Inside the underground hospital where Ukrainian surgeons toil as bombs rain down to save lives of RUSSIAN prisoners

Inside the underground hospital where Ukrainian surgeons toil as bombs rain down to save lives of RUSSIAN prisoners
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Inside the underground hospital where Ukrainian surgeons toil as bombs rain down to save lives of RUSSIAN prisoners
Author: Jerome Starkey
Published: Feb, 28 2025 20:45

HERO medics have described their “daily battle with death” to save the lives of comrades butchered on Ukraine’s frontlines. The Sun joined surgeons in a cellar as they performed life-saving operations while massive Russian airstrikes thundered through the night outside.

 [A medic treats a wounded Ukrainian soldier in a field hospital.]
Image Credit: The Sun [A medic treats a wounded Ukrainian soldier in a field hospital.]

The field hospital in eastern Donbas is the first place troops are brought if they are hurt on the nearby frontline. Mercifully all the patients we saw were expected to survive. One was concussed with shrapnel buried in his back. Surgeons gave him a local anaesthetic, pulled out a bean-sized shard of metal – with the help of a large magnet – and had him stitched up and out of theatre 15 minutes after he arrived.

 [Two injured Ukrainian soldiers in a stabilization unit.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Two injured Ukrainian soldiers in a stabilization unit.]

The lead surgeon Dr Oleksii said: “We are fighting a battle with death every day. “The best days are the days we win. It is always a pleasure to win that battle.”. Last year he performed open heart surgery and stitched together a still beating heart that had been sliced open by shrapnel.

 [Portrait of a Ukrainian soldier.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Portrait of a Ukrainian soldier.]

He showed us a video of the procedure on his phone. A quick glance at his pictures showed a camera roll pink with gore. Most of Oleksii’s patients are Ukrainian soldiers, but he also treats local civilians and “several Russian prisoners of war”. He said he treated Russians “through gritted teeth” as there is growing evidence that it is a Russian policy to execute Ukrainians if they surrender on the battlefield.

 [Ukrainian soldier receiving treatment for a shrapnel wound.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Ukrainian soldier receiving treatment for a shrapnel wound.]

Ukraine has documented at least 135 cases in 2024 alone. Most were filmed by surveillance drones. Dr Oleksii said: “They are killing our PoWs, but they make it here to our hospitals and we are saving their lives.”. He said one Russian patient stood out in his memory: “He was telling me how much he loved Ukraine and how he was forced to come and fight us.”.

 [Portrait of Katya, a 25-year-old Ukrainian paramedic.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Portrait of Katya, a 25-year-old Ukrainian paramedic.]

Did he believe him? “No. To trust Russians is to cheat yourself.”. Dr Oleksii’s goal is to get every patient, whoever they are, in and out within an hour, so they can travel on to safer hospitals, further from the front for more advanced specialist care.

 [A soldier examines a framed photo among many others at a memorial.]
Image Credit: The Sun [A soldier examines a framed photo among many others at a memorial.]

Of course, it is not always possible. Hours before we arrived three soldiers died in an ambulance on their way to his stabilisation point. The fourth arrived with severe head trauma, slipping in and out of consciousness. The doctors managed to stabilise him but they are unsure if he will survive, or what quality of life he may have. He is only 26.

 [Injured Ukrainian soldier with bandages over his eyes.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Injured Ukrainian soldier with bandages over his eyes.]

Katya, 25, a civilian volunteer, said they try not to get emotionally involved. She said: “We don’t follow every patient’s story, you can’t always put those emotions through you. If you do it every time you will be broken very quickly.”. Katya was training to be a professional pianist at the Beethoven Institute in Vienna when Russian president Vladimir Putin launched his full scale invasion of her homeland on Feb 24, 2022.

 [Portrait of Jerome Starkey at a Ukrainian stabilizing unit.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Portrait of Jerome Starkey at a Ukrainian stabilizing unit.]

The war derailed her graduation because she refused to play the Russian music which she had planned for her final performance. She said: “I used to love Russian music, but Russians were killing our writers, our composers and destroying our cultural legacy.”.

 [President Donald Trump at a joint press conference.]
Image Credit: The Sun [President Donald Trump at a joint press conference.]

Instead, she returned to Ukraine and trained as a combat medical corpsman, a US military standard. There were many, many people killed in front of my eyes. The day we arrived she had been moved to tears by a soldier sobbing on the operating table. Katya said: “We received a casualty who had been wounded 13 days earlier.

“He had shrapnel wounds, not critical. But he hadn’t been able to leave his position because there was no one to replace him. “When he came he was very chilled, he was like, ‘I am already 13 days with these injuries’. He was really happy to drink a Fanta, eat some cake.

“Then he said, ‘I lost almost all of my team and now I am here.’. “It was like he had survivor’s guilt. “He lay down on the operating table, the anaesthetist gave him a drip and antibiotics. I saw him staring at ceiling. “He was blinking a lot. I realised he was was blinking because he was crying, silently.

“Finally, he says, ‘I am here and the suffering is over’.”. For the next few months, Katya said, “the war will be on pause for him” while he recovers. The Sun team spent a night with Oleksii, Katya and their colleagues underground. We slept in short stretches, with the on-call team, in a corridor next to the operating theatres.

Dr Oleksii asked us not to reveal their location as the building has been bombed. A doctor was killed last autumn. Throughout the night we heard explosions. Then soon after dawn two soldiers arrived half-blinded by a hand grenade thrown into their trench in a Russian assault.

Yurii, 52, a grandfather of three, had bandages over his eyes but managed to describe what had happened. He said: “It’s awful. The conditions in the front are awful.”. He said soldiers are sleeping in simple dugouts with no furniture, felled tree trunks for cover and earth walls buttressed sandbags.

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