Current:Home > InvestBusiness owners in a Ukrainian front-line city adapt even as ‘a missile can come at any moment’ -AdvancementTrade
Business owners in a Ukrainian front-line city adapt even as ‘a missile can come at any moment’
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:26:06
KRAMATORSK, Ukraine (AP) — In a city where damaged buildings are everywhere, a destroyed pizzeria stands out as a painful reminder of lives and livelihoods dashed in an instant.
A Russian ballistic missile struck the popular eatery in eastern Ukraine in June, killing 13 people including an award-winning Ukrainian writer and several teenagers. Seven of the victims were staff.
Today, fresh flowers and notes have been placed where the entrance once was. A T-shirt, part of the waitstaff’s uniform, hangs near the makeshift memorial with the inscription “We will never forget.”
“As an entrepreneur, of course, I regret the loss of property, but there’s something that cannot be returned: human lives,” said Dmytro Ihnatenko, the owner of RIA Pizza.
The bombed-out building in Kramatorsk underscores the massive risks for businesses in this front-line city in the Donetsk region. But that has not deterred many other business owners who have reopened their doors to customers in the past year.
The city council estimates there are 50 restaurants and 228 shops now open in Kramatorsk, three times the number open at the same period last year. Most are believed to be existing business that closed in the early days of the war and have reopened.
“We understand that this is a risk, and we are taking it because this is our life,” said Olena Ziabina, chief administrator of the White Burger restaurant in Kramatorsk. “Wherever we are, we need to work. We work here. This is our conscious choice.”
The White Burger chain operated mainly in Donetsk and Luhansk regions before the war. But after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, it could reopen only in Kramatorsk. It launched two new restaurants in the capital, Kyiv, and Dnipro to keep the chain alive.
Kramatorsk’s restaurant is the chain’s top performer in profitability, even though prices are 20% lower than in the capital’s restaurant.
After the attack on RIA Pizza, White Burger’s operators didn’t consider closing the Kramatorsk restaurant, Ziabina said. “I cried a lot,” she said, recalling the day she heard about the attack.
Kramatorsk’s economy has adapted to war. The city houses the Ukrainian army’s regional headquarters, and many cafes and restaurants are frequented mainly by soldiers as well as journalists and aid workers.
Ukrainian women often travel there to reunite for few days with husbands and boyfriends.
Soldiers joke that Kramatorsk is their Las Vegas, providing all the “luxuries” they need like good food or coffee. But restaurants offer only non-alcoholic beer due to the city’s proximity to the battlefield.
The city streets are mostly empty except for military cars. The residents who stayed avoid big gatherings and crowded places.
Still, it is a far cry from the war’s early days, when Kramatorsk’s shops, restaurants and cafes were shuttered. Tens of thousands of people were left without jobs, and factories were closed.
“Probably, thanks to the military, we can still come back to this city,” said Oleksandr, who asked to be identified only by his first name because of security concerns.
He is a co-founder of one of the numerous military shops in Kramatorsk serving soldiers. Oleksandr said he marks up prices by only 1 hryvnia (2 cents) above the manufacturer’s price. He said the aim isn’t to earn money but to provide the military with the necessary equipment.
Many residents cherish new work opportunities brought by the reopening of shops and restaurants.
But there are fewer options for older people, said Tetiana Podosionova, 54. She worked at the Kramatorsk Machinebuilding Plant for 32 years, but the plant closed due to security risks when the war started.
“I had hoped to work at the factory until retirement,” Podosionova said. Most jobs are now in restaurants and shops, where she had no experience.
Finally, she found a job at Amazing Fish Aquarium, which resumed operations months after the war began. The aquarium has hundreds of exotic fish and dozens of parrots and remains open to entertain residents, who are often stressed from missile strikes.
But every reopened business carries risk. Ihnatenko, the pizzeria owner, still comes to his destroyed restaurant every day when he’s in Kramatorsk. He doesn’t know why. He looks tired. His voice is hardly above a whisper.
He, like many business owners, saw Ukraine’s successful counteroffensive in the neighboring Kharkiv region last year as a sign that life could return to Kramatorsk.
“It seemed safer here,” he explained, standing in the rubble of his restaurant.
He has no plans to rebuild and reopen yet again.
His tragic experience shows the challenges that business owners face while keeping their doors open.
“A missile can come at any moment,” he said.
___
Volodymyr Yurchuk contributed to this report.
___
Follow AP’s coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
veryGood! (2353)
Related
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Bernie Sanders: Israel is losing the war in public opinion
- Stock market today: Asia markets rise ahead of US consumer prices update
- Sia got liposuction. Who cares? Actually, a lot of people. Here's why.
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- In Florida farmland, Guadalupe feast celebrates, sustains 60-year-old mission to migrant workers
- Baseball's first cheater? The story of James 'Pud' Galvin and testicular fluid
- Bernie Madoff victims to get additional $158 million in restitution
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Brandon Aubrey, kicker for the Cowboys, hasn't missed a field goal. Maybe he should.
Ranking
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- A New UN “Roadmap” Lays Out a Global Vision for Food Security and Emissions Reductions
- Ranked choice voting bill moves to hearing in front of Wisconsin Senate elections committee
- As more Rohingya arrive by boat, Indonesia asks the international community to share its burden
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Singer Zahara, South Africa’s Afro-soul sensation and beloved ‘Country Girl,’ dies aged 36
- Bernie Sanders: Israel is losing the war in public opinion
- The Dutch counterterror agency has raised the national threat alert to the second-highest level
Recommendation
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
Chinese leaders consider next steps for economy as debt and deflation cloud outlook for coming year
Sean 'Diddy' Combs' e-commerce brand dropped by companies after sexual abuse claims
What does it mean to be Black enough? Cord Jefferson explores this 'American Fiction'
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
Stock market today: Asia markets rise ahead of US consumer prices update
Powerball winning numbers for December 11 drawing: $500 million jackpot awaits
Live updates | Israel plans to keep fighting as other countries call for a cease-fire in Gaza