# taz.de -- Voluntary service in the Ukraine conflict: Maria Berlinska goes off… | |
> This is a woman who studied Jewish history and organised festivals with | |
> feminist bands. Then she volunteered to go to war. Why? | |
Bild: Maria Berlinska on the frontline in Awdijiwka. Next to her is the command… | |
KIEW/AWDIJIWKA taz | In the evening of one hot day in July, while | |
Kalashnikov rifles sound off at the foot of a hill, Maria is searching for | |
the wind. She trudges through the waist-high, bone-dry grass, raises her | |
right arm high, feels for movements in the air and continues up the hill. | |
The soldiers, who are dragging a large wooden crate for her, run behind her | |
like little chickens following their mother hen. Maria Berlinska is running | |
out of time. The wind was too strong throughout the day and soon the sun | |
will go down. Berlinska has been preparing herself for this moment for | |
weeks. She was expected here at the front. Today she will fly her drone. | |
Maria Berlinska, 28 years old, investigates where the enemy is for the | |
Ukrainian army. The enemy are the troops fighting for the People’s | |
Republics of Donetsk and Luhansk, which are recognized by no other country | |
in the world as such, and which are two regions in the East of Ukraine | |
supported by Russia. Berlinska is in Awdijiwka, one of the most fought-over | |
areas at the front, which is diplomatically called the 'line of contact’. | |
Awdijiwka is located around 13 kilometres north of Donetsk and is | |
controlled by the Ukrainian army. | |
Using her drone, a small aircraft made out of styrofoam, Maria Berlinska | |
wants to investigate what Ukrainian soldiers cannot detect on the ground. | |
Where are the enemy’s mortar shells coming from? Are the enemy combatants | |
hidden in a pit somewhere over there? | |
Maria Berlinska wears a camouflage T-shirt and trousers, but she’s not a | |
soldier. For a year and a half, she has voluntarily gone to the front line | |
without being paid to do so. She does this again and again, for a few weeks | |
at a time. She is part of a Ukrainian voluntary movement. A lawyer from | |
Odessa gathers funds and buys cars with it, which he then gives to the | |
army. Ukrainian Orthodox Christians in Germany have put a donation box for | |
the army in their church. A man, who was originally studying Management in | |
Warsaw, has returned to his country and volunteered as a soldier. | |
The Ministry of Defence in Kiev doesn’t have precise figures or reliable | |
estimates on the number of these volunteer soldiers. President Petro | |
Poroshenko stated a year ago that 35,000 volunteer soldiers had fought for | |
the Ukrainian side since spring 2014. This is out of a total of 210,000 | |
soldiers who were mobilised. Andriy Melnyk, the Ukrainian ambassador in | |
Germany, once said that without the voluntary fighters his country’s army | |
would have lost the war in the East a long time ago. It is clear that the | |
state is counting on the volunteers. | |
## But why does a person like Maria Berlinska voluntarily go to war? | |
“I don’t want to kill anyone. I also know that the people who die in this | |
war will not be the ones who started it“, Berlinska says. “But violence is | |
not stopped with books and flowers“. | |
Two months before she let her drone fly up from a hill at the front, she | |
was sitting on the kitchen floor of her flat in Kiev. She was sharing a | |
flat with a man who worked in the Ministry of Economy. The May sun shone | |
through the balcony window, and Berlinska was wearing a knitted sweater | |
with polar bears on it, perching on a blanket and clutching a cup of tea. | |
She was already at the front, she says. Soon she would go there again. | |
There are dark shadows around her eyes. Her voice is raw. | |
Why do you do it? | |
“I don’t want to have what Putin and his supporters call the Russian world | |
here in Kiev. So I must help stop them in Donbass“. | |
What is the Russian world? | |
“Total control and homophobia. It is a world which is only concerned with | |
power“. | |
Is Russia evil? | |
“Nonsense. Some of my ancestors came from Russia and Russians have paid for | |
my bulletproof vest. Good people live there. However, Vladimir Putin has | |
seized their state“. | |
You could leave the country. | |
