life in kyiv, plunged into darkness and cold

by time news

Where does this cackling come from when Mykola Fechtchouk turns the key in her lock? From the back of his apartment, on the sixth floor of a building in Irpine. It’s the glow of his headlamp that reveals the embarrassment of this man, when opening the door of his three-piece, in anorak and black hat. “Excuse me, I took chickens this summer, it allows me to have eggs. » In this early winter, the city, which sprouted like a mushroom in the last years of the Soviet Union before becoming a pleasant suburb of kyiv, then, nine months ago, the symbol of the terrible bombardments of the Russian army and its hasty withdrawal, is affected by cold and darkness. The light only shines for a few hours a day – ” thirty minutes “ this thursday 1is December, calculates the forties.

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Mykola Fechtchouk lives in one of the buildings targeted by air raids in March. Four holes, all tiles broken. Wounded by shrapnel, he fell in the mud and fled “like a rat” take his wife and daughter to safety in Poland. In his absence, despite the blown windows, the Russians occupied the nine floors of his bar building. Except his apartment: this professional locksmith had made the most beautiful door in the world, “150 kg of shielding”, he laughs. He reinvested it in the spring, spent the summer there. Nothing has been repaired, except that it is snowing heavily, night falls at 4 p.m., freezing, and due to recent airstrikes on the country’s water and electricity systems , it’s all dark. Another new decor.

Mykola Fechtchouk in her apartment in the suburbs of Irpine (Ukraine), December 1, 2022.
The apartment of Mykola Fechtchouk, in the suburbs of Irpin (Ukraine), on December 1, 2022.
A block of buildings hit by shelling during the invasion of the Russian army in the suburbs of Irpine (Ukraine), December 1, 2022.

One in five residents has already left kyiv and its outskirts. About 80% of the exiles are between 18 and 35 years old, like Mykola’s daughter and wife, still refugees in a Polish village. He stayed in Ukraine, like the men of his age, but without money, without a car, without a job, because “the inhabitants have left the city”. Barely if, from time to time, he helps out the imprudent ones stuck in the elevator by a power failure.

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The rest of his life is shared between roasting cigarettes in the courtyard of the estate, chatting with what remains of the neighborhood, and taking a trip to the supermarket, reopened thanks to an electric generator. The generators! In Ukraine, individuals or companies, everyone wants their own today. But prices are rising (25,000 hrivnas, or around 500 euros, double that of 2021), because shortages are looming: people club together to find them on the fly, in Poland. On Facebook pages, demonstration bricks heat up on gas stoves.

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