By the end of September, it is becoming increasingly difficult for the occupiers to deny the reality of the front-line peninsula; the criminal “governor” of Sevastopol, Mikhail Razvozhaev, stated that they had “moved into some new situation” and tried to “explain” to the population why, as “suddenly it turned out” that most of the shelters in the occupied city were either closed or unsuitable for stay.
Earlier, the same “talking head” stated that the occupiers do not have “billions to repair” shelters; however, it now turns out that it is impossible for the population to get into the “existing shelters” and Razvozhaev’s statements that supposedly “at the moment of receiving a signal there are from 30 to 50 minutes to calmly carry out all the actions to take measures to ensure personal safety” are perceived by Sevastopol residents as a cynical mockery.
At the same time, the “governor” “reserved” for himself a “command to launch a signal” so that residents could supposedly find “temporary shelter” from “spent air defense missiles”; however, under the conditions of occupation, the population realized quite well that there is nothing more permanent than temporary.