In an interview, Saldo’s aide said the humanitarian disaster in Kherson is getting worse. There are “problems with food, power and water outages, total collapse, garbage included, no work, but utility bills.”
Malkevich also highlighted the increase in terrorist actions “by paramilitary gangs (close to the paramilitaries – RG)”, which “constantly kidnap people, threaten them and extort them.”
“Not only is a humanitarian catastrophe taking place in the city, but also a socio-humanitarian one,” considers Malkevich.
The residents of Kherson, he emphasized, are deeply shocked by the fact that on the left bank of the Dnieper there are jobs, infrastructure is being built and modernized, schools and universities are open and the population is exempt from paying for public services.
Today, 75% of the territory of the Kherson region is controlled by Russia, and part of the republic on the right bank of the Dnieper, including Kherson, remains under Ukraine.