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Freed, but still fearful, Kherson residents weigh evacuation

Nadiia Kostyliova and her 11-year-old son, Sasha, battle an icy wind as they make their way, laden with heavy luggage, down the platform, toward their train carriage.

The train will be evacuating them from Kherson. The city was liberated from Russian control last month, in a Ukrainian offensive, but it is barely livable. The Russians are bombarding Kherson with artillery shells, and Sasha has grown petrified by the explosions.

Why We Wrote This

In a cruel twist, residents of Kherson who survived nine months of Russian occupation until liberation by Ukrainian troops are now subject to such hardship that many feel obliged to evacuate.

The bulk of the city’s residents left during the nine-month Russian occupation; for those who survived that ordeal, evacuation now is a cruel blow. The new evacuees all leave reluctantly, looking forward to returning home when the Russian forces, which withdrew only a short distance, have been pushed farther back, out of artillery range. And when water and electricity have been restored to the shattered city.

Ms. Kostyliova has never ventured far beyond the Kherson city limits. Now she is setting off on a journey across Ukraine to stay with her sister, uncertain whether she will find work, or where her son will go to school. “I’ve never been so far in my life,” she says. “So I’m scared.” But, she adds, “it is no longer possible to stay.”

An icy wind whips the platform at Kherson station as Nadiia Kostyliova and her 11-year-old son, Sasha, make their way to their carriage. She carries most of their heavy bags, including his Paw Patrol backpack. He insists on keeping one, though, because he wants to show her he is a man.

They board and find their compartment: two bunks, no door. Next door is another family, whose baby begins to cry. Ms. Kostyliova sits next to her son and looks out the window. Sasha watches his mother.

The train, heading for western Ukraine, leaves in about four hours. It’s the first time Ms. Kostyliova has ever left the area around Kherson, and she doesn’t want to go.

Why We Wrote This

In a cruel twist, residents of Kherson who survived nine months of Russian occupation until liberation by Ukrainian troops are now subject to such hardship that many feel obliged to evacuate.

“I’ve never been so far in my life,” she says. “So I’m scared.”

Ms. Kostyliova is one of thousands of residents for whom Kherson can no longer be home, though. The city has been in Ukrainian hands since Kyiv’s troops recaptured it from the Russians last month. But Kherson and its surrounding villages have come under heavy artillery fire, and living conditions have deteriorated as Russian strikes knock out electricity and water supplies.

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