“And then what? You cannot appease an aggressive dictator by retreating. | |
Today it will be us, but tomorrow it will be another country in Europe“. | |
If Maria Berlinska wants to say something, she only moves her lips as much | |
as is absolutely necessary, as if the corners of her mouth were frozen. | |
## Berlinska's background | |
Her parents are from Eastern Ukraine, but for a long time they have lived | |
in the west of the country. As a child, Maria Berlinska lived in a village | |
near the city Kamianets-Podilskyi, 400 km south-west of Kiev. It is an old | |
city, founded in the 12th century and once inhabited by Jews, Poles, | |
Ukrainians and Armenians. In World War Two, the Germans killed more than | |
20,000 Jews here. Berlinska grew up with her parents and grandparents, she | |
says, and the connection she feels to her country stems from this time in | |
her life, particularly from the stories and songs of her childhood. Her | |
love for literature slowly developed as time went on – poems by Schadan and | |
Goethe, books by Dante, Chekhov and Salinger. | |
After college she studied Jewish History in Kiev, at one of the oldest | |
universities in the country. As well as that, she organised Festivals and | |
brought feminist bands to her home country. Then the Euromaidan Revolution | |
began, between November 2013 and February 2014, which forced the President | |
Yanukovych into exile. | |
Maria Berlinska turns around to face the soldiers and points with her right | |
hand to a spot of grass. They should put the crate down here. Berlinska | |
folds open the cover to reveal two wings next to each other and, below | |
them, the aircraft’s fuselage. One of the men takes the parts out. Maria | |
Berlinska is the pilot and he is the operator. He helps her to launch the | |
drone and takes care of technical difficulties. He is now inserting the | |
wings into the sides of the fuselage. The drone is ready. | |
## The Maidan principle | |
In February 2014, the fourth month of the protest, violence escalated in | |
Kiev’s main square, Maidan. Snipers shot at protesters. More than one | |
hundred people died, including many police officers. Maria Berlinska was at | |
the square. | |
Since then, she says, she has lived in the moment. She no longer makes any | |
plans. Life can end at any moment, she tells us. | |
This month, Maria Berlinska has experienced how strangers are willing to | |
share their food and how volunteer paramedics dress wounds. The Maidan | |
principle: everyone helps each other out. | |
For a long time, people in Ukraine tried to get by as best as possible, | |
which also meant that people turned a blind eye to other injustices which | |
were taking place, Maria explains. It was only until the Euromaidan | |
revolution, Maria goes on to say, that people felt like there could be a | |
different approach to life, other than trying to trick each other. An | |
alternative to the official, corrupt structures. An alternative to a state | |
where ministers and police officers alike take bribes. | |
Maria Berlinska is not only fighting the separatist army and Russians in | |
the East, but she is also fighting for what type of country the Ukraine | |
will be one day. She is part of a movement, which is bigger than the | |
military’s supporters. In the Ministry of Science, a quantum physicist is | |
voluntarily compiling the paperwork for an education reform and, in Kiev, a | |
film director is organising Christmas parties for internally displaced | |
persons. Many volunteers, as they are called in Ukraine, see themselves as | |
part of a better parallel society. | |
## After the revolution | |
In the spring of 2014, shortly after the end of the revolution, the first | |
fights between Ukrainian soldiers and separatists in the East of Ukraine | |
broke out. Soon there was evidence that the Russian government was inciting | |
tensions in Donbass. In June 2014, tanks suddenly appeared among opponents | |
of the Ukrainian government and, from August, their troops were losing | |
ground. | |
During these weeks, Berlinska was sitting in her living room, reading a | |
constant stream of new, contradictory reports about the fighting in East | |
Ukraine. Anything seemed possible to her. The Russian army could soon be in | |
Kiev, the Ukrainian army could recapture Donbass, a third world war could | |
