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Plastic bag in the toilet, fear to bathe. Russians occupied area has serious water problems

by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor

Water ​crisis Deepens⁤ in Russian-Occupied Donetsk as ‌Officials Eye Slovenian ⁣Supply

Donetsk, Ukraine – Residents in⁤ Russian-occupied areas‌ of Ukraine’s Donetsk region face a worsening water crisis, prompting separatist leader‌ Denis Pushilin to propose ‌a controversial solution: diverting water from‍ Slovenia. The proposal highlights the long-standing and escalating water shortages ‌plaguing the ​region, a⁣ problem exacerbated by conflict and infrastructure neglect.

The current difficulties echo⁣ a 2014 attempt by pro-Russian separatists, led by former FSB officer Igor Girkin, to seize control of ‍the entire donetsk region.While Ukrainian forces liberated parts of the occupied territory in the summer of 2014,Russian-backed‌ militants maintained control over cities like luhansk and Donetsk.‍

Unlike Crimea,where ‍Ukraine⁤ cut off water ⁣access following the 2014 annexation,Kyiv continued to allow water from the Siverian Donets River to flow into occupied⁤ areas until​ 2022,as the river supplied water‌ to the Ukrainian-controlled city of Mariupol.

Prior to Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, the Donetsk Filter Station operated as a relatively neutral site, accessible⁢ to observers from the Association for⁢ Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and personnel from the Ukrainian-Russian Joint Center for Control and Coordination (JCCC), established ‍in 2015 under the Minsk Agreements.‌ Though, the channel frequently came under fire.

In 2021, occupation authorities signaled an intent to ⁤modernize the⁣ region’s water infrastructure. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reportedly pledged approximately 30 billion hryvnia ⁤(roughly €500 million) towards the⁣ project. These​ plans were abandoned following the February 2022 ‌invasion,‌ leaving ‍critical⁢ repairs and upgrades ‌unaddressed. The conflict​ directly impacted both the ​canal itself and the planned modernization of aging pipes, a problem dating back to the 1990s.

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