Rock bottom: testimonies by residents of flooded Nova Kakhovka
Russia refuses to evacuate locals with Ukrainian passports, while water-borne mines explode in the town

Many residents of Nova Kakhovka and neighbouring communities on the left bank of the Dnipro River, occupied by Russia, are forced to climb on the roofs of their homes to escape the rising water. They complain that the occupation authorities, who call the territory Russian, did not start evacuating in time, and now people remain trapped in their homes. The situation is complicated because residents of coastal villages and Nova Kakhovka itself have no boats: the military commandeered them last year. There are no maps of the minefields either — they disappeared along with the military. Explosions can be heard intermittently in the flooded areas.
“Summer house settlements and Tsyurupinsk (former Soviet name of Oleshky — editor’s note) with Hola Prystan are being flooded. The maximum water rise level is 12 metres. There is no power or water in these settlements; the residents have left themselves. The water will come down in two-three days.”
“A neighbour came running to us: her husband is paralysed. The house is one-storey, and the man was already in the water when we arrived. Thankfully, his wife had put some pillows high up for him while she was running for help.”

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