War may be far away but tensions from the Ukraine conflict are causing an unprecedented chill in a remote Arctic town where Russian and Ukrainian coalminers have worked side by side for decades
Barentsburg, Norway: War may be far away but tensions from the Ukraine conflict are causing an unprecedented chill in a remote Arctic town where Russian and Ukrainian coalminers have worked side by side for decades.
In Barentsburg, in Norway's Svalbard archipelago, relics of a bygone era—a bust of Lenin, a sculpture with Cyrillic script declaring "Our goal - Communism"—bear witness to Russia's longstanding presence.
The town's population peaked at around 1,500 in the 1980s, but shrank after the Soviet Union collapsed.
Now, some 370 people live here, two-thirds of them Ukrainians—most from the Russian-speaking eastern Donbas region—and the remainder Russians.