As Ukraine enters the second week of its incursion into Russia's Kursk region, its soldiers are seemingly making a point of trying to help Russian civilians, in stark contrast to some of the actions of Russian soldiers in Ukraine.
Since its surprise attack on August 6, Ukraine says its forces have taken control of
74 settlements in the Russian border region as of Tuesday, seizing about 386 square miles of territory.
That is almost as much territory as Moscow's grinding advances have
taken in Ukraine so far in 2024.
Experts at the Institute for the Study of War think tank, meanwhile,
estimate that Ukrainian forces were operating in or near about 41 settlements in Kursk as of Tuesday.
But instead of targeting civilians and infrastructure like Russia has in Ukraine over the past two and a half years, Ukraine is providing aid and relief to Russian civilians, according to reports and Ukrainian officials.
Earlier this week, Ukrainian daily news program TSN
reported that Ukrainian troops had started providing humanitarian aid to locals in the city of Sudzha in Kursk Oblast.
One soldier told the program that the Ukrainian armed forces have given civilians water, canned goods, biscuits, and other necessities, per a
translation by Ukrainska Pravda.
On Wednesday, Ukraine
said it had launched a 24-hour hotline for humanitarian aid and evacuation to Ukraine for Kursk residents through its Ministry of Reintegration of the Temporarily Occupied Territories.
In a Facebook
post on Wednesday, the ministry head, Irina Vereshchuk, said the Ukrainian armed forces were planning to conduct humanitarian operations to support civilians and open humanitarian corridors for the evacuation of civilians — both toward Russia and Ukraine — with the help of international humanitarian organizations.
Vereshchuk repeated the same message in a Facebook
post written in Russian — to make it clearer to Russians, she said — adding that the humanitarian effort and evacuation of Russian refugees were carried out in compliance with international humanitarian law.