A cold wind was blowing across the steppe, but Sapura Kadyrova didn’t see the point in bundling up.
She was waiting to greet her son, who was arriving home from the war in a crimson government-issued casket.
“So maybe I won’t be warm,” Ms. Kadyrova, 85, moaned.
“In February he would have turned 50, and he promised me he would be allowed to come home then,” Ms. Kadyrova told her guests.
While as many as 80 percent of Ukrainians have a close friend or relative who was injured or killed in the war, many Russians in urban centers still feel insulated from it.
Persons:
Ms, Kadyrova, Garipul S, Kadyrov, “, ” Ms
Locations:
Klishchiivka, Ukraine