Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

AP PHOTOS: Shattered lives and recovery in Ukraine war

Via AP news wire
Friday 20 May 2022 17:16 BST

Your support helps us to tell the story

As your White House correspondent, I ask the tough questions and seek the answers that matter.

Your support enables me to be in the room, pressing for transparency and accountability. Without your contributions, we wouldn't have the resources to challenge those in power.

Your donation makes it possible for us to keep doing this important work, keeping you informed every step of the way to the November election

Head shot of Andrew Feinberg

Andrew Feinberg

White House Correspondent

An 11-year-old boy pushes his sister in a swing outside a hospital in Lviv, her dangling legs wrapped in bandages where they end. Their mother, too, has lost a leg and comforts the girl in her hospital bed.

Yarik Stepanenko, twin sister Yana and their mother, Natasha, were trying to catch a train heading west — to safety — from the eastern city of Kramatorsk when a missile hit the station on April 8. Yana lost both legs: one just above the ankle, the other higher up her shin. Natasha lost her left leg below the knee.

Yarik, left at the station in the chaos of the attack, was uninjured and has been reunited with his mother and sister as they recover at the hospital.

The Stepanenko family is one of many feeling the relentless toll of the war in Ukraine.

Iryna Martsyniuk, 50, wears a bright pink tracksuit as she stands outside her house, its roof reduced to timbers and rubble piled by the door. Martsyniuk and her three young children were at home when Russian bombing destroyed their home in Velyka Kostromka but all survived unharmed.

In Kharkiv, Roman Pryhodchenko wipes tears from his face as he stand near a mangled window inside his home that has been damaged by multiple strikes. Elsewhere, anguished mourners weep over the coffins of slain Ukrainian service members.

In a recently retaken area near Kharkiv, Ukrainian troops inspect basements and abandoned buildings, while in Kyiv servicemen load bodies of Russian soldiers into a refrigerated rail car.

Ukrainian servicemen evacuated from besieged Mariupol’s Azovstal steel plant sit on a bus near a prison in Olyonivka, in territory under the government of the Donetsk People’s Republic.

Although Mariupol was a target from the start of the invasion and has been under effective Russian control for some time, a group of Ukrainian fighters have held out in the sprawling steel plant — symbolic of how Ukrainian forces have managed to grind down the Russian troops.

With the battle for the plant winding down, Russia has already started pulling troops back from the site.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in