There are not many people left in Zaitseve, a village on the front line that divides Ukraine, but voters like Galina Soboleva want just one thing from this month’s presidential election.


“Whoever promises us peace, to rebuild our homes, we will vote for them. That’s all we need,” the pensioner said.


Destruction and damage are widespread after five years of conflict over eastern Ukraine between government forces and Russian-backed separatists.


Around 13,000 people have been killed, a quarter of them civilians, according to the United Nations Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine.


Troops are stationed in trenches outside Zaitseve and government trucks risk rebel fire to bring bread, coal, firewood and other goods along a dirt road.


Employees from the state-run Oschadbank travel by armoured truck to a nearby checkpoint, to allow residents on both sides of the conflict to withdraw money.


Some six hundred kilometres (400 miles) away in Kiev, President Petro Poroshenko has made standing up to Russia a central thrust of what has become a tough political battle for reelection. Those planning to take part in the March 31 presidential vote say the conflict is the single biggest issue facing the country but struggle to identify who can best end it.


Zaitseve, in the country’s mainly Russian-speaking Donetsk region, was captured by rebels in the early months of the campaign and could not vote in the 2014 election that brought Poroshenko to power. The village was re-taken by government troops in summer 2015 but peace is still elusive.


“We don’t see anything yet, no improvements so far,” local activist and aid volunteer Tetyana Durneva said. “Fighting is going on all the time - yesterday it was really thundering.”


‘WE NEED PEACE’


In 2014, after the Maidan street protests ousted Kremlin-friendly president Viktor Yanukovich, Russia invaded and annexed the Crimea peninsula. Ukraine says Russia then engineered quasi-separatist uprisings across a belt of eastern Ukraine that escalated into a full-scale conflict. Russia denies doing so.



Two so-called “People’s Republics” – unrecognized by either Kiev or Moscow – have formed in the Donetsk and Luhansk industrial regions of eastern Ukraine, known as Donbass.


In Donetsk city, few people are likely to vote, because they would have to cross the front line to register; some of those interviewed said the candidates were as bad as each other.


“They all hate us,” said Yulia, declining to give her second name. “Why? Because they lived off our backs,” she added in a reference to the region’s communist-era industries, many of which have now closed. “Donbass fed them their whole lives and all the time it got worse for us.”


Ukraine, Western countries and NATO accuse Russia of sending troops and heavy weapons to prop up the separatists.


Moscow says it only provides political and humanitarian support to rebels and says Russians fighting in Ukraine are volunteers. The Minsk ceasefire agreement in 2015 staunched the worst of the bloodshed but troops continue to die regularly.


Poroshenko’s two main rivals - former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and comic actor Volodymyr Zelenskiy - say they will approach peace talks differently, bringing the United States and other countries to the table. But it is unclear whether they would change the status quo.


Residents in Zaitseve were reluctant to reveal their voting intentions but Zelenskiy, a political novice, leads recent opinion polls of those willing and able to vote in the east.


Some families are divided by the conflict, like that of Nikolai Yushkov, a 70-year-old pensioner living in the nearby village of Mayorsk. While he, his son and daughter live on government-controlled land, another daughter lives under separatist control, where the election is not being held.


“Everyone says: you need to sit down and you need to negotiate,” he said. “Peace. We need peace.”


The single-storey building he shares with another family has survived shelling that destroyed surrounding buildings but is just 600 metres from the separatist trenches. One outer wall, destroyed by fighting, has been replaced by a stack of firewood.


There are well over a million crossings of the 500 km contact line every month, many of them by pensioners who spend hours queuing - in cold, heat, rain or snow - as they rely on state benefits only available on the government-controlled side.


The government and organisations like the United Nations have sought to improve conditions at the checkpoints, providing heated tents, toilets, advice on avoiding landmines, and making border guards wear body cameras to prevent corruption.


Raisa Taranenko, 73, whose family shares the building with Yushkov, also shared his desire for an end to the war. “But it’s not clear how the situation will develop, there is no hope for anything,” she said. “Everything is getting worse and worse.”


Poroshenko came to power in 2014 promising to end the war within weeks and eventually take Ukraine into NATO. Under his administration spending on defence has been ramped up to 5 percent of gross domestic product from 3 percent in 2013.


The war is still going on but the army is better equipped and has, under U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, been supplied with Javelin missiles.


For some of the soldiers on the front line, peace is not enough. Oleg, a Lieutenant-Colonel who did not give his last name, said the heavy toll of killed and wounded, both military and civilian, had left just one option:


“Only victory will do.”