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Vira Kravchuk


60 Sumy border settlements completely abandoned amid intensified Russian attacks and offensive threat

More than 400 people evacuated from Ukrainian border communities in a single week, with 26 children among those forced to leave their homes.
Evacuation of civilians from the village of Pysarivka in Ukraine's Sumy Oblast.
Evacuation of civilians from the village of Pysarivka in Ukraine’s Sumy Oblast. Photo: Suspilne Sumy
60 Sumy border settlements completely abandoned amid intensified Russian attacks and offensive threat

Over 60% of residents have evacuated from dangerous territories in Ukraine’s northeastern Sumy Oblast amid continuous shelling of civilian infrastructure and intensified offensive operations along the border.

Sumy Oblast, located near the Russian border and relatively close to Russia’s Kursk Oblast, is currently a frontline area heavily bombed by the Russian forces. In August 2024, Ukrainian troops launched an incursion into Kursk from the Sumy Oblast, capturing around 1,000 square km (386 square miles) and 28 settlements. However, by early 2025, Russian counterattacks, supported by the North Korean troops, almost completely regained the lost territory. As of May 2025, Ukrainian officials announced Russian advance in Sumy Oblast and capture of some border villages, prompting evacuations.

The evacuation pace has accelerated in recent days, with more than 400 residents leaving border communities during the week of 9-15 June alone.  Among those evacuated were 26 children, according to the head of Sumy Regional Military Administration, Oleh Hryhorov.

The scale of the evacuation encompasses 213 settlements across Sumy Oblast, with 60 communities now completely abandoned by their residents. 

Russian forces now conduct an average of 80 to 120 strikes daily against the region, Hryhorov reported in a recent interview with Suspilne Sumy. Seven civilians were killed since the beginning of June, including one child. 

The intensity of attacks created a state of near-constant danger, with air raid alerts lasting an average of 14-15 hours daily.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy previously stated that Ukrainian forces had successfully halted Russian advancement in the Sumy direction. However, he also indicated that Russia has concentrated 50,000 soldiers in the area as part of an attempt to establish what he described as a “buffer zone” within Ukrainian territory.

Current occupation data from the analytical project DeepState shows 12 settlements in Sumy region remain under Russian control as of 14 June.

The Institute for the Study of War and Ukrainian officials, however, assessed that Russia lacks sufficient manpower and resources for a major breakthrough in Sumy, with many targeted villages evacuated and of limited strategic value.