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‘I don’t want to be a refugee’. The story of Ukrainian women

Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to flee Ukraine since Russia launched its offensive in Ukraine. Thousands went to the Czech Republic. Some of them are temporarily housed in the dormitory of Slavia Praha, one of the main football teams in the country.

Olha Drahan Bila lived in the town of Tserkva, 80 kilometers south of Kiev. Russia The military bombed the area homes and have turned the streets into ruins.

More than 1 million people have been forced to flee Ukraine since the Russian attack. Many worry that this could be the largest wave of refugees Europe has seen since World War II.

Drahan’s 13-year-old daughter and He and his sister left home on February 27 and three trains on muddy roads, traveling for three days and Changing his personal car, he finally reached Prague.

The world Russia fear the increasingly brutal attacks of their troops and watching with excitement. Russia the military, including the civilian population and targets schools. Already on March 2 Ukraine The Emergency Management Agency said more than 2,000 civilians had been killed.

Drahan said it was too expensive to travel from the Polish border to Prague and was able to carry a small suitcase with the most necessary items. Husband and his elderly mother, Bila Tserkva, remained. His 24-year-old son, who is already a dream broker in a peaceful environment, stayed in Kiev and joined thousands of other volunteers defending the city from Russian aggression.

Troops stretching for tens of kilometers of Russia and military equipment Kyiv stood on the edge. Like many Ukrainians, Draha has ties to Russia. His sister lives in Sochi and his brother in Chita.

They could not believe what Draha was saying about what happened in her hometown. Drahan many in Russia information says he lives in a vacuum. Here, the state media portrays Ukraine as an aggressor and justifies Moscow’s actions.

Russia’s military intervention in Ukraine has revived the horrors of the Soviet Union’s 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia. The country was among those who reacted quickly to the war. Both the Czech Republic and Moscow snowdemanded sanctions, KyivHe extended a helping hand to both the military and the humanitarian community.

In the Czech Republic from the beginning 20There was a community of 0,000 Ukrainians. Thousands of Ukrainians have reportedly taken refuge in Russia since the attack began.

He was 35 years old when the war broke out Oksana Malyutahusband and His two sons had just moved into their new apartment in western Ukraine, south of Rivne. Now he 10and He and his 15-year-old son crossed into Poland and went to the Czech Republic. Her husband remained in Ukraine to protect his homeland.

“It simply came to our notice then. We are lying in bed! For the first three days of the attack, we slept in the basement of our building for fear of being bombed. ”, – he says. Their town is only 160 kilometers south of Belarus. Belarus’s authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko has allowed Russian forces to use his territory for attacks.

Remaining in the dormitory Lyubov Padskay Another woman is a pensioner from Western Ukraine. He crossed the border alone into the Czech Republic on February 25, a day after the attacks began. Padskaya, who had to walk part of the way, reached Prague in five days.

68-