>Recent reports show that some supermarkets are limiting customers to just three bottles of cooking oil and three packages of pasta per person. This shift follows weeks of deepening logistical disruptions throughout the Crimean Peninsula
>…
>The supply issues stem from intensified efforts by Ukraine to degrade Russian logistics, including strikes on oil refineries and attacks on transport routes, such as the R-280 „Novorossiya“ highway, that serve as vital supply lines during Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
>…
>Local residents describe a return to a Soviet-style distribution economy, noting that basic resources have become increasingly difficult to secure.
jvo203 on
Long queues, goods shortages, inflation: back in the U.S.S.R.
Leonie-Lionheard on
> The supply issues stem from intensified efforts by Ukraine to degrade Russian logistics, including strikes on oil refineries and attacks on transport routes, such as the R-280 „Novorossiya“ highway, that serve as vital supply lines during Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
> Local residents describe a return to a Soviet-style distribution economy, noting that basic resources have become increasingly difficult to secure.
Slava Ukraini!
elderrion on
Let’s hope the Russian settlers get the message and fuck off
johfajarfa on
Lines need to be longer
ZestyMyst008 on
Oh no. How sad.
If only there were some way for the orc colonizers to stop themselves from starving to death.
Far_Car430 on
Russians and Russia support should feel the pain, and may it last long long.
TopIndependent2344 on
Shame…
Slava Ukraini…🇺🇦🇿🇦
Mikethebest78 on
On the one hand human suffering is never good but on the other more important hand these people can no longer pretend that the war doesn’t effect them. I don’t think Crimea is the place for them all of those people who moved to Crimea since 2014 need to go back to Russia.
On a related but separate topic: In the early months of the war, the narrative was that the control of Nova Kakhovka was important for Crimea because it controls the canal that diverts Dnipro water to Crimea, and that without this canal, Crimea would turn into a desert.
After the Kherson Counteroffensive, the Russians blew up the Nova Kakhovka Dam. Didn’t that dry up the canal, and therefore water supply to Crimea was cut off?
Then, how is it possible that the population in Crimea can be sustained for years afterwards without, above anything else, water supply?
MercatorLondon on
Russians wanted USSR back so there you have it.
CicatrixMaledictum on
I feel bad for the legitimate residents, and not so bad for the colonizers.
On that note… is the ratio known, i.e. fraction of population that came after the 2014 invasion?
EDIT: Some sources say 1/3… is that right? Seems like a lot, unfortunately.
Redneck1026 on
This would make me happier but I have read that there are up to 300,000 Ukrainians and Tartars still living in Crimea. I worry about them.
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Gloriuos Putin wanted Soviet times.
>Recent reports show that some supermarkets are limiting customers to just three bottles of cooking oil and three packages of pasta per person. This shift follows weeks of deepening logistical disruptions throughout the Crimean Peninsula
>…
>The supply issues stem from intensified efforts by Ukraine to degrade Russian logistics, including strikes on oil refineries and attacks on transport routes, such as the R-280 „Novorossiya“ highway, that serve as vital supply lines during Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
>…
>Local residents describe a return to a Soviet-style distribution economy, noting that basic resources have become increasingly difficult to secure.
Long queues, goods shortages, inflation: back in the U.S.S.R.
> The supply issues stem from intensified efforts by Ukraine to degrade Russian logistics, including strikes on oil refineries and attacks on transport routes, such as the R-280 „Novorossiya“ highway, that serve as vital supply lines during Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
> Local residents describe a return to a Soviet-style distribution economy, noting that basic resources have become increasingly difficult to secure.
Slava Ukraini!
Let’s hope the Russian settlers get the message and fuck off
Lines need to be longer
Oh no. How sad.
If only there were some way for the orc colonizers to stop themselves from starving to death.
Russians and Russia support should feel the pain, and may it last long long.
Shame…
Slava Ukraini…🇺🇦🇿🇦
On the one hand human suffering is never good but on the other more important hand these people can no longer pretend that the war doesn’t effect them. I don’t think Crimea is the place for them all of those people who moved to Crimea since 2014 need to go back to Russia.
https://i.redd.it/ujkahtwtvl5h1.gif
The Ruskies Reaping What They Sow 😍 How fitting.
Only the beginning. Hang on tight
On a related but separate topic: In the early months of the war, the narrative was that the control of Nova Kakhovka was important for Crimea because it controls the canal that diverts Dnipro water to Crimea, and that without this canal, Crimea would turn into a desert.
After the Kherson Counteroffensive, the Russians blew up the Nova Kakhovka Dam. Didn’t that dry up the canal, and therefore water supply to Crimea was cut off?
Then, how is it possible that the population in Crimea can be sustained for years afterwards without, above anything else, water supply?
Russians wanted USSR back so there you have it.
I feel bad for the legitimate residents, and not so bad for the colonizers.
On that note… is the ratio known, i.e. fraction of population that came after the 2014 invasion?
EDIT: Some sources say 1/3… is that right? Seems like a lot, unfortunately.
This would make me happier but I have read that there are up to 300,000 Ukrainians and Tartars still living in Crimea. I worry about them.