What’s old is new again, and it’s not pretty
After spending more than a month in Ukraine documenting the war earlier this year, Marcus Yam is back in the eastern part of the country where fighting remains fierce and residents continue to endure with no end in sight.
While taking time off from covering the conflict, Yam won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography for his “raw and urgent images of the U.S. departure from Afghanistan that capture the human cost of the historic change in the country.”
He’s now back in Ukraine to document the conflict and its human toll.
Day 102: The path to Lysychansk.
People under the belly of a water truck. They have lived without water or electricity.
Liubov shrugs as she chops wood to cook. She invites help.
A school burns in Lysychansk. Fighter jets roar above, then ‘boom.’
Machine gun fire rattles down the road. The voices of men screaming instructions echo.
A woman sobs. ‘I cannot live like this anymore. Nobody knows when this is going to end.’
Day 101: Kilometers from the Russians, soldiers stay alert.
Locals surface for fresh air. One-hundred days of fear.
Day 99: The cadence of war.
Russia is laying down a barrage. Civilians ask, ‘When will this end?’
Day 98: Slovyansk has a front row seat to Russian invasion.
Vitaliy’s wife was killed in an attack. He grieves. Next door, a room splashed red.
Marcus Yam’s previous journal on the war in Ukraine.
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