break out. One thing was clear: Hundreds of Ukrainians were dying. She was | |
chain-smoking, couldn’t sleep at night and spoke a lot with friends. Should | |
she go off to fight? | |
She rang up different units. They didn’t want her, because she is a woman. | |
So she went to the Aidar battalion, a voluntary group. The men and women in | |
this group go to the front poorly equipped- some only have hunting rifles | |
or no weapons at all. They help themselves to what their dead friends and | |
enemies leave behind. To many Ukrainians they are heroes. | |
In the battalion they needed somebody who could fly drones and who could | |
explain how the enemy soldiers were moving. Berlinska learnt how to steer | |
copters, small machines with four, six or eight rotors, which are | |
relatively easy to operate. | |
On 1 September 2015, she arrived at the Front and the very next day she | |
travelled to Shchastya, which means 'luck’ in Russian. There she | |
experienced war for the first time. The Kalashnikov rifles sounded as if | |
someone was drumming on metal. 'I was afraid because war is really | |
terrifying. I wanted to leave and never come back. At the same time, I was | |
ashamed, because I was so afraid and because I had not come earlier.’ | |
## Maria Berlinska does not want to kill. But she does | |
Maria Berlinska flies copter drones. She loves the feeling of controlling | |
the little machines as they fly. For the first time, she is considering | |
training to get her pilot’s licence once the war is over. | |
During Maidan, she learned that people can take their fate into their own | |
hands. During the first weeks of the war, she decided that she wanted to | |
play her part. The first few days on the frontline showed her how scared | |
she was, but something else as well – that she enjoyed having power over | |
the sky. | |
She asked her commanders not to put her in a position where she is directly | |
responsible for killing people. They came to an arrangement that reflects | |
her desire not to hurt others, her will to protect her country and her love | |
of flying. | |
“I would use my gun if someone attacked me, if I had to“. She enjoys her | |
role of scout, helping her soldiers to survive. “But I am well aware that | |
reconnaissance has another side to it,“ she says. “Part of my job is to | |
kill people“. | |
## How to fly a drone | |
Maria Berlinska wants to be good at what she does. Copters like those she | |
flew on her first mission cannot fly very high or be in the air for very | |
long, but some drones have that capability. They look like miniature | |
aircraft and are the ones Berlinska wants to be able to operate. | |
The drone sits on a three-legged camping stool. It looks like one of those | |
chunky, rounded planes from Donald Duck cartoons. Maria Berlinska sits | |
cross-legged in front of an open suitcase, in which a computer is set up. | |
The screen shows the view from the camera on top of the drone. At the | |
moment it is her colleague’s midriff. The computer should now recognise the | |
drone’s location, but the connection is not working. Berlinska’s colleague | |
holds the drone by its wings and takes a few steps back. “Stop, stop, | |
stop!“ calls Maria Berlinska. At the foot of the hill, behind the trees, | |
they are shooting again. | |
Dmitri Starostin taught Maria Berlinska how to fly a small drone like that | |
one. That was in autumn two years ago in a field on the outskirts of Kiev, | |
behind an old print shop and a petrol station. | |
Now, two summers later, the flying teacher stood in the same field in Kiev. | |
There is smoke rising from the neighbouring gardens and the smell of burnt | |
plants hangs in the air. Dmitri Starostin watches as two soldiers learn how | |
to land a drone. The white aircraft releases a parachute, jerks backwards, | |
then slowly floats to the ground. Starostin, 47, is an art director for a | |
television channel. He wears sandals on his bare feet and 'Road Tripping’ | |
is written across his T-shirt. | |
Dmitri Starostin is now working as a teacher for the Centre for Air | |
Reconnaissance, founded and run by Maria Berlinska. Free of charge, he | |
teaches people who are going to the frontline everything that he taught | |
Berlinska two years ago. 150 students have passed through the centre, | |
