For more than a month, the Russians have not brought humanitarian aid to occupied Mariupol, and the shops have set exorbitant prices. That’s why the local residents switched to natural farming – they arrange gardens in the courtyards of high-rise buildings, next to the graves of the dead civilians.
TSN.ua collected everything that happened in Mariupol during the past day, July 7.
- In Mariupol, residents plant gardens in the courtyards of high-rise buildings – next to graves
In Mariupol, the local residents who remained in the city, due to the lack of food and the complete unavailability of vegetables and fruits , switched to subsistence farming. Now there are gardens in the yards of apartment buildings, next to the graves of dead civilians. In addition, demolition of buildings continues in the city.
- “Another bullying”: in Mariupol, the occupiers set exorbitant prices in stores
In the occupied Mariupol, the Russians set exorbitant prices for hygiene products in stores. The cheapest shampoo in the store costs UAH 129, dishwashing sponges – UAH 71, feminine pads – UAH 99, diapers for children – UAH 1,680, dishwashing detergent – UAH 108. Local residents simply cannot buy them.
- The occupiers in Mariupol force the locals to dismantle the rubble of the metal plant: almost 10 people were blown up by a mine
In the Ukrainian Mariupol, which is temporarily captured by the Russians, at the metallurgical plant named after Ilyich, eight civilians were blown up by a mine. It happened during the demolition of the rubble, where the occupiers drive local people.
“People have been recruited to clear rubble on the territory of the Ilyich MMK. In fact, people are being used as miners. In the last week, 8 civilians were blown up by a mine with various degrees of damage during such work in the middle of the plant,” – said the mayor’s adviser Petro Andryushchenko.
- The occupiers have not brought a humanitarian truck to Mariupol for more than a month
In Mariupol, the local residents who remained in the city have not received any humanitarian aid from the Russian occupiers for a month, and communications have not yet been established to the surviving houses. As one of the residents said, the occupiers have not brought humanitarian aid for a long time. There is also a catastrophic lack of medicines and drinking water in the city. According to her, the water is mostly technical. You can only wash or wash things in it.
- Grave city: at least 20,000 dead people were buried in Mariupol
Places of mass burials near the temporarily occupied Mariupol have doubled over the past two months. An average of 25 people die in the city every day – that’s about 1,800 lost lives in May and June alone. There is a humanitarian disaster in the city, there is no basic – water, medicine. Due to which, according to the adviser to the mayor of Mariupol Petro Andryushchenko, natural mortality increased fourfold compared to pre-war times.
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