(6 Jul 2022)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kharkiv — 5 July, 2022
++MUTE++
1. Aerial of residential buildings damaged by Russian shelling +
TITLE: RUSSIAN ATTACK DEVASTATES UKRAINIAN NEIGHBORHOOD
2. Wide of damaged residential building
LOCATOR: Saltivka, Kharkiv
++MUTE++
3. Aerial of a damaged residential building
ANNOTATION: Saltivka, one of the largest neighborhoods in Europe, was severely damaged when Russia attacked the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv.
4. Various of residents clearing rubble and debris
ANNOTATION: Some residents are taking the toll of the damage, as they recall the terrifying attacks.
5. Wide of a damaged building
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Pavel Govoryhov, 84-year-old resident:
"I was shell-shocked. I didn't see anything for a month. I lay there in the basement. Thanks to the neighbors, they gave me something to drink. My wife is dead."
7. Wide of debris
8. Wide of a damaged building
ANNOTATION: The residential area once housed more than half a million people but is largely impossible to live in anymore.
9. Various of Viktor Lazar going down to a basement and looking for water
ANNOTATION: There is no water, gas or electricity in most of the homes and only a few remaining residents.
10. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Viktor Lazar, 37-year-old resident:
"This is my home. I have no other place to go."
Kharkiv — 3 July, 2022
++MUTE++
11. Aerial of a damaged football field
STORYLINE:
Saltivka's Soviet-era apartment blocks in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv once housed over half a million people, one of the largest neighbourhoods in Europe.
But in the wake of Russia's invasion, most of the apartments and houses have sustained critical damage and are impossible to live in.
Some residents are taking the toll of the damage, as they recall the terrifying attacks.
"I was shell-shocked. I didn't see anything for a month. I laid there in the basement. Thanks to the neighbours, they gave me something to drink. My wife is dead," said 84-year-old Pavel Govoryhov, wiping tears.
There is no water, gas or electricity in most of the homes and only a few remaining residents.
Even though most of his neighbours have left, Viktor Lazar, 37, is determined to stay in Saltivka.
"This is my home. I have no other place to go," he said.
As the war grinds along deadly fault lines across Ukraine's east and south, Lazar and the few remaining residents in the vast and shattered neighbourhood represent a life without resolution in which many Ukrainians are trapped.
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