including ten women. Berlinska was Starostin’s first student. | |
It was October 2014 when she came to him. They trained for two weeks. The | |
little planes crashed repeatedly and every evening one or two need | |
repairing. The most difficult thing has been teaching Maria Berlinska not | |
to drop the drone on anybody’s head. “Not to kill anyone with it,“ he say… | |
## But killing – surely that is exactly what you do, right? | |
“We teach our soldiers so that they can keep themselves alive“, says Dmitri | |
Starostin. “The army is poorly equipped, many young men and women are sent | |
off to fight with little training and die because they don’t know where the | |
enemy is“. Yes, he knows that the information his students gather is fatal | |
for people fighting on the other side. “I wish I had better options“, says | |
Starostin, “but, if in doubt, I choose to save the lives of our soldiers“. | |
Starostin is not usually paid for the lessons he teaches. But the petrol | |
station at the edge of the field provides Maria Berlinska’s school with 60 | |
litres of free fuel per month. | |
Berlinska does not earn money from the school she founded either. She must | |
use other means to scrape together the roughly 500 dollars she needs per | |
month. Occasionally, she still organises concerts or performs research for | |
scientific studies. | |
The volunteer setup, the support of many – it works well in the enthusiasm | |
of the moment. And in the tents of Maidan, which are taken down again after | |
a few months. But does it work in an armed conflict, the length of which no | |
one can predict? | |
## Tension between volunteers and “professionals“ | |
Maria Berlinska looks back to the cars in which her troops drove up the | |
hill today. The Jeeps and minibuses are parked near a cemetry. There is a | |
van with a red cross on its side – they call this the tablet. Inside it | |
waits an old man who has lost almost all his teeth – he is the paramedic. | |
He is here in case something happens. | |
Though the fighting went to and fro in the early days, it is increasingly | |
becoming a static war. Approximately 40,000 Ukrainian soldiers and around | |
38,000 separatists and Russians today stand on opposite sides along a 500km | |
front. These figures were provided by the Ukrainian government and cannot | |
be confirmed. According to the latest ceasefire agreement, both sides must | |
cease using heavy weapons. The OSCE (Organization for Security and | |
Co-operation in Europe), whose job it is to ensure that the two sides are | |
not fighting one another, is continually identifying breaches of the | |
agreement. | |
In this delicate situation, the relationship between the volunteers and the | |
government’s armed forces is complicated. Many volunteers feel contempt for | |
the high-ranking officers, because they hold them responsible for the | |
Ukranian army’s defeats. The volunteers do not trust the generals, just as | |
they do not trust the government. Many officers, however, look down on the | |
volunteers because they lack proper training. | |
Amnesty International accuses members of volunteer battalions of theft and | |
abduction. One report also mentions the Aidar battalion, in which Maria | |
Berlinska has fought. According to the report, the soldiers tortured | |
civilians who they accused of collaborating with the separatists. Men and | |
women from the Aidar battalion had fascist symbols tattooed on their bodies | |
and painted on their cars. | |
Since then, the volunteers have been integrated into the army or the | |
Internal Troops of Ukraine. This was at the demand of countries such as the | |
USA, Canada and Germany, but the government in Kiev also had fears that the | |
militia would become too powerful. | |
## Building drones | |
A soldier with a Kalashnikov has laid down in the grass and looks up at the | |
sky. The operator holds the drone in his right hand like a massive paper | |
aeroplane. “On three,“ says Maria Berlinska, and he starts running, ras, | |
dwa, tri, one, two, three… the propellor begins to whirr and two seconds | |
later the white of the plane becomes blurred against the clouds and the | |
blue of the evening sky. The drone’s humming can still be heard, even | |
though the machine itself is now out of sight. “Good,“ says Maria | |
