<p>Four-year-old Tanya started in her mother's arms, eyes wide open, as the boom of artillery fire echoed around the battered frontline Ukrainian town of Bakhmut.</p>.<p>Olena has been inventive so far to try to hide the truth of what is happening from her curly-haired daughter, but her creativity is running dry.</p>.<p>"Sometimes I just turn the volume on the TV louder... If I constantly tell the child that this is war I will disturb her mind. But I think she understands," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"During recent shelling there was (a) blast of shrapnel. Later I was talking with my husband about going to get humanitarian aid and the child asked if there will be shrapnel there," Olena added.</p>.<p><strong>Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/ukraine-condemns-russian-call-to-hang-azov-fighters-1131568.html" target="_blank">Ukraine condemns Russian call to 'hang' Azov fighters</a></strong></p>.<p>Bakhmut -- one of the few remaining cities under Ukrainian control in the Donetsk region -- is now at the centre of Russia's brutal offensive in the east of the country.</p>.<p>Taking it would give Russia control of a strategic highway and supply route, opening the road towards regional hub Kramatorsk.</p>.<p>Olena's family is one of the few to have stayed together with their children in Bakhmut, now only around six kilometres (four miles) from Russian positions.</p>.<p>More than a third of the population of 73,000 have fled and authorities insist on getting everyone out.</p>.<p>The streets are now all but deserted, with daily life in what was once a small, leafy town shattered by tanks rolling down the street and the constant roar of artillery exchanges.</p>.<p>Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Saturday urged all of the remaining 200,000 civilians still living in Ukrainian-controlled areas of the battleground region to get out as soon as they can.</p>.<p><strong>Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/zelenskyy-urges-evacuation-of-ukraines-frontline-donetsk-1131655.html" target="_blank">Zelenskyy urges evacuation of Ukraine's frontline Donetsk</a></strong></p>.<p>"The more people who leave Donetsk region now, the fewer people the Russian army will kill," he said.</p>.<p>Kyiv has announced a mandatory order to evacuate and say they aim to ferry people out ahead of the winter as gas pipes for heating have been cut due to the fighting.</p>.<p>But most of those refusing to leave Bakhmut share a common story: too poor, too sick, too old to start over in a new place.</p>.<p>"My husband's mother is bedridden for five years already and we can't leave her," explained Olena.</p>.<p><strong>Read—<a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/soldiers-in-civilian-areas-a-touchy-topic-in-ukraine-1131219.html" target="_blank">Soldiers in civilian areas: A touchy topic in Ukraine</a></strong></p>.<p>Recent strikes on the city, which left three dead and many wounded, made some reconsider their decision to stay no matter what.</p>.<p>Ekaterina and her three children, aged eight, six and two, waited for a bus at an evacuation point in Bakhmut.</p>.<p>Teary-eyed, they were saying farewell to their husband and father Artiom, who will remain in Bakhmut "because somebody has to".</p>.<p>A bandage covered part of Ekaterina's cheek, while her back was dotted with bruises and scratches, all from shrapnel.</p>.<p>"We expected everything to be alright and that's why we waited for so long. But it's not. I still see a future for my children here because one day the situation will be stable again," Artiom said.</p>.<p>In the town centre, Olena, her husband and their daughter hop on the small red scooter they all share to move around, with small Tanya first in row.</p>.<p>"There is nothing more to capture here. When (the Russians) will come to take it everything will be destroyed," she said.</p>.<p>"Who will rebuild it? How many years will be necessary for our children to rebuild everything?"</p>
<p>Four-year-old Tanya started in her mother's arms, eyes wide open, as the boom of artillery fire echoed around the battered frontline Ukrainian town of Bakhmut.</p>.<p>Olena has been inventive so far to try to hide the truth of what is happening from her curly-haired daughter, but her creativity is running dry.</p>.<p>"Sometimes I just turn the volume on the TV louder... If I constantly tell the child that this is war I will disturb her mind. But I think she understands," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"During recent shelling there was (a) blast of shrapnel. Later I was talking with my husband about going to get humanitarian aid and the child asked if there will be shrapnel there," Olena added.</p>.<p><strong>Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/ukraine-condemns-russian-call-to-hang-azov-fighters-1131568.html" target="_blank">Ukraine condemns Russian call to 'hang' Azov fighters</a></strong></p>.<p>Bakhmut -- one of the few remaining cities under Ukrainian control in the Donetsk region -- is now at the centre of Russia's brutal offensive in the east of the country.</p>.<p>Taking it would give Russia control of a strategic highway and supply route, opening the road towards regional hub Kramatorsk.</p>.<p>Olena's family is one of the few to have stayed together with their children in Bakhmut, now only around six kilometres (four miles) from Russian positions.</p>.<p>More than a third of the population of 73,000 have fled and authorities insist on getting everyone out.</p>.<p>The streets are now all but deserted, with daily life in what was once a small, leafy town shattered by tanks rolling down the street and the constant roar of artillery exchanges.</p>.<p>Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Saturday urged all of the remaining 200,000 civilians still living in Ukrainian-controlled areas of the battleground region to get out as soon as they can.</p>.<p><strong>Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/zelenskyy-urges-evacuation-of-ukraines-frontline-donetsk-1131655.html" target="_blank">Zelenskyy urges evacuation of Ukraine's frontline Donetsk</a></strong></p>.<p>"The more people who leave Donetsk region now, the fewer people the Russian army will kill," he said.</p>.<p>Kyiv has announced a mandatory order to evacuate and say they aim to ferry people out ahead of the winter as gas pipes for heating have been cut due to the fighting.</p>.<p>But most of those refusing to leave Bakhmut share a common story: too poor, too sick, too old to start over in a new place.</p>.<p>"My husband's mother is bedridden for five years already and we can't leave her," explained Olena.</p>.<p><strong>Read—<a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/soldiers-in-civilian-areas-a-touchy-topic-in-ukraine-1131219.html" target="_blank">Soldiers in civilian areas: A touchy topic in Ukraine</a></strong></p>.<p>Recent strikes on the city, which left three dead and many wounded, made some reconsider their decision to stay no matter what.</p>.<p>Ekaterina and her three children, aged eight, six and two, waited for a bus at an evacuation point in Bakhmut.</p>.<p>Teary-eyed, they were saying farewell to their husband and father Artiom, who will remain in Bakhmut "because somebody has to".</p>.<p>A bandage covered part of Ekaterina's cheek, while her back was dotted with bruises and scratches, all from shrapnel.</p>.<p>"We expected everything to be alright and that's why we waited for so long. But it's not. I still see a future for my children here because one day the situation will be stable again," Artiom said.</p>.<p>In the town centre, Olena, her husband and their daughter hop on the small red scooter they all share to move around, with small Tanya first in row.</p>.<p>"There is nothing more to capture here. When (the Russians) will come to take it everything will be destroyed," she said.</p>.<p>"Who will rebuild it? How many years will be necessary for our children to rebuild everything?"</p>