Mayor of occupied Enerhodar says the city's municipal sector nears collapse
Dmytro Orlov, mayor of temporarily occupied Enerhodar, said that the city's utilities are on the verge of collapse, the heating system is almost destroyed
Dmytro Orlov informed about this on Telegram.
"As of now, the communal sphere of Enerhodar is gradually reaching the limit. Russian invaders have turned the recently prosperous Enerhodar into a depressed village," he wrote.
The mayor of Enerhodar stressed that the centralized heating system of the city was almost completely and deliberately destroyed by the Russian invaders: "instead, the modular boiler houses that they installed in different districts of the city are mostly inefficient and have done more harm than real good. It is cold in the apartments. Only in a few houses, to which boilers are directly connected, the temperature regime is more or less in line with the norm. But the number of such houses is small".
According to him, the other day, near the Sovremennik Palace of Culture there was a leak of almost a ton of diesel fuel, which is used by mobile boilers.
"They covered all this mess with sand and pretended that it was necessary. But the stench has not disappeared. As well as the danger to people and the environment. And this is not an isolated case. Diesel fuel is spilled all over the city," Dmytro Orlov said.
He added that all the access roads to Enerhodar are mined and dug with trenches, the invaders also mined the city beach.
"The information that the invaders bring something under the cover of night and under heavy guard and hide it in the basements of residential buildings is confirmed by local residents. Although there are almost as few Enerhodar residents left in the city as the occupiers hemselves and those Russians who came to Enerhodar by advertisements and occupied other people's apartments," the mayor said.
The terror of the occupied territories continues in Mariupol: On January 9, it became known that the city's hospitals are overcrowded, people are denied to be hospitalized, and morgues do not have enough time to take the bodies of the dead.
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