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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Jennifer Rankin in Brussels

‘It was scary’: acts of resistance in Russian-occupied Kherson

An armed Russian soldier in combat gear watches a family strolling along the Dnipro River in Kherson.
People in Kherson lived under Russian occupation between March and November 2022. Photograph: Sergei Ilnitsky/EPA

One night last June, Liliya Aleksandrova slipped out of her home in occupied Kherson with some bright paints and a dangerous idea. She went to a grocery shop in her neighbourhood, a business that she knew was frequented by Russian soldiers who had invaded the city months before. “Kherson is Ukraine,” she wrote on a metal fence near the shop. Then she added a golden swirl of paint – a yellow ribbon, the symbol of Ukraine’s resistance movement in the Russian-occupied territories.

“For sure it was scary, but she asked God to help her,” recounts an interpreter, who was summarising Aleksandrova’s account to the Guardian.

At the time of her midsummer protest, the Russians were everywhere. People could be searched at checkpoints, sometimes forced to undress. Some simply disappeared. But Aleksandrova thought the risk was worth it. “It was her idea to show she doesn’t accept ruscism’. She doesn’t accept Russia being on this land,” said the interpreter, using the compound of “Russian” and “fascism” widely used in Ukraine to describe the occupying forces. Aleksandrova, speaking from Kherson over a fuzzy Zoom screen, held aloft a picture of her grandfather, who fought in the second world war. He also “did … not accept the occupiers at that time”, the interpreter added.

A Russian soldier in central Kherson in May 2022.
A Russian soldier in central Kherson in May 2022. Photograph: AP

Aleksandrova could speak openly of her numerous acts of protest because Kherson was freed by Ukrainian forces in November after more than eight months of Russian occupation. After the liberation, Ukrainian investigators discovered alleged “torture rooms” where dozens of men were said to have been beaten, given electric shocks and sometimes killed. “There were moments when she felt real fear because Russians were going by in their cars, they were going by in the streets and there was a constant threat of being noticed, of being exposed,” the interpreter said.

Now the fence panel she graffitied has gone to Brussels, where it was one of the main objects at a two-day exhibition last week dedicated to the Yellow Ribbon resistance, an independent, non-violent grassroots movement.

The section of fence daubed with the slogan ‘Kherson is Ukraine’ by Liliya Aleksandrova, displayed in Brussels.
The fence that Liliya Aleksandrova used for her message. Photograph: Jennifer Rankin/The Guardian

Organised by the Yellow Ribbon movement with support from a Ukrainian NGO and PR firm, the exhibition took place outside the European parliament, with the aim of showing European decision-makers the reality of life under Russian occupation.

The green fence panel is battered and pock-marked by bullets – traces of Russian attacks, Alexandrova said. “She wanted this to be also a memory and a symbol of how Russians were destroying Kherson,” her interpreter said.

According to Ukraine’s government, more than 100,000 sq km (38,600 sq miles) of the country are under occupation by Russia. That is 1,877 cities, towns and villages. “Unfortunately, this number often remains abstract to foreigners,” said Ukraine’s ambassador to the EU, Vsevolod Chentsov. “Thousands of brave people are fighting against the huge ideological bubble in which Russian propaganda is investing millions.”

Yellow ribbons displayed at the exhibition in Brussels.
Yellow ribbons displayed at the exhibition in Brussels. Photograph: Jennifer Rankin/The Guardian

One person is Ivan, a co-founder of the Yellow Ribbon movement, who lives in occupied Melitopol. Russia tries “to create an informational vacuum where they are telling you that ‘there is no Ukraine’, ‘Ukraine left you’, ‘your city is Russian’, ‘Russia is here forever’,” he said. Ivan is not his real name and he wore a mask throughout the conversation which partly obscured his face.

Acts of resistance, such as painting a yellow ribbon on a fence, “show that Ukraine is still independent, it will liberate you sometime soon – please do not take a Russian passport,” he said.

The movement started in Kherson, the first big city to fall under Russian occupation. Pro-Ukraine demonstrations sprung up immediately. But on 27 April 2022, when about 500 people gathered to protest, Russian troops used teargas and stun grenades to break up the peaceful demonstration. Activists, such as Aleksandrova, were undeterred, but realised their protest would have to go underground.

Ukrainians protesting against the Russian occupation in late March 2022.
Ukrainians protesting against the Russian occupation in late March 2022. Photograph: Olexandr Chornyi/AP

To show resistance, they tied yellow ribbons to fences, or projected the initials of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (ЗСУ) on to public buildings used by Russian forces or pro-Russian administrators. They put up posters with QR codes informing people how to avoid getting a Russian passport and avert sending their children to schools controlled by the Russian state.

The movement spread to other occupied territories. The Ukrainian letter “Ï” – which does not feature in the Russian alphabet and is essential for the Ukrainian spelling of Ukraine – appeared on posters, walls and fences. When local authorities sought to ban the sale of blue and yellow paint, activists resorted to tearing up scraps of old clothes to make yellow ribbons. More recently activists have turned the Russian “Z” symbol into an hourglass in Ukrainian colours. The message is simple: Russia’s time on Ukraine’s territory is running out.

The Yellow Ribbon movement claims that 8,000 people in the occupied territories are using its chatbot, which sends out instructions on different protests. People are asked to upload photos and videos of their actions, so organisers know they are active. The chatbot is intended to preserve everyone’s anonymity.

“Sometimes it is hard to trust because you know anyone could just tell the Russians you are a local partisan and it would be really hard for your family,” Ivan said.

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