Kiev's elderly shiver after Russian attacks
KIEV
Shivering in her flat after Russian strikes knocked out the heating, 91-year-old Lidia Teleschuk said she couldn't remember a winter this harsh since World War II.
Russia has stepped up its strikes against Ukraine's power and heating infrastructure, plunging Kiev residents into darkness and cold as temperatures dropped as low as minus 20 degrees Celsius.
"In 1942, it was even worse," Teleschuk said.
"There hasn't been a winter like this since. It's been awful. It will be hard for us to survive."
The heavy targeting of the Ukrainian capital, which Russia failed to seize at the start of its invasion, has forced residents to find makeshift solutions to stay warm.
It has been particularly painful for elderly people like Teleschuk.
In her flat deprived of electricity, heating and hot water, the 91-year-old showed AFP how she gets through the day.
Running her hand through her brittle white hair, she mimed heating water on a gas stove to wash herself in the cold mornings.
She had also poured some of the hot water into plastic bottles, turning them into small sources of heat.
"But it's not enough, dear children. It's just enough for me to warm up a little," she said.
The temperature inside her apartment hovered between 8 and 11 degrees Celsius.
Volunteers from the Starenki foundation, which delivers food and essentials to the elderly, were visiting Teleschuk to check in on her.
She beamed as one of them, program director Alina Diachenko, gave her a battery-powered fairy light.
"Volunteers take a little time to chat. That's very important, not just the food, but the attention," Diachenko said.
Repair crews are racing to reconnect homes to power and heat, but sub-zero temperatures and repeated air strikes have slowed their efforts.
Russian strikes have repeatedly cut power to tens of thousands of homes and heating to 6,000 apartment blocks, half of all those in the city.
Some of the 3.6 million people in the city have left, heading to country houses and relatives for warmth and light.
Over 900 buildings still had no heating this week, President Volodymyr Zelensky said, urging local authorities and government officials to act faster.
"There was just a little bit of heat, then bam, they bombed again, and now nothing works," Yeromina sighed.
Playfully lifting the corner of her long trench coat, Yeromina showed how she had layered up to stay warm.
A few streets away, in her flat on the 6th floor, 88-year-old Esfir Rudminska had adopted a similar strategy.
"I dress really warm, like a cabbage with two or three sweaters!" she said, head wrapped in a white silk scarf.
Repeated bombings were making her nervous.
"You can get through anything, eat a piece of bread with tea and you're fine. But my nerves can't take it. I try to hold on," she said, hugging a furry white hot water bottle.
"Sometimes, there's no one at home, I cry and it seems to get easier, even though I'm not a crier. I'm 88 years old, I've already lived my life."