The Prague Post - Kolya, the Ukrainian teen preparing for frontline battle

EUR -
AED 4.236697
AFN 76.604281
ALL 96.630172
AMD 441.239819
ANG 2.064974
AOA 1057.877321
ARS 1673.66984
AUD 1.782078
AWG 2.082299
AZN 1.962729
BAM 1.955416
BBD 2.319824
BDT 140.572374
BGN 1.95494
BHD 0.434877
BIF 3398.002752
BMD 1.153628
BND 1.502792
BOB 7.968795
BRL 6.171568
BSD 1.151764
BTN 102.16376
BWP 15.49682
BYN 3.925395
BYR 22611.114346
BZD 2.316425
CAD 1.629477
CDF 2480.300537
CHF 0.931382
CLF 0.027746
CLP 1088.446724
CNY 8.213084
CNH 8.221262
COP 4365.560148
CRC 578.881217
CUC 1.153628
CUP 30.571149
CVE 110.574987
CZK 24.341845
DJF 205.097915
DKK 7.466992
DOP 74.104794
DZD 150.518372
EGP 54.569964
ERN 17.304424
ETB 176.841713
FJD 2.638175
FKP 0.884145
GBP 0.879382
GEL 3.120561
GGP 0.884145
GHS 12.626473
GIP 0.884145
GMD 84.215192
GNF 9997.948486
GTQ 8.837716
GYD 241.285266
HKD 8.969466
HNL 30.284786
HRK 7.532273
HTG 150.727765
HUF 386.32992
IDR 19275.97498
ILS 3.775404
IMP 0.884145
INR 102.250401
IQD 1508.890386
IRR 48582.168168
ISK 146.199718
JEP 0.884145
JMD 184.75209
JOD 0.817961
JPY 176.702973
KES 148.806883
KGS 100.884269
KHR 4622.911154
KMF 485.677496
KPW 1038.303851
KRW 1679.936879
KWD 0.354106
KYD 0.959903
KZT 606.165619
LAK 25020.865881
LBP 103141.536027
LKR 351.237928
LRD 211.052028
LSL 20.016093
LTL 3.406365
LVL 0.697818
LYD 6.297708
MAD 10.741509
MDL 19.717954
MGA 5193.934238
MKD 61.51791
MMK 2421.517208
MNT 4135.793395
MOP 9.222808
MRU 46.082145
MUR 53.009495
MVR 17.771618
MWK 1997.19019
MXN 21.435284
MYR 4.815241
MZN 73.786289
NAD 20.016093
NGN 1656.587412
NIO 42.381304
NOK 11.780996
NPR 163.248502
NZD 2.051936
OMR 0.443574
PAB 1.153373
PEN 3.889536
PGK 4.929988
PHP 68.188085
PKR 325.682072
PLN 4.25008
PYG 8159.325759
QAR 4.203321
RON 5.084963
RSD 117.199373
RUB 93.734292
RWF 1673.556597
SAR 4.326787
SBD 9.495044
SCR 16.155444
SDG 692.753003
SEK 11.056079
SGD 1.505669
SHP 0.86552
SLE 26.767707
SLL 24191.007737
SOS 658.264928
SRD 44.418721
STD 23877.776291
STN 24.494974
SVC 10.077932
SYP 12755.547332
SZL 19.999896
THB 37.379443
TJS 10.644849
TMT 4.037699
TND 3.414669
TOP 2.701917
TRY 48.680852
TTD 7.804399
TWD 35.743677
TZS 2837.925839
UAH 48.465755
UGX 4027.427698
USD 1.153628
UYU 45.930495
UZS 13787.29045
VES 262.187695
VND 30351.960125
VUV 140.938128
WST 3.257015
XAF 655.82243
XAG 0.023906
XAU 0.000289
XCD 3.117738
XCG 2.075774
XDR 0.815633
XOF 655.82243
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.13189
ZAR 20.061434
ZMK 10384.039828
ZMW 26.058653
ZWL 371.467836
  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    14.8