Berlinska. They all join her sitting in front of the screen. The drone | |
camera shows trees, fields scorched by the sun and a lake sparkling like | |
liquid gold. | |
As months of the war go by, even the volunteers are becoming more | |
professional. In winter 2015, Maria Berlinska bought a better drone. She | |
ordered component parts on the internet for around 3,600 euros and | |
volunteers assembled them. At the same time, Berlinska founded her school | |
for air reconnaissance. She raised money and persuaded drone pilots, | |
engineers and electronics experts to teach there. | |
Oleksandr Schendekow is one of them. He educates her students about | |
electronics, navigation and how to operate a camera. Sometimes he also | |
shows them how drones are built, which is his specialism. He has built | |
little copters for use on the frontline and finally begun to construct the | |
first Ukranian reconnaissance drone that meets military standards. Anyone | |
who wants to know how the Ukranian volunteers became professional needs to | |
meet him. | |
## The factory and the company | |
The Coffee House is the Russian equivalent of Starbucks and can also be | |
found in Ukraine. It is filled with tables made from dark wood and | |
armchairs with patterned cushions. Schendekow refused to meet in the | |
factory where the first Ukranian military drones are produced. “We don’t | |
even take our customers to where production takes place,“ he says. “Nobody | |
can know where the factory is.“ Oleksandr Schendekow is a slim man with | |
long eyelashes and a musketeer-style beard. | |
He is an expert at making individual components work together in the | |
smoothest way possible. The drone manufacturing began as a volunteer | |
organisation and somewhat kickstarted the war. The website is called | |
People’s Project and is where donations can be made for weapons, military | |
training and repairing naval vessels. A list shows how much money needs to | |
be raised, what percentage has already been collected and how many people | |
have donated. 'First People’s UAV Complex’, the Ukranian drone project, is | |
one of the items on the list. 478 people have donated almost 30,000 US | |
dollars to the project. | |
Donation websites, drone schools… the volunteer helpers are continually | |
creating new structures. But they cannot escape the fact that volunteering | |
also means being able to opt out at any time. The donations are therefore | |
especially high when a large number of Ukranian soldiers have been killed. | |
“No blood, no money“, that is the rule in this war, according to the | |
volunteers. | |
Schendekow has previously worked for a company which films advertisements | |
and wedding videos with cameras on drones and sent a couple of copters as a | |
donation to the front. He then saw on Facebook that they were searching for | |
people who are familiar with the electronics of miniature aircraft via the | |
donation platform “People’s Project’“. With a couple of partners he fou… | |
his own company based on the idea of a “people’s drone“. They now work | |
exclusively for the Ministry of Defence. | |
## Why is there a need for volunteers to build military spy drones? | |
“Ukraine had no operational drones before the war“, says Schendekow. The | |
Armed Forces were poorly equipped even though Ukraine produces modern | |
military technology. “My impression is that this decline was politically | |
intended“ says Schendekow. “The elite at that time wanted to facilitate a | |
peaceful, though perhaps not friendly, takeover by Russia“. | |
Maria Berlinska gave a helicopter drone to the commander. She took a photo | |
for her Facebook page Photograph: Olena Maksimenko | |
They see it differently in the military. Even before the war, the armed | |
forces were in possession of drones, according to an email written by the | |
Ministry of Defence in Kiev. They name two models, both of which are long, | |
rocket-like monstrosities from the 70s and 80s, but the Ministry claims | |
that they are still being used today. | |
## War stories for lunch | |
Maria Berlinska must fly low so that the men can see what the camera is | |
showing. The sun blinds. She has her thumb on the control console’s | |
right-hand lever, her left thumb and index finger on the left-hand lever. | |
