Governor: Russian attacks against Donetsk Oblast kill 5, injure 3 over past day.

Russian forces shelled Donetsk Oblast's Lyman district on Aug.

22, killing five people and injuring three, reported Governor Pavlo Kyrylenko. Three residents were killed, and one was wounded in the village of Torske, while another was injured in Zakitne, Kyrylenko wrote[1] on Telegram. Earlier the same day, he said[2] on national television that Russian shelling had killed two civilians and wounded another in Yampil.

Russia also reportedly launched an air strike on the village of New York in Donetsk Oblast, using aerial bombs that weigh 250 kilograms each. There were no casualties, according to the governor. "The enemy is targeting civilians in Donetsk Oblast every day, especially in frontline communities," Kyrylenko told TV reporters.

Stranded civilians brave shelling, return to Ukraine's front-line towns

ORIKHIV, HULIAIPOLE, Zaporizhzhia Oblast - A massive rumble shakes the basement under the partly destroyed administrative building, followed by another blast much closer. "Not good," says 51-year-old Svitlana Mandrich, Orikhiv's deputy mayor, looking warily at the sandbags protecting the cellar's v...

[3]

The official added that 171 children remain on the front-line territories of Donetsk Oblast, but local authorities plan to evacuate them with their parents in the next two weeks forcibly. The mandatory evacuations from settlements located near active hostilities began on April 7. Local officials are responsible for

implementing the policy, and all children evacuated from active combat zones must be accompanied by a relative or a legal guardian. A total of 492,000 people remain in Donetsk Oblast following Ukraine's evacuation efforts, according to Kyrylenko. Consistently the site of the heaviest fighting of the full-scale war, the eastern region regularly sees civilian casualties from Russian strikes across the front line.

'It's a lottery': How Ukraine's assault brigade counterattacks near Bakhmut

Editor's note: The Kyiv Independent spent a day with soldiers from the 80th Separate Assault Brigade in June, and the story is comprised of interviews with them about their experience near Bakhmut. The soldiers are identified by their names or callsigns, and their deployment locations are not reveal...

[4] Dinara Khalilova

News Editor

Dinara Khalilova is a news editor at the Kyiv Independent. She has previously worked as a fixer and local producer for Sky News.

Dinara holds a BA in journalism from Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv and a Master's degree in media and communication from Bournemouth University in the UK.

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References

  1. ^ wrote (t.me)
  2. ^ said (youtu.be)
  3. ^ Stranded civilians brave shelling, return to Ukraine's front-line townsORIKHIV, HULIAIPOLE, Zaporizhzhia Oblast - A massive rumble shakes the basement under the partly destroyed administrative building, followed by another blast much closer. "Not good," says 51-year-old Svitlana Mandrich, Orikhiv's deputy mayor, looking warily at the sandbags protecting the cellar's v... (kyivindependent.com)
  4. ^ 'It's a lottery': How Ukraine's assault brigade counterattacks near BakhmutEditor's note: The Kyiv Independent spent a day with soldiers from the 80th Separate Assault Brigade in June, and the story is comprised of interviews with them about their experience near Bakhmut.

    The soldiers are identified by their names or callsigns, and their deployment locations are not reveal... (kyivindependent.com)