    -2.03%

  • SCS

    -0.1700

    15.76

    -1.08%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    11.34

    +0.62%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    76

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    24.01

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.6500

    70.73

    -0.92%

  • RIO

    0.2100

    69.27

    +0.3%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.78

    -0.21%

  • NGG

    0.9200

    76.29

    +1.21%

  • RELX

    -1.1900

    43.39

    -2.74%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.75

    -0.15%

  • BCE

    0.7800

    23.17

    +3.37%

  • GSK

    0.4100

    47.1

    +0.87%

  • AZN

    2.6200

    83.77

    +3.13%

  • BTI

    0.3300

    54.21

    +0.61%

  • BP

    0.1400

    35.82

    +0.39%

Kolya, the Ukrainian teen preparing for frontline battle
Kolya, the Ukrainian teen preparing for frontline battle / Photo: Ed JONES - AFP

Kolya, the Ukrainian teen preparing for frontline battle

With bright blue eyes and a dagger tattoo on his temple, Mykola Lebedev has the gaze of a child but the determination of an adult: the 18-year-old Ukrainian recruit is about to throw his first grenade.

Text size:

Plagued by manpower shortages since Russia invaded in 2022, Ukraine is trying to recruit even younger men to fight on the front.

Lebedev -- "Kolya" to his friends -- is one of those who has signed a lucrative army contract, and now being trained in a secret location before deployment in the east.

Looking on, his instructor crossed himself as Kolya pulled the safety pin and threw the grenade. The bunker trembled in the explosion.

"Congratulations, you've lost your virginity!" the instructor said.

Coughing and spitting on the floor, Kolya clambered to his feet with difficulty.

Around him stood scorched hills and the ruins of what was once was a village, briefly occupied by Moscow at the start of its invasion in February 2022 and then destroyed by relentless shelling.

Kolya knows first-hand the devastation Russia has wrought on his country.

On February 26, 2022, two days after Russia invaded, Moscow's forces seized a village neighbouring his in southern Ukraine.

"Torn bodies were lying on the streets, destruction, and so on. It was very hard to look at," he told AFP.

Then aged 15, he pledged he would join the army.

"I couldn't just stand by and do nothing."

Under pressure from his parents, Kolya moved to Poland just before his 18th birthday -- when he would have been blocked from leaving the country under martial law.

Kyiv has since relaxed those rules, allowing men aged up to 22 to travel abroad.

"But I realised that I still wanted to fight and defend my country," he told AFP. And so, despite tearful appeals from his mother, he returned and enlisted in July.

- 'Listen to the sky' -

To his instructor -- only 25 himself but already an experienced veteran -- Kolya and his fellow young recruits are "Ukraine's hope".

"But their war will be harder than ours."

Russian drones have turned the front line into a killing zone around 15 kilometres (10 miles) deep.

Inside the ruins of an abandoned house, Kolya and two comrades were practising how to escape them.

Clad in a bulletproof vest, he held a gun close to his chest. The buzz of a drone echoed through the corridors.

The noise is incessant along the 1,300-kilometre (800-mile) front, used as a tactic to traumatise and exhaust soldiers who have to be constantly aware of the threat from the sky.

In a moment of silence, they rushed outside to shelter in a nearby grove.

The drone smashed into the ground at their feet.

"You're dead," the instructor said.

"Why didn't you listen to the sky?"

"We didn't see it," Kolya responded.

The war has already taken one of Kolya's friends, seriously wounded another and left his uncle with burns covering more than 90 percent of his body.

His father is fighting and his stepfather -- one of only two survivors from his original platoon -- deserted to look after his three children.

When Kolya told his stepfather he was joining the army, "he called me an idiot," he said, laughing.

- 'Whoever dies first' -

To convince them to serve, Kyiv offers 18- to 24-year-olds special one-year contracts, a sign-up bonus of $24,000 and monthly salaries of $2,800 -- much more than conscripts, aged 25 and over, get.

Kyiv does not disclose the number of people it has recruited through the scheme.

In the shade of the barracks, the solders were cleaning their Kalashnikovs.

Kolya said he enjoys shooting -- "it's a balance between life and death... it's your safety, your life."

When deployed, he will first be sent to the trenches on the front, spending months there before being rotated out.

The recruits do not talk much about being sent into battle, Kolya said.

"We already understand everything."

"Mostly, we joke and laugh... we have this joke about the war: whoever dies first is the loser."

In once-a-week calls with his girlfriend, Kolya also tries to maintain a sense of normality.

"Love you, miss you, kiss you, and so on. Standard," he said, recounting their conversations.

Asked what he thinks he will face on the front, Kolya is not afraid. But neither he is under any illusions.

"Blood, screams, explosions."

O.Ruzicka--TPP