The Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine, it established in the year 2014. It operates now at the request of Ukraine’s Government of Ukraine to monitor and report on the human rights situation in Ukraine and with a unique concentration on the conflict zone in the eastern region of Ukraine as well as in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol that Russia controls. Russian Federation.
The metric used in the war was, Death.
A mine killed a small boy near the beach. A young mother shot the forehead. Retired teachers were killed at her home. Soldiers are killed and dying each day in hundreds: younger and older people and all of them.
A war is measured through a variety of metrics.
The territory was either won or lost. The influence of geopolitics increased or decreased. The amount of treasure accumulated or the resources depleted. However, for those affected by the bombings and who can hear the whirring of missiles coming in, the sound of gunfire in the streets, and the cries of grief from smashed windows, The death toll is the most compelling report of a war.
The Eastern Ukraine war started in the year 2014.
Between 2014 and starting 2022, had claimed the lives of more than 14,000. For eight years, Ukrainian government forces battled Russian-backed separatists to control most of the heavily developed regions, Donetsk and Luhansk also referred to as Donbas. The ferocious battles of 2014-2015 concluded with only one-third of the territory, which is its most urbanised area, being controlled by two Russian statelets that were proxies known as the self-described Donetsk the Luhansk People’s Republikas.
In September and February, Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany agreed to several versions of the known Minsk agreements that eventually ended troops’ advance and significantly reduced fighting. However, the contracts were not executed, and the conflict turned into trench warfare, with around 75,000 soldiers fighting along a 420-kilometre front line that cut through populous regions. The war destroyed the region’s industrial and economic development, forced millions of people to relocate, and transformed the zone of conflict into one of the most mine-ridden areas.