Wednesday, April 29, 2026 | Dhu al-Qaadah 11, 1447 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Hope, fear and uncertainty on streets of Donetsk

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DONETSK: On the streets of the biggest city in Ukraine’s breakaway eastern regions, some residents expressed joy and gratitude on Tuesday over Russia’s decision to recognise their independence, but others were filled with foreboding for what might come next. President Vladimir Putin on Monday granted official recognition to the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics and signed friendship treaties with their leaders, a step that paves the way for Russia to send in troops and establish military bases. The West condemned the move as an illegal act that could mark the prelude to a full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine and began imposing some sanctions.


But for some in Donetsk, where Moscow-backed separatists have battled Ukrainian government forces in a conflict that Kyiv says has cost 15,000 lives since 2014, it was long overdue. “This is very important for me. I know that the blood I spilled with my comrades and our labours and efforts and the losses of civilians were not in vain all this time’’, said Dmitry, a former member of a pro-Russian separatist militia. He was looking forward to the arrival of Russian troops as part of the agreements signed on Monday.


“This great people of Donbass have suffered so much, they need it now (Russian troops). They’ve had enough blood, enough death’’, he said. A convoy of at least a dozen cars flying large Russian tricolor flags and honking their horns wound its way through the city centre. “Russia, hoorah!” shouted one driver. — Reuters


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