The winds are strong, the drone wobbles. Berlinska stares at the screen. | |
One of the soldiers, the reconnaissance officer, directs her “up to the | |
road and then to the right“. She should fly back to a trench. A Ukranian | |
unit has been fired at from there. | |
On a Sunday morning in July Maria Berlinska sits in short white trousers on | |
a pile of charcoal and says, it is now going to the front. It will be hot | |
again today, up to 40 degrees, the petrol station has put out its BBQ | |
range. Beside Berlinska leans a wooden walking stick, she’s had an | |
operation, multiple falls, at Independence Square in Kiev, in the war, a | |
tumour had formed. | |
“You will do everything I say“, Berlinska says to her team. “Understand?�… | |
Sitting in the Jeep behind her is Julia Tolopa, who, at 21 years old, wants | |
to go the front to learn how to fly drones. She can already drive tanks. | |
Tolopa comes from the North Caucasus, from Russia. She shows photos on her | |
smartphone of the tattered remains of a Lada Niva, which she drove over a | |
mine in, then she swipes through the photos. A smiling man with short hair | |
in a red T-shirt: dead. A man with a hat and scarf: dead. | |
She survived, she smiles, then she crushes the smile with her lips once | |
more. She speaks proudly, she speaks quietly, no for her it has not yet | |
become the daring adventure which is easy to tell. They all tell stories of | |
lucky escapes. This is the message, for others as well as for themselves. | |
Past fields of sun flowers and bus stops with “Slawa Ukrajini“ sprayed on | |
them, the glory of Ukraine, 125 miles to the east, and there are ever more | |
holes in the streets. The cars stop at a pub: For lunch there is a kefir | |
soup with eggs, potatoes and dill, along with war stories. | |
## Women in the front | |
Many volunteers have seen people die at Independence Square and in the war. | |
“Heroes don’t die“ is tattooed on Julia Tolopa’s arm. Many volunteers do | |
not allow themselves to pause, to mourn. They say that they will only be | |
able to so when the country the dead fought for exists. But which country | |
would that be? | |
Before the war there were female chefs and combat medics, but women | |
couldn’t do many jobs. Because thousands of men have died in the fighting, | |
women are being promoted. | |
Maria Berlinska is fighting for women to have equal rights in the military | |
and for women to be paid the same as men. It is her other major project, | |
she calls it “Invisible battalion“. Together with a sociologist she | |
researched the position of women on the front and the study shows black and | |
white photos of the women standing proudly in their uniforms. | |
## A ride to the next base | |
On the way to Donetsk they can hear the tracks, which are left by the | |
tanks, more and more in the Jeep. It sounds like a dentist’s drill when the | |
car’s tyres meet the grooves. | |
They smoke a bit of hashish, hang their feet out the windows. During a | |
break Maria Berlinska recites a poem by Schadan Serhij, one of the most | |
famous Ukranian poets. “They bite gently into the skin, without noticing | |
that it is mine“, Maria Berlinska quotes and bobs her ankles up and down | |
along with it, “if she wakes up, it would be nice to know her name“. | |
It is not far, they just have to pass the checkpoints. They pull up to the | |
barriers slowly and turn off the lights; they don’t want to blind the | |
soldiers. | |
The base, in which they will sleep for the next days, is an old post | |
office. An armoured, Soviet reconnaissance vehicle stands there on four | |
massive wheels, next to it a pick-up-truck, the bonnets and windscreens of | |
both are covered in bullet holes. | |
Plastic bottles lie all around, there’s a pile dirt in the hallway, | |
protective vests, Kalashnikovs and sniper rifles hang on the walls of the | |
rooms, along with antennas of wire mesh, which the soldiers use to try and | |
improve the television reception. The windows are open, it is hot, 35 | |
degrees, naked male torsos, sweat, there’s a musty smell of old blankets | |
and the acidity of beef its own juices, lunch today was from cans. | |
“This is our regular army“, says Maria Berlinska, pointing her head | |
backwards to the decade-old broken vehicles, to the rubbish, to the grey | |
