KHARKIV, UKRAINE (AFP) – When Russian troops steamrolled through her east Ukrainian village in February, Ms Elena Ivanovna’s family packed their car before dawn and fled to Kharkiv, where they unwittingly found themselves on the front line.
Ukraine’s second-largest city has been pummelled by strikes day and night since Russian forces attempted to seize it at the start of the invasion.
The bitter fighting has rendered the city of 1.5 million a tangle of blown-out shops and smouldering apartment blocks, and forced families like Ms Ivanovna’s underground where they are sheltering in the metro.
“We thought that here (in Kharkiv) we would find salvation, but it became the front line. Helicopters and planes were bombing the city. So we decided to come to the metro,” the 40-year-old kindergarten teacher said.
On Feb 24, the night of the invasion, Ms Ivanovna and her family were asleep in their village Lyptsi, just 10 kilometres from the Russian border.
“We woke at 4.30am in the morning… even the children woke and immediately realised that this was war,” she said.
“Through the window, we could see that everything was on fire, our house was shaking.”
Ms Ivanovna, her husband and their children, aged eight, 10 and 17, dressed quickly, grabbed a handful of belongings and initially took refuge in their own basement.
“After 15 minutes, it got quieter, so we ran to our car and drove towards Kharkiv… as fast as we could.”
As they drove, they saw missiles “falling everywhere”, she said.
When they got to the city to join Ms Ivanovna’s mother, they found it too was under fire.
So, once again, the family crowded into a cellar as the strikes rained over them.
After six days, they knew they needed somewhere safer, so they joined hundreds of others in one of the stations.
Living in the metro
Two months later, about 700 people are still living in the various metro stations that punctuate Kharkiv.
Close to the Russian border, the city saw heavy fighting at the start of Moscow’s offensive, but has always remained under Ukrainian control.
“The first week, people slept on top of each other. There was no humanitarian aid. No one understood what was going on,” said Iolia, one of the volunteers helping the displaced.
To create a semblance of privacy, the families have divvied up the station’s long platform.
Mattresses, blankets, beds, tables and chairs have been brought into the station, while volunteers regularly clean the passageways and ensure the electricity works.
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