“Where are they going to take them?”
“We do not possess this information,” says the hotline agent.
“Where is my mother going to get off the boat? What is the destination? Oleshky or Hola Prystan?”
“We don’t know really.”
“All civilians need to evacuate immediately due to potential mass shelling by Ukraine’s army,” says the automatic responder of the hotline for those willing to move to the eastern bank of the Dnipro River in the Kherson region. “The shelling may start within a day’s time. Buses taking people to the eastern bank and further east to other Russia’s regions will depart daily starting 7 o’clock from Kherson’s river port. Make sure to take your IDs with you.”
On 18 October, Vladimir Saldo, the so-called “governor” of the Russia-occupied part of Ukraine’s Kherson region, urged people residing on the western bank of the Dnipro to evacuate, claiming that Ukraine was marshalling its forces for a full-scale offensive. He also noted that there was “an imminent danger of flooding due to the planned destruction of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant and a discharge of water at power plants upstream,” announcing his “tough decision but a right one: to move civilians from certain districts of the Kherson region to the eastern bank of the Dnipro River.” It is unclear from the statement which side is planning to destroy the power plant.
“Those who will have moved further east to other Russian regions will receive real estate certificates,” Vladimir Saldo said. “Russia’s Deputy PM Marat Khusnullin ordered this. Evacuation and temporary accommodation of the residents of the Berislav, Bilozerka, Snihurivka and Oleksandrivka districts will be free of charge, with the support of Russia’s Emergency Ministry and the Kherson regional government.”
Kherson’s residents received Russia’s text messages urging them to evacuate late at night. Colourful leaflets started to appear in the entrances of apartment blocks the day before, calling on the locals to move to the eastern bank in order to save their families. All leaflets had the hotline number for those who wished to cross the Dnipro River. Most of the people in Kherson rushed downstairs to check their cellars or to stock up on drinking water and noodles. Some tried calling the hotline and were ultimately lost in confusion.