"When aviation is working, it is impossible to hide from it. Russian bombs are dropped at night. You see the light in the room. You hear an explosion. The house shakes. 4th floor. Where to hide? I didn't get out of bed. I was just sleeping. I didn't know where to hide," Mykola Buslov, a resident of Mariupol, says.
When the gas ran out, the city turned into a continuous fire. People died in the house opposite. A mine pierced a flight of stairs through a window. Two people died. The first grave appeared in Prymorskyi park. A corpse wrapped in a sheet was lying near the crossing.
"Never in my life I could have thought that people would be starving and dying! Why did we suffer this and what did we do wrong?" Mykola says.