Denis, a factory worker, has been living in an underground bunker with his extended family of 16. "It seems safe in here but nothing is 100% sure. If we're going to get hit, we'll get hit, so be it," he says.
![Ukraine , Russia](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/df4247_0038c1bbc225446f87f58f91a0e7f8ba~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_980,h_571,al_c,q_85,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_auto/df4247_0038c1bbc225446f87f58f91a0e7f8ba~mv2.jpg)
Running for cover is part of their daily routine.
The outskirts of the town have borne the brunt of fighting – houses reduced to rubble by powerful blasts. Soldiers pointing to a huge crater say it was caused by a 500-kilo bomb.
At a local hospital, the wounded are being rushed in as the sound of shelling rings out. We're told not to film the facade of the hospital, for the staff are afraid of targeted strikes.
Andriy Mykolaiyovch, a doctor, says, "We don't have any choice, we have to treat the patients. That's our duty and that's that".
Our interview with the town's mayor, Halyna Minayeva was suddenly cut short by incoming rocket fire. After changing locations and stopping to assist a woman asking where she could find humanitarian aid, the mayor told FRANCE 24, "I'm not afraid. I'm not allowed to be afraid. I've got too much work to do".
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