Eerie Ukrainian drone footage shows abandoned Euro 2012 stadium which hosted England clash in war-torn Donetsk

EERIE drone footage has captured a rare glimpse inside a war-torn Euros stadium in Russian-held Ukrainian territory.

The Donbass Arena was the new sparkling jewel of Eastern Europe before Vladimir Putin‘s forces laid waste to the region over the last decade.

A Ukrainian UAV soared high above the ruins of the long abandoned stadium

It caught a rare glimpse inside after years of neglect and destruction

Twitter/FCShakhtar_engThe barely-holding stadium has been abandoned since 2014[/caption]

Twitter/Shakhtar_uaIt has suffered successive blasts from shelling as fighting rages in Donetsk[/caption]

Opened in 2009, the £320million stadium in the city of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine was home to national giants and reigning champions Shakhtar Donetsk.

The ghost ground once played host to Champions League games and five major matches in the Euros 2012, including two of England’s group stage fixtures and the semi-final between Portugal and eventual-winners Spain.

It was one of eight venues used for UEFA championships, which was jointly hosted by Ukraine and Poland.

With a capacity of 52,000, it was the third-largest stadium in the tournament.

But since 2014, The Donbass Arena has been out of bounds since Russian forces invaded the region.

The new Ukrainian drone footage reveals a stadium that has been ravaged by war – haunting, empty, and a shell of its former glory.

The UAV soars high above the stadium just catching a peek inside, where ‘Donetsk’ is still spelt out in huge white letters.

Mysterious white stuff covers the darkened, overgrown grass and the once bright red seats have turned into a faded grey.

The arena was heavily damaged by artillery shelling in August 2012 as Putin’s troops and pro-Russian separatists battled Ukrainian forces in the area.

By this point, the club had already moved out of its home, relocating more than 600 miles west to Lviv, far from the front line.

In October 2014, further artillery shelling blasted holes right through the stadium from east to west.

The fighting continued on and off for years, making it unsafe for Shakhtar to return.

Then the long abandoned stadium suffered further destruction when it was caught in the crossfires in March 2022 following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Russian state TV shared footage of shell craters just metres from the stadium, as well as a number of shattered windows on its outside.

After a decade of war, it now lies in ruins – bomb-blitzed and abandoned – with smashed turnstiles and shattered glass exteriors.

The floodlights have been out of power for years and the racks inside the club shop lie empty.

It seems unlikely the stadium will be used again, with Donetsk being illegally claimed as part of Russia by Putin in September.

For now, the venue remains a frightening reminder of the fragility of peace in Europe.

Elsewhere in Ukraine, the Tsentralnyi football stadium in Mykolaiv has been abandoned since 2021 and a Russian missile blew a huge chunk out of it last year.

Another blast from the past is the Ukrainian 5,000-seater Avanhard Stadium in Chernobyl, which was abandoned after the power plant disaster in 1986.

The ground is now covered in a forest of trees and is barely recognisable after more than 30 years of neglect – the site was seized again by Russian forces in 2022.

PA:Press AssociationThe Donbass Arena in its heyday as it hosted five games in the Euros 2012[/caption]

A Wayne Rooney goal helped England beat Ukraine in a Euro 2012 match at the stadium

AFPYears of neglect and the effects of war have turned this stadium into a football graveyard[/caption]

GettyA firefighter works at the site as the stadium got caught up in renewed shelling in Donetsk[/caption]

The damage caused by shelling in March 2022   

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