Irpin, Kyiv Alexey Titov is on the edge. The road on which it stands once led across the Irpin River in the direction of Kiev. But a meter behind him, the asphalt suddenly tears away, the bridge is destroyed, and the road leads nowhere.
Titov is actually a physiotherapist. Since his city was liberated from Russian occupation, he has been documenting the reconstruction with his cell phone. “That’s where the Russians came from,” explains the 33-year-old, pointing to a piece of forest on the horizon. As he speaks, the noise of construction swallows up his words: construction workers are already working on behalf of a Turkish company to close the abyss again. The replacement for the bridge should be ready in a few months.
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