Sunday, March 8, 2026

'They pointed rifles and shouted': CDF storms Chernogorsk hospital in daring daylight raid

 ZELENOGORSK PRAVDA

"Truth in Service of the Nation"

Separatists Ousted from General Hospital as Patients, Staff Recount Terrifying Ordeal

Chernogorsk — The General Hospital in the heart of Chernogorsk is once again under government control after a daring daylight assault by regular Chernarus Defense Forces troops on Saturday, military officials have confirmed.

The operation, described by one participating officer as "textbook," unfolded after intelligence reports revealed that Russian-backed militia forces had seized the facility, forcibly ejecting patients, doctors, and nurses before using the building as a stronghold.

What followed was a harrowing ordeal for the civilians caught in the crossfire—and a precision military response that left the separatists with little choice but to surrender.


'WE WERE CERTAIN WE WOULD BE EXECUTED'

The invasion of the hospital began without warning.

"They burst into our offices, pointing rifles at us and shouting for us to leave," recalled one doctor, still visibly shaken hours after the ordeal. "We left quickly and immediately."

For the medical staff, the initial moments were a blur of confusion and terror.

"I have never been so scared in my life," another doctor told Zelenogorsk Pravda from a temporary shelter set up for displaced medical workers. "For a moment I was certain that we were going to be executed by the separatists. You know what they do elsewhere."

A nurse described the chaos as it unfolded around her.

"It was so sudden! At first, a lot of shouting and we could not figure out what was going on until they burst into clinics and offices, shouting for us to leave. My first thought was they were going to kill us all—until I was able to leave the hospital."

Among those forced out were mothers with young children.

"Me and my kids were there to get a vaccination," a young female patient recounted, her voice still trembling. "My kids were crying very loud. When they burst into the clinic, I raised my hands, and the young separatist with a rifle motioned for me and my kids to leave. I was relieved when we were able to exit the building."


'CELL PHONES WENT DARK'

Once the separatists had cleared the ground floor of civilians, they began fortifying the building.

An office worker who had been visiting a colleague described the scene as heavily armed militants moved through the hallways.

"We stood at the wall with all these rifles pointed at us, with all these young men shouting, as several men passed by carrying heavy weapons heading upstairs. Once those hallways were cleared, they ordered us out."

Communications were cut almost immediately.

"Our cell phones went dark," a hospital staff worker said. "We couldn't call anyone. We didn't know if anyone knew what was happening to us."

On the upper floors, the terror was even more acute.

One nurse who had been working on the top floor when the separatists stormed the building spent the entire occupation hiding in a utility closet.

"When our troops began firing on the hospital, it was the loudest thing I'd ever heard. I was so scared," she said. "I spent 20 minutes hiding inside a utility closet when it all began. All these young men were running around the halls shouting at others to get out. I was afraid to leave and get shot for hiding. But when the CDF started shooting, I decided I best stay put."


'THEY DIDN'T TOUCH THE PHARMACY'

One detail that puzzled medical staff was the separatists' complete disregard for the hospital's narcotics supply.

"I was certain that they were there to rob the pharmacy," a doctor admitted. "You know, we have a lot of narcotics in the pharmacy. But they didn't touch that. They didn't touch anything."

The observation suggests the hospital was seized for its strategic value—a fortified position in the heart of Chernogorsk—rather than for material gain.


THE ASSAULT: 'TEXTBOOK' EXECUTION

As civilians streamed out of the hospital, CDF forces were already moving into position.

A military officer who spoke on background described the operation in clinical terms.

"The assault we conducted was textbook. Once our heavy armor destroyed strong points and heavy vehicles the separatists had deployed, our infantry approached the building from two separate directions and entered through two separate entrances."

The separatists, faced with a coordinated, professional assault, offered little resistance.

"Many separatists and their commanders threw down their rifles and surrendered immediately. We moved them back to base for interrogation."

What amazed the officer most was not the success of the operation, but its cost.

"What amazed us was how light friendly casualties were."


AFTERMATH

In the hours following the operation, the hospital was declared secure. Displaced medical staff began returning to assess the damage and prepare for the resumption of normal operations.

For the patients and staff who lived through the ordeal, the psychological scars may take longer to heal.

The young mother who had brought her children for vaccinations summed up the experience of many:

"I was just happy to get out alive."


WHAT COMES NEXT

Military officials have not disclosed how many separatists were captured during the operation, nor have they released details of the interrogation process. It is also unclear whether the hospital will require significant repairs before it can fully reopen.

But for the people of Chernogorsk, Saturday's operation sent a clear message: the CDF can and will strike decisively to protect civilian lives and infrastructure, even in the heart of contested urban terrain.

The hospital is free. The patients are safe. And the separatists who sought to turn a place of healing into a fortress have been removed.


Contact Svetlana Golikova at s.golikova@zelenogorsk-pravda.chernarus


Editor's Note: Some details have been withheld at the request of military authorities to protect operational security and the privacy of individuals involved.

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