While Russian forces still fully control the Borovsky district of Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, Moscow’s troops are “gradually withdrawing” from the region to the Donetsk region, a statement from Borova’s village council told Telegram on Sunday.
“There is no mobile connection and no internet that cannot be rebuilt because the territory is occupied by Russians,” the statement said, adding that “some places have been left without electricity and gas.”
According to the report, Russian troops are housed in the buildings of the village council, the Palace of Culture, hospitals, in the homes of some civilians. Among the local collaborators, “occupation authorities” have been appointed in the area, who will now coordinate administrative activities in the community.
The council said some parts of the community had suffered significant damage and had failed to contact a psychoneurological boarding school in the area, which houses about 200 patients.
Due to a lack of communication, the council was unable to identify the people who were taken to hospital by a bus that was attacked by Russian forces on Friday.
The issue of delivering medicines to a hospital in the village of Borova, including anesthesia, and humanitarian aid to the population in the form of food, hygiene products and essential goods, is acute, the council said.
Calls have been sent to Deputy Prime Minister Irina Vereshchuk, who is also the Minister of Reintegration of the Temporarily Occupied Territories of Ukraine, and to the head of the Kharkiv Regional Military Administration Oleg Sinegubov to organize humanitarian corridors for evacuation and aid delivery in the region.
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