rubber hose, which must be a shower for everyone. She kneels on a bed and | |
looks out of a window into the black, one pane of glass is still in one | |
piece, the other is replaced by cardboard. Mortars and grenade launchers | |
are fired outside. Sometimes it sounds like thunder, others like farts in | |
the bath. It does not stop, you get used to it. “What a pointless war“, | |
says Maria Berlinska. | |
Why pointless? | |
“If it were up to me there’d be no countries. People are important to me, | |
not countries. But I don’t live in a world of dreams, I live now and in | |
this situation and I have to deal with it“. | |
Are you afraid? | |
“Yes, of course I am“. | |
## From the dream night to the daily war | |
The next morning, the journey from peace into war took three minutes. On | |
one side of the train tracks lies the city, where men and women buy | |
Coca-Cola and Lawash flat breads from street venders and go to work in the | |
large coal factory every day. Daily life seeps into every crack opened by | |
the war. | |
On the other side of the track, Maria Berlinska puts on a helmet and pulls | |
on her protective vest. Speed is the best protection from sniper rifles, so | |
they are racing along, turning quickly around concrete barricades, bushes | |
on both sides of the road scrape and squeel over the Jeep’s dark green | |
paint. A house, the second floor has been torn down, in the first there are | |
sandbags and barricades made from road signs. | |
They were expecting Maria Berlinska, there is fish soup on plastic white | |
plates. Then the shooting starts, first a Kalashnikov, then two, then so | |
many, that even the soldiers can no longer say how many are fighting out | |
there. Twenty people have been wounded here in the last month, the | |
commander tells me, and three are dead. As the firing ceases, two men with | |
protective-vests and Kalashnikovs run into the building, the commander | |
shakes their hands. He says they were shot from a trench nearby. You can | |
see the pale sand when you look out of the open, right-side of the base. | |
## The first one is already shot down | |
Maria Berlinska needs to fly back to the trench once more. “There, there“. | |
She manages to control her aircraft against the wind. “Very good“, says the | |
reconnaissance officer. Then the screen goes black. Blue writing. Nemaje | |
Syhnalu. No signal. The operator runs to the antenna, turns it, flips it | |
over, holds it up. “What’s going on?“, asks the soldier. Maria Berlinska | |
falls down to the ground, she had already clenched her teeth, now her jaw | |
drops. All of the excitement has gone from her face. She sits down on one | |
the stools where half an hour ago her drone still lay. She lights up a | |
cigarette. She says nothing. The others still want to believe it was an | |
electronic malfunction, she knows what went wrong. For the first time the | |
separatists have shot down her drone. | |
A phone rings. Maria Berlinska takes her smartphone from her shirt pocket, | |
pushes a button and throws it onto the grey crate. Voices can be heard, | |
laughter, we are the best, one says in Russian. Maria Berlinska installed a | |
microphone on the drone, it transmits the voices of the men who shot down | |
her aircraft. Julia Tolopa jumps to the crate, takes a photograph with her | |
smartphone of the drone’s last coordinates, two eight-digit numbers. The | |
soldiers now have phones in their hands, they want artillery to be fired at | |
the spot where the shots came from. | |
As Maria Berlinska’s heavy, grey crate is stowed in the Jeep, there are | |
three claps of thunder, wumm, wumm, wumm. | |
Can you imagine a life after the war, Maria Berlinska? | |
“Of course. I want to travel, so far I’ve only been in four countries“. S… | |
lists them: Ukraine, Russia, Slovakia, UK. | |
Four days later a news website for the Dontesk People’s Republic publishes | |
a message: “Please take note of the pieces of a Ukranian 'Furie’ type drone | |
shown here. It was shot down by our unit of gunmen in the Avdijivka | |
industrial area on 18 July 2016“. Next to the text is a picture of Maria | |
Berlinskas’ drone. The right wing is missing. | |
Collaboration: Christina Spitzmüller | |
22 Jan 2018 | |
## AUTOREN | |
Daniel Schulz | |
## TAGS | |
taz international | |
## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA |