REPORTAGE – While Western missiles are now hitting the region, the displaced people at the border still have no idea of their future. Faced with fatigue and growing discontent, the authorities began to react.
For more than three months Lyubov has lived in a fog, nervously “exhausted” by the situation that afflicts him. The posters that she had put up all over Kursk at the beginning of August, flanked by the message “I’m looking for my parents”have been put away for a long time. But she has still not found her parents, residents of Soudja. “I received a total of six calls from people who thought they had seen them, but actually no”she said in her apartment on Chekhov Street. She is surrounded by her four children, aged 9 months to 7 years, who – fortunately – take up all the space in her living room and in her mind. “But they miss their grandparents, video calls too. They ask me, 'When are we going to see grandpa and grandma?' »
Lyubov Prilutskaya lost all contact with them from the start of the sudden Ukrainian incursion into Russian territory on August 6. Sudja was immediately captured by kyiv forces. The fighting stopped…
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