The Fort Worth Press - Russian tanks advance towards Kyiv from east

USD -
AED 3.67315
AFN 63.492461
ALL 81.288631
AMD 372.380045
ANG 1.789884
AOA 918.000357
ARS 1377.492202
AUD 1.396794
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.699161
BAM 1.665113
BBD 2.01512
BDT 122.759818
BGN 1.668102
BHD 0.377228
BIF 2975.105995
BMD 1
BND 1.273476
BOB 6.913109
BRL 4.982597
BSD 1.000451
BTN 93.790972
BWP 13.451617
BYN 2.814964
BYR 19600
BZD 2.012209
CAD 1.36645
CDF 2310.999924
CHF 0.78322
CLF 0.022658
CLP 891.79611
CNY 6.824802
CNH 6.829475
COP 3580.41
CRC 455.822507
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.400773
CZK 20.77525
DJF 178.157299
DKK 6.37653
DOP 59.650359
DZD 132.44793
EGP 52.055309
ERN 15
ETB 157.484803
EUR 0.853197
FJD 2.194501
FKP 0.740159
GBP 0.74065
GEL 2.689995
GGP 0.740159
GHS 11.080075
GIP 0.740159
GMD 72.999962
GNF 8777.498711
GTQ 7.646989
GYD 209.3344
HKD 7.832805
HNL 26.580678
HRK 6.427014
HTG 130.965962
HUF 311.019651
IDR 17221.55
ILS 2.99945
IMP 0.740159
INR 93.759249
IQD 1310.596128
IRR 1320999.999847
ISK 122.689681
JEP 0.740159
JMD 158.492044
JOD 0.70899
JPY 159.394496
KES 129.150005
KGS 87.427401
KHR 4004.835771
KMF 419.999744
KPW 899.990254
KRW 1479.359879
KWD 0.30828
KYD 0.833745
KZT 463.595498
LAK 22073.421989
LBP 89593.471709
LKR 317.917894
LRD 184.091335
LSL 16.446219
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.326571
MAD 9.238104
MDL 17.138041
MGA 4149.568356
MKD 52.55037
MMK 2099.66818
MNT 3578.517246
MOP 8.0708
MRU 39.939723
MUR 46.520139
MVR 15.460376
MWK 1734.492329
MXN 17.322498
MYR 3.9525
MZN 63.902114
NAD 16.446219
NGN 1348.940277
NIO 36.821672
NOK 9.296902
NPR 150.065555
NZD 1.692345
OMR 0.384481
PAB 1.000528
PEN 3.43825
PGK 4.400759
PHP 60.190414
PKR 278.910249
PLN 3.621599
PYG 6293.366934
QAR 3.647718
RON 4.345799
RSD 100.126033
RUB 75.100047
RWF 1461.969385
SAR 3.750618
SBD 8.038772
SCR 14.015284
SDG 599.999861
SEK 9.191805
SGD 1.274725
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.603506
SLL 20969.496166
SOS 571.778849
SRD 37.457983
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.858697
SVC 8.754693
SYP 110.631499
SZL 16.439919
THB 32.259886
TJS 9.419537
TMT 3.505
TND 2.90915
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.925199
TTD 6.78285
TWD 31.4855
TZS 2605.000213
UAH 43.897001
UGX 3706.888478
UYU 39.776259
UZS 12134.653533
VES 481.046775
VND 26322.5
VUV 117.946979
WST 2.711482
XAF 558.460897
XAG 0.01282
XAU 0.000211
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.803113
XDR 0.694162
XOF 558.465651
XPF 101.534165
YER 238.624974
ZAR 16.459602
ZMK 9001.197767
ZMW 19.034038
ZWL 321.999592
  • RIO

    2.4700

    100.19

    +2.47%

  • CMSC

    0.0750

    22.735

    +0.33%

  • BTI

    1.1300

    55.96

    +2.02%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    -1.3100

    15.85

    -8.26%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    55.97

    -0.27%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    36.75

    -0.87%

  • VOD

    0.1250

    15.315

    +0.82%

  • BCC

    -0.2450

    82.205

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    1.5800

    85.85

    +1.84%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.84

    -0.25%

  • BP

    0.3850

    46.295

    +0.83%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.05

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    23.09

    +0.22%

  • AZN

    0.2200

    196

    +0.11%

Russian tanks advance towards Kyiv from east
Russian tanks advance towards Kyiv from east

Russian tanks advance towards Kyiv from east

At a deserted service station on the motorway northeast of Kyiv, a Ukrainian officer warns: "Don't go any further. The Russians are over there."

Text size:

Over the last five days, the Russians have advanced more than 80 kilometres (62 miles) on the northeastern front and are getting close to the Ukrainian capital.

The Ukrainian officer in camouflage points towards the north, where the motorway stretches empty to the horizon between snow-covered fields.

"The Russian tanks are just over there, two kilometres away," he said, ordering a civilian vehicle to turn round and go back, due to the danger from Russian forces.

"Drive in a zig-zag to avoid their shots," he advises the driver.

Then he returns to his watch, in charge of around a dozen soldiers whose task it is to pass on information on Russian tanks so that the Ukrainian army can bomb them as soon as they move to break through the lines.

The Russian tanks are stationed just a few kilometres away from Kyiv's city limits.

Last Saturday, the Russians were about 80 kilometres further up this road, on a level with the city of Chernihiv.

This advance along the motorway from the north brings Russian tanks just to the east of Kyiv, heightening fears that they could soon encircle the capital.

Russian tanks are also just a few kilometres from the city to its northwest.

In the surrounding villages, there are few cars on the road and they drive with utmost caution in what is now frontline territory.

On their rear windscreens, they fix handwritten signs saying simply: "Children", in the hope this will protect them from Russian bombardment, which has caused numerous civilian deaths since the start of the war.

- Dog trainer -

In the nearest village, Velyka Dymerka, "most of the women and children have left, it's mainly the men left", says Oleg, 43, one of the civilian volunteers guarding the first checkpoint on the road leading to the village from the motorway.

Oleg is tense: a day earlier, Russian tanks took control of two nearby villages: Shevchenkove and Bohdanivka.

Soon afterwards, on Tuesday afternoon, "the Russians bombarded us with Grad missiles and rockets", he says.

One of these crashed through a brick two-storey house standing among others in the village. Its owner, Petro Dvorskiy, had taken shelter in the cellar with his wife and they survived, his 45-year-old son Vadym tells AFP.

Almost 24 hours later, there is still white smoke billowing from the roof, now open to the elements.

Inside, the ceiling has fallen in and the water pipes are broken upstairs, so water drips down and laps around the living room furniture, surrounded by rubble and charred debris.

The Russians then tried to swoop on Velyka Dymerka, but the Ukrainian army prevented them by blowing up one of their tanks with a rocket-launcher, according to local volunteers, who show photos of the charred tank in the middle of the road.

For the moment, they do not mention any civilians killed by Russians in recent days, either under bombardment or in the villages taken over by Russian troops.

At the last checkpoint before Bohdanivka, the volunteer commander, Yuriy, a tall sturdy balding 49-year-old who was a dog trainer before the war, peers down the long straight road that separates him from the enemy.

- 50-50 on Russian takeover -

"It's calm now, but it was hot yesterday," he comments. At the foot of the checkpoint is a pile of twisted metal tubes.

"They're Grad missiles," Yuriy says.

He says that the column of Russian hardware that took Bohdanivka was made up of more than 70 vehicles including some 40 tanks and had around 300 soldiers.

He says that "the Russians come to the villages, shoot at the houses to scare the inhabitants and steal everything they can as supplies".

"They park their vehicles beside the houses, alongside the inhabitants, so that they won't get bombarded," he adds.

Before taking his leave, he asks to pass on a message: "The West needs to help Ukraine."

On Wednesday there are few soldiers at Velyka Dymerka and the volunteers say that they are training villagers to use rocket launchers.

Asked if the village will be taken by the Russians, Olexiy, a 38-year-old volunteer, smiles sadly: "It's 50-50," he says.

Two weeks after the conflict began, there are numerous unknown factors: how much resistance the Ukrainians will put up and whether Russia has the capacity to encircle and take Kyiv.

A few kilometres closer to Kyiv, close to Brovary, a suburb that is Kyiv's eastern gateway, Vladyslav, a 22-year-old Ukrainian soldier, says he believes the Russians "lack food and fuel", "are on their knees" and will end up "bombarded and demoralised".

But Sulim, the battalion's deputy commander, who is 40 and more experienced, says he thinks the Russians will "keep moving forward".

He would like to see some senior Russian officers change their minds, but says he has little hope of this happening.

T.Gilbert--TFWP