Ukraine dam: Rebuilding shattered lives after Ukraine’s dam collapse

 

 

When Ukraine's Kakhovka dam was blown up in June, it led to devastating floods that destroyed homes and farmland, and left hundreds of thousands without drinking water. Four months on, Ukrainians are still facing water shortages but say they are determined to overcome the destruction.

When Svitlana Kridiner heard about the dam collapse, she knew it was only a matter of time before her village would be flooded. In the end it took two days for the water to reach her. It arrived at around 17:00 on 8 June.

"We packed quickly. We took our livestock - cows, dogs, ducklings - and our equipment: milking kits and a generator," she says. "We had to leave all our other possessions behind, they were all lost."

The 52-year-old farmer and her husband Vasyl had devoted their lives to their herd of two dozen cows, which they had raised from calves, and did everything they could to save them.

It took just five more hours for the water to engulf their whole farm. Their village, Afanasiivka, is 70km (45 miles) north of the dam and there are signs of damage everywhere.

 

Svitlana shows us water marks inside a barn, close to the ceiling, and explains that most of the hay she and her husband had prepared to feed their cows over the winter was destroyed. So was their other animal feed.

"The water rose by six metres, but at least the farm building survived," she says. "Only the floor got washed away but the walls are still standing."

On top of this, Svitlana's village is near the front line, and like many of the flood-hit areas is contaminated with ammunition. She shows us a rocket, stuck in the ground in one of her hay meadows. "My husband has to mow around it," she says.

 

The Ukrainian government is offering her compensation for the flood damage, although she says the 5,000 Ukrainian hryvnia offered, equivalent to $135 or £110, is nowhere near enough to repair everything.

Somehow, she's not disheartened. "Maybe we will take out another loan, we will mow some hay for the cows or buy some more. We will make it, rest assured."

Her optimism is shared by another farmer we meet, Vadym Sheremet, who shows us round the ruins of his home in the village of Pavlo-Marianivka, 10km (six miles) away.

"Here we had a fireplace, where our family gathered," says the 52-year-old, pointing to a pile of bricks and chimney debris. "It was such a happy time," he trails off, remembering the old days. 

 

The water reached the roof of his house and destroyed his crops. Before the flood he grew wheat, barley and sunflowers. And this isn't the first time he has had to start again.

Vadym's village was under Russian occupation for much of 2022. "Last autumn we had 250 hectares of grain, ready to harvest. Russians burnt it all. That was the first blow," he says.

"Then spring 2023 came. We gave it our all and sowed, however hard it was. Then the water came. We were knocked down once again."

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The impact of the dam explosion is so huge that it is described as "one of the biggest human-caused disasters of our time", in a report by US research institute, the Wilson Centre.

It also says that "more than one million hectares of land in three southern oblasts of Ukraine - Kherson, Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk - will be unusable for the next three to five years for lack of a water supply".

Damage worth an estimated $2bn (£1.6bn) was caused by the breach, excluding the cost of rebuilding it, according to Ukrainian authorities. They said more than two-thirds of the affected area was in Russian-occupied territory where the flooding was worse because the bank on that side of the river is lower. 


 

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