Connect with us

News

Panic in Eastern Ukraine as Trump Considers Land Deal With Russia

Published

on

Presidents Vladimir Putin of Russia, Donald Trump of the United States and Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine

In Sloviansk, a small city near Ukraine’s eastern frontlines, life continues under the constant threat of shelling.

According to CNN report, a different kind of fear has spread the possibility that the United States might agree to hand parts of eastern Ukraine to Russia in exchange for a ceasefire.

The idea surfaced during talks between US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Russian officials ahead of the Alaska summit between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

If such a deal happened, Sloviansk could end up under Moscow’s control.

For locals like Mykhailo, a journalist who spends rare quiet moments at the city’s salt lake, the proposal feels surreal.

“I feel like I just float away from this reality,” he said, glancing toward the concrete bomb shelter by the beach.

“Many of my friends want to stay here, but we’d all have to leave. Still, I don’t think it will happen.”

Others show less faith in diplomacy. Ludmila, who lost mobility after stepping on a land nine two years ago, dismissed the talks as theatre.

“They decide one thing, say another, and do another,” she said.

The mood is tense across Donetsk region. Residents have already dug new defensive trenches west of Sloviansk to prepare for another Russian push.

Few, however, imagined their strongest ally might consider giving away their homes.

In Sloviansk’s only functioning maternity ward, new mother Taisiya cradled her daughter, born just days earlier. “That would be very bad,” she said of the potential deal.

“But we have no influence. People will just give away our homes.”

See also  South Africa’s genocide case against Israel: The International Court of Justice explained

The war’s reach remains relentless. Natalia and Sviatoslav lost their daughter Sofia, her husband Mykyta, and their grandson Lev in a Russian airstrike in Kyiv on July 31.

The young family had moved away from Sloviansk to escape daily drone and missile attacks, only for the war to find them anyway.

Sofia had been three months pregnant and planned to visit Sloviansk soon to share the news.

“They left from the war, and the war caught them there,” Sviatoslav said quietly.

In nearby Kramatorsk, trains from Kyiv arrive to the sound of air raid sirens. Families reunite briefly before soldiers return to the front.

Tetyana, greeting her husband Serhiy for his birthday, wept openly.

“I don’t care about those territories,” she said. “I just want him to come home alive.”

For many here, Trump’s diplomacy feels distant and irrelevant.

Survival  not politics  defines their days.


For Diaspora Digital Media Updates click on Whatsapp, or Telegram. For eyewitness accounts/ reports/ articles, write to: citizenreports@diasporadigitalmedia.com. Follow us on X (Fomerly Twitter) or Facebook

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest from DDM TV

Latest Updates

Nigerians have no reason to be poor — Tinubu

Man killed in confrontation with vigilantes in Kwara

VIDEO: El-Rufai Unveils ADC Platform to Supporters in Kaduna

Zelensky Rejects Land-for-Peace Deal Ahead of Berlin Summit

Air Canada Flight Attendants Issue 72-Hour Ultimatum as Talks Collapse

US Imposes Sanctions on Congolese Militia

Nigerian Businessman Loses $70,000 In Uganda Gold Scam

Power minister denies mansion scandal, says built before appointment

Outrage as police arrest 48 Bauchi students protesting campus robberies, rapes

Man Dies After Overweight Partner Falls on Him

Subscribe to DDM Newsletter for Latest News

Get Notifications from DDM News Yes please No thanks