Squeezed between the Ukrainian and Russian front lines in an increasingly volatile battlefield in southeastern Ukraine, the small town of Orikhiv is constantly under fire, and Tamara Mikheenko, one of the few residents who remain,
Tamara Mikheenko, 70, cries while hiding in a basement shelter as she talks about the incessant shelling of the frontline town of Orikhiv, in Eastern Ukraine. Photo / Lynsey Addario, New York Times
![A destroyed residential home in the frontline town of Orikhiv. Photo / Lynsey Addario, The New York Times](https://www.nzherald.co.nz/resizer/v2/D2NDH3OYYZRM2I3VEZBSSYSWCA.jpg?auth=6eff5e7b88226b7e00f891984bf8c90666f80f9e3d77b10b756213b75e76a25e&width=16&height=11&quality=70&smart=true)
Shelling along this front has intensified in recent days and all over the region Ukrainian forces are digging new trenches and fortifying positions.
It is in and around these villages, still home to goats, cows and chickens, but to fewer and fewer people, that the current, pivotal phase of the war for Ukraine's east is being fought. After failing to take the capital, Kyiv, and meeting as yet impenetrable resistance along Ukraine's Black Sea coast, President Vladimir Putin of Russia has turned the remaining might of his army on the fertile plains east of Ukraine's Dnieper River and a few key major cities.
Already, Russian forces have gobbled up nearly 80 per cent of the Donbas region, as well as a ribbon of land connecting Russian territory to the Crimean Peninsula, which Putin annexed in 2014. One by one, the towns south and east of Orikhiv have fallen into Russian hands.
Should Orikhiv also fall, Russian forces will have nearly an open path to the large industrial metropolis of Zaporizhzhia, just under 65km away. Zaporizhzhia's prewar population of about 750,000 has swelled with the daily arrival of evacuees from nearby territory now occupied by Russian forces, including the battered port city of Mariupol. Around the city, a sense of impending danger is palpable. Air raid sirens now sound several times a day and the local military hospital is filled with troops coming in from the front lines with ghastly injuries.
![Kostyantin Denisov, the mayor of Orikhiv, talks on the phone outside of his office. Photo / Lynsey Addario, The New York Times](https://www.nzherald.co.nz/resizer/v2/ME22X46ESI2PFYRFQ35EA6VWJM.jpg?auth=2ed05a7ce2a401446d6957540a4edffa60baf46347adb4f40c34f25b9c981dd5&width=16&height=11&quality=70&smart=true)
On Tuesday, Russia's military launched a rocket attack against targets inside the city, narrowly missing its nuclear power plant, the largest in Europe when fully operational, according to officials. The rockets hit a city utility, killing one person, although the local government provided no further details.
Since the start of the war on February 24, rocket attacks have been rare in Zaporizhzhia. Not so in Orikhiv. The town is just 5km from the Russian lines, and shelling occurs around the clock, becoming intense in the evenings. Several houses were hit overnight Tuesday, including the one belonging to Mikheenko's neighbour, Vitaliy Kononenko.
"This is what the Russian world has brought us," Kononenko said, inspecting the large hole punched through the front of his home. Inside, plastic ceiling panels had melted and the fur of a large teddy bear sitting in the window of a child's room was singed. Fortunately, it was the only casualty.
The house, which Kononenko said he had recently finished building, would have burned to the ground had Mikheenko's son, Aleksandr, not dashed from the basement to put it out.
Orikhiv's mayor, Kostyantin Denisov, said that, miraculously, the city has suffered no casualties despite the constant shelling. This is partly because of the decision early on to evacuate as many people as possible. Today, only about 30 per cent of the city's prewar population of 20,000 remains, he said.
![Vitaliy Kononenko, 47, walks through his brand new home after it was hit by a projectile. Photo / Lynsey Addario, The New York Times](https://www.nzherald.co.nz/resizer/v2/T4WFR5GAXP3VI35DXFHJESAQRA.jpg?auth=e01cb2a73d53a95e128cf38f838cb8f3f446cf3daa1a6cd0d39ea19922311797&width=16&height=11&quality=70&smart=true)
Some of those still in the city, like Mikheenko, stay holed up in their basements, but not everyone. On Tuesday, among the clusters of neat single-family homes was the occasional resident fussing about in a blooming front garden.
Denisov has stayed in place, refusing to leave his office in the peach-coloured City Hall building. He is needed, he said, to help with the city's defence, which is not an easy task. The 251-year-old town was once located on a number of trade routes and has at least seven roads leading into it.
"Now we have to close these routes off from our uninvited guests," he said. "That's our main task. We won't surrender."
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Michael Schwirtz
Photographs by: Lynsey Addario
© 2022 THE NEW YORK TIMES