Russia’s ‘August curse’ sees war come home
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In
years past, the month of August was often greeted in Russia with a degree of caution, even
alarm. Russians spoke in whispered tones of their “August curse” to explain the
unusually high number of deadly accidents, terrorist attacks, or outbreaks of
war.
For a long
time now that curse seemed to have been lifted and almost forgotten, reducing
the month to just another hot summer interlude.
But this
year, it appears to be back with a vengeance.
For
a start, Russians are witnessing a massive upsurge in Ukrainian attacks that
have brought the Kremlin’s war home, making Moscow pay a price and giving
ordinary Russians a taste of the horrific violence Ukraine has suffered since
last February.
In the Black
Sea, Russia’s military and commercial fleets have come under attack from
Ukrainian naval drones this month, threatening Russian supply and trade routes.
And every
day in August so far has seen the news media carry reports of small-scale but
incessant Ukrainian drone attacks targeting official buildings, military
installations, or commercial and residential premises.
Most
are shot out of the sky, according to officials, by bolstered air defenses. But
enough get through to give Russians pause.
“We’re all
shocked that it’s happening here,” one unnamed woman told local media in
Moscow.
“But we are
not politicians so we don’t want to comment,” she added.
There has
been a strict crackdown on dissent in Russia, particularly around criticisms of
the war in Ukraine.
Another
woman appeared on local media with her face blurred to protect her identity: “I
have two kids and want to stop being ashamed that they were born in this time,”
she said.
Other
Russians are apparently now taking their opposition a step further, with August
witnessing an unprecedented spike in arson attacks against military recruitment
offices across the country – more than two dozen fire-bombings in just over a
week, according to Russian state media.
Officials
say vulnerable citizens, like pensioners, are being duped into carrying out
attacks by Ukrainian agents posing as police or creditors calling in loans and
forcing them to act.
But a source
linked to one Russian partisan group denies Russians are being coerced, telling
CNN that the Kremlin wants to hide the growing discontent in society.
“If people
weren’t angry with the authorities, they wouldn’t do anything,” the source told
CNN.
The
second week of August was no less fraught than the first, and with far more
dead and injured.
A mysterious
explosion ripped through an industrial plant in the small Russian city of
Sergiev Posad, about two hours drive from Moscow, sending a dark mushroom cloud
billowing into the skies.
The
authorities insist it was a safety lapse at a firework factory, denying reports
of sabotage at what was once a leading manufacturer of military optical
equipment, like night goggles and gun sights.
Still, the
blast caused horrific damage: 440 apartments and 20 private homes struck,
according to Russian state media; 184 cars destroyed; 84 people injured, 1
killed, and at least 8 more still missing.
Russia’s
August curse is back indeed.


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