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‘What life is this?’: Escaping Ukraine’s occupied territories

From food shortages to informants, eight evacuees tell openDemocracy of life in Russian-occupied towns

‘What life is this?’: Escaping Ukraine’s occupied territories
A woman sits alone on an evacuation bus for people fleeing Melitopol | Chris McGrath/Getty Image
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It was snowing heavily when Yulia* walked across the only open border between Ukraine and Russia last month, carrying her two cats and dragging a large suitcase behind her.

She had left her village on the edge of Russian-occupied Melitopol, a city in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region, more than 24 hours earlier, paying a Russian ‘carrier’ with a minivan around $250 (nearly £200) to take her to the border-crossing in Ukraine’s northern Sumy region.

Walking across the two-kilometre no-man’s land was the final step in a long journey that is not without risk. Just two weeks earlier, a Russian volunteer who was transporting Ukrainians to the Sumy checkpoint was detained and tortured by Russian security personnel.