“Danger! Mines! Do not leave the road!” reads a billboard painted with an ominous skull and crossbones on a blood-red background that stands on a roadside in war-torn eastern Ukraine.
Though fighting between Kiev’s forces and pro-Russian rebels has dwindled after nearly two years, mines scattered across the industrial region that is home to about 3 million people continue claiming lives at an alarming rate.
A report last month prepared by the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine said explosive devices killed 21 people and injured 57 in the preceding three months.
In the absence of massive artillery shelling, landmines remain the main cause of civilian casualties, the report said.
Ukraine’s emergency services report clearing the Donetsk and Lugansk provinces that are partially run by the rebels of more than 44,000 mines and booby traps by the start of December.
However, the warring sides and foreign monitors struggle to estimate how many devices remain.
To reduce the number of victims, the International Committee of the Red Cross began installing billboards along a 7km stretch of a road that juts through the no-man’s land splitting the two sides’ fighters and their respective checkpoints.
It has only put up 15 of them for the moment, but locals appear grateful nonetheless. Until now, the only visible warnings appeared on small handmade boards set up mostly by soldiers.
“These signs are needed,” said Olga, a 28-year-old nurse, who refused to give her last name for security reasons.
“They will make this area safer,” she said, while watching the first billboard being put up in Berezove, a so-called “grey zone” village about 10km south of the separatists’ de facto capital, Donetsk.
Once per month, Olga picks up a heavy suitcase and crosses the demarcation line to visit relatives who live in a pro-Western government controlled part of the impoverished east European state.
Olga said that on each journey, she fears being maimed or worse by the invisible threat.
“It can happen at any moment: A bus can hit a mine or some pedestrian will try to walk along the side of the road” in a field where most of mines are scattered, she said.
“I live in [rebel-run] Olenivka, near the checkpoint, and it also happens that people hit booby traps and mines. They are completely invisible and there are absolutely no warnings,” she added.
Nearly 9,200 people have been killed and more than 21,000 injured since fighting that Kiev and its Western allies accuse Russia of instigating erupted in April 2014.
Moscow denies sponsoring the war in reprisal for Ukraine’s February 2014 ousting of its Russian-backed president and subsequent decision to forge an alliance with the EU, and possibly even seek NATO membership.
One of Europe’s bloodiest and most diplomatically-damaging crises since the Balkans wars of the 1990s prompted Germany and France to help Russia and Ukraine sign up to a truce and political reconciliation agreement in February last year.
That deal has calmed the worst violence, but has done little to settle the political future of rebel-controlled lands that run near the Russian border, which militias control.
Ukraine said it must deploy its forces along the porous frontier before any political resolution is reached — a seemingly distant goal.
In this latest in a series of conflicts to plague other contested regions of the former Soviet Union, groups like the Red Cross do what they can to help stranded civilians survive.
The Red Cross installed its first sign at the end of March in Berezove, where the global humanitarian organization pinpointed 15 mine blasts in the past six months, killing one civilian.
“This is very dangerous territory,” Red Cross member Anna Cheptunova said.
Cheptunova said that most casualties occur when buses packed with civilians veer off roads to avoid checkpoints at which vehicles are sometimes forced to wait for hours, forming long queues.
The most recent reported incident killed three people when their minibus tried to get past the checkpoint by driving off into a mine-studded field on Feb. 10.
The Red Cross intends to put up more billboards in the future south of Donetsk. However, some residents say the effort was insufficient and that the two foes should focus on demining efforts to make the region safer.
“These preventive billboards are a necessity,” said 55-year-old Georgy, waiting for his bus near a checkpoint.
“What is even more necessary is for the guys with the guns on both side to start clearing” the war zone, he said.
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