In southeast Ukraine, the small village of Tavriiske is becoming almost unrecognizable as residents flee ahead of advancing Russian forces. Buses from nearby Zaporizhzhia, 50 km away, have stopped running, and only a few families remain. The fear of bombs, drones, and constant shelling is pushing people to leave homes they have lived in for decades.
Families Forced to Leave
Maryna Vyshnevska, 35, gathered her five children and a few belongings to board a police evacuation bus. “We thought they (the Russians) would be driven back and all this would stop,” she said. “But when we realised it would only get worse and worse, it was better to leave.” Her story reflects the reality for many families in Tavriiske and nearby villages, where the frontline has created a dangerous bulge surrounded by Russian troops on three sides.
Local volunteers and police patrol the roads under anti-drone netting to help those trapped. Vlad Makhovskyi, 51, a volunteer wearing tactical gear, said, “Every day, every week, we see more destruction and a greater risk of entering towns like these.” In one instance, two men carried an elderly woman on a bright pink bed sheet out of a damaged house.

Intensifying Frontlines
U.S.-brokered peace talks between Russia and Ukraine are set to start in Abu Dhabi, yet fighting continues along the 1,200-km front line. Russian forces are slowly advancing toward the so-called “fortress belt” of eastern Donetsk and moving toward Zaporizhzhia, the capital of a region partially occupied by Moscow.
Ukrainian authorities say fighting has intensified around Huliaipole, 40 km east of Tavriiske. With Russian troops encroaching from multiple sides, villagers feel trapped. Nataliia Fedorenko, 66, left her home in tears, describing the emotional toll of living in a war zone. “It’s scary. Nobody wants to die. I know I don’t have much time left, but this kind of death…?” she said.
A Village Abandoned
Almost no families remain in Tavriiske. Roads that once bustled with life are now deserted, and the few remaining residents face the daily fear of attack. Even as international efforts seek peace, the reality on the ground is grim: ordinary people are paying the price for a war that shows no immediate signs of stopping.
The exodus from Tavriiske is a stark reminder that, in modern warfare, civilian life is under constant threat, and villages can vanish from maps long before the fighting ends.
















