The town of Vuhledar has been under heavy fire from Russian terrorists for almost two years. It is a small mining town in Donetsk Region, with no surviving houses, no electricity and no gas, but people still live there.
What the "Russian world" has brought to Vuhledar is described in Vitaliy Poberezhnyi's report for Reporters.
"Russian world" came to "save" the city, where before the full-scale Russian invasion lived about 15,000 residents, who worked calmly, made plans for the future and were environmentally conscious. In particular, Ukrainian blogger and journalist Denys Kazansky paid attention to this, commenting on several photos in his Telegram channel.
"By the way, the last photo shows separate waste sorting bins. So, in tiny Vuhledar, there was separate waste collection before Russia came," Denys pointed out.
For comparison, he gave an example of how the Russian occupation authorities in temporarily occupied Donetsk solve the issues of garbage disposal.
"...in the 'capital of the republic', the former city of millions, Donetsk, there is no normal waste collection at all - garbage is taken out intermittently, and overflowing dumps are decomposing and rotting," Kazansky noted.
Earlier "Apostrophe" reported that the situation in temporarily occupied Mariupol remains deplorable - the city has problems with heating, no compensation for destroyed property is paid and there is no work.