Nine months of Russian occupation left more than half of Inna Boiko’s 50,000-hectare farm in southern Ukraine littered with shell craters, burnt-out equipment and dangerous land mines. When she and hundreds of other farmers returned to their villages in the Mykolayiv region in November 2022, she was determined to clear the fields and plant again.
But in the early days of the war, Boiko was left to her own devices on how to make that happen, using makeshift drones and other DIY contraptions to remove hazards in what has become the world’s most heavily-mined country. Since then, Ukraine’s government has turbocharged its pitch for international help, attracting a rush of special machinery from Japan and funds from philanthropist Howard Buffett with astonishing results.
"We are now knocking on every door, talking about money, equipment — any possible way to support us,” Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko told reporters in October.
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