of battle: The journey of Kharkiv Oblast's Territorial Defense Editor's Note: Some of the soldiers interviewed in this piece declined to give their last names for security reasons or because they had relatives in occupied territory, and are identified by first names and callsigns instead. KHARKIV OBLAST - At an undisclosed part of the front line in Ukraine's

[2]

Earlier, Kharkiv Oblast Governor Oleh Syniehubov announced[3] the plans to evacuate more than 11,000 people, including 600 children, from the area.

"The enemy has significantly increased the shelling of settlements close to the front line and continues to terrorize the civilian population, including conducting airstrikes," wrote Syniehubov. "Under such conditions, the risks to the life and health of civilians have increased significantly." Russia has been concentrating its forces[4] around Kupiansk in Kharkiv Oblast since mid-July, trying to regain the positions lost during the Ukrainian surprise counteroffensive last autumn. Ukraine liberated Kupiansk from Russian occupation in September 2022.

Due to its close proximity to the border, the city and other surrounding areas of Kharkiv Oblast have been under constant attack since the start of the full-scale invasion.

'We pushed and they collapsed': How Ukraine liberated Kharkiv Oblast VOVCHANSK, Kharkiv Oblast - Three months after its liberation, Vovchansk still bears the scars of Russia's seven-month-long occupation. A small partly-destroyed concrete bridge leads into a town whose main road is now littered with charred vehicles turned upside down.

The local police station, used...

[5]

References

  1. ^ began (t.me)
  2. ^ Trained in the heat of battle: The journey of Kharkiv Oblast's Territorial DefenseEditor's Note: Some of the soldiers interviewed in this piece declined to give their last names for security reasons or because they had relatives in occupied territory, and are identified by first names and callsigns instead. KHARKIV OBLAST - At an undisclosed part of the front line in Ukraine's (kyivindependent.com)
  3. ^ announced (t.me)
  4. ^ forces (kyivindependent.com)
  5. ^ 'We pushed and they collapsed': How Ukraine liberated Kharkiv OblastVOVCHANSK, Kharkiv Oblast - Three months after its liberation, Vovchansk still bears the scars of Russia's seven-month-long occupation. A small partly-destroyed concrete bridge leads into a town whose main road is now littered with charred vehicles turned upside down.

    The local police station, used... (kyivindependent.com)