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According to the deputy mayor of Galina Lugova, 27 people were killed in the cit...

"Death everywhere": Kherson residents told how they live under daily shelling of Russians

According to the deputy mayor of Galina Lugova, 27 people were killed in the city through Russian shelling last week, 40 were injured. After Kherson's de -occupation in the fall of 2022, the locals could not enjoy the benefits of liberation, as now Russian invaders fired the city from the other bank of the Dnieper. The city dwellers told the New York Times. "Death everywhere," said the deputy mayor of Galina Lugova.

According to her, 27 people were killed in the city last week in the city, 40 were injured. "Enemies are animals," she told reporters. According to Tamara Smolarchuk, who lost her sister and mother through shelling, she said she could not understand why the Russians were so cruel. "They kill us every day," the woman said. The material says that many locals believe that merciless shelling is a revenge of Russia for failing to keep the city.

After the settlement of the settlement, the Armed Forces of Ukraine did not go far. They have moved to the other bank of the river and now fireting Kherson from tanks, artillery, mortars and rockets. According to Lugova, collaborators who report to the Russians, where the positions of the Ukrainian military are located, are still among the inhabitants of Kherson. According to her, six times she almost died as a result of shelling. "We have to kill them. I'm serious. We have to kill them.

They have no right to live. It is through them that people are killed," she said. According to her, the people left in Kherson are those who need support. There are many elderly and children, as well as people with disabilities. They lack the strength to get to the shelter when shelling begins. "I need people here," Lugova said. The material states that women who work for utilities and sweep the streets of Kherson now wear bulletproof vests. They say bulky and heavy, but they do not want to shoot.

"I have this fear that I will not have time to die soon," said the municipal worker Lyudmila Chaika to journalists. According to her, she cannot get used to shelling, constantly feels danger. She sleeps with her dog nickname KrAZ to be comforted. The woman believes that her pet also finds in this comfort. Recall that on May 3, the Russian Armed Forces killed a well -known doctor in Kherson.