Ukraine urges citizens to reveal Russian troops locations

Kyiv wants people in Enerhodar to reveal the identities of local collaborators with the occupying authorities.

People walk past as Russian soldiers guard an office for Russian citizenship applications, in Melitopol, south Ukraine, Thursday, July 14, 2022. Russia took control of part of the Zaporizhzhia region quickly after the launch of the military operation in Ukraine. This photo was taken during a trip organized by the Russian Ministry of Defense. (AP Photo)
People walk past as Russian soldiers guard an office for Russian citizenship applications, in Melitopol, south Ukraine [AP Photo]

Ukraine’s defence ministry has urged citizens in a key area seized by Russia to reveal where Moscow’s troops were living and who among the local population was collaborating with the occupying authorities.

The statement on Saturday by the ministry’s defence intelligence directorate was aimed at people in and around the southern city of Enerhodar, which is home to a major nuclear power station.

“Please let us know as a matter of urgency the exact location of the occupying troops’ bases and their residential addresses … and the places of residence of the commanding staff,” it said, adding that exact coordinates were desirable.

It also asked for details “of local collaborators who went over to the side of the enemy”, including where they lived and worked, as well as information about “people who ‘sympathise’ with the occupiers”.

Russia captured Enerhodar in early March and in May, the Russian-appointed head of the city was injured in an explosion. The Kremlin termed it a “terrorist attack”.

In June, a pro-Russian official in the southern Kherson region was killed in a blast, the RIA news agency said. Earlier that month, the head of the region’s penal service was taken to hospital after a bomb exploded near his car.

The intelligence directorate’s appeal – published on Telegram – also asked for the routes that Russian military equipment was using in Enerhodar.

“Together, let’s kick the occupants out of our homeland!” it said, adding people could either call in details or provide them via the WhatsApp or Signal instant messaging apps.

Enerhodar had a pre-war population of more than 50,000. Many residents work at the two power plants near the town, one of which is the Zaporizhzhia facility, the largest nuclear power station in Europe.

Source: Reuters