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‘I have nowhere to go’: With Russia at their door, Ukrainians flee Pokrovsk

Pokrovsk once stood out as one of the livelier cities still under Ukrainian control in the contested eastern region of Donetsk. But now, the Russians are just under five miles from the southeast edge of the town, close enough to hit it with artillery. Over half of the district’s population of 54,000 has gone.

Police tallied 2,666 strikes within 24 hours from Sept. 10 to 11 across the region. Such numbers translate into a steady rumble of explosions and a rising casualty rate. July and August saw the highest monthly civilian death tolls since Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine began in 2022.

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The war in eastern Ukraine is creeping ever closer to Pokrovsk, a key logistics hub, forcing the city’s last civilian holdouts to make the hard choice to evacuate before Russian forces bring the fighting to their doorsteps.

Billboards now display one clear command: evacuate. Police cars patrol the few blocks that still show signs of life, reiterating the same message over their loudspeakers.

Roman Buhaiov, a volunteer with the East SOS charitable foundation, is determined to get as many people as possible to safety. The organization has five evacuation teams working nonstop to assist people with limited mobility.

“People always wait until the very last moment to evacuate,” says Mr. Buhaiov. “By the time they finally understand the danger of the war, it can be too late for the evacuation crews to help.”

Raisa Savchenko throws on her fur coat and makes one final, frantic survey of her apartment. She checks that the curtains are closed, the water valves shut, and the lights turned off. With her phone and documents packed and a wooden cane in hand, she walks gingerly down the stairs and climbs into an evacuation van.

“No one needs me here and nobody can look after me here,” says Ms. Savchenko, a retired post officer in her 80s, coming to terms with the uncertainty of her future as Russian forces continue to advance on her home in the eastern region of Donetsk. “I have nowhere to go.”

Safety is an elusive destination. But the evacuation of Ms. Savchenko and a bedridden neighbor from this mining town, in the Pokrovsk district of Donetsk, brings relief to their social worker.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The war in eastern Ukraine is creeping ever closer to Pokrovsk, a key logistics hub, forcing the city’s last civilian holdouts to make the hard choice to evacuate before Russian forces bring the fighting to their doorsteps.

“There are so many explosions now,” says Victoriia Kotyliak, who plans to leave as soon as the others in her care have left safely. “These ladies were all alone and becoming more and more anxious.”

That anxiety is understandable. Police tallied 2,666 strikes in 24 hours across the Donetsk region this week. Those numbers translate into a steady rumble of explosions and a rising casualty rate. July and August saw the highest monthly civilian death tolls since Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine began in 2022.

Roman Buhaiov, a volunteer with the East SOS charitable foundation, is determined to get as many people as possible to safety. The nongovernmental organization has five evacuation teams working nonstop in Pokrovsk and the surrounding towns and villages. They prioritize people with limited mobility and form part of a broader safety blanket woven by Ukrainian volunteers all too familiar with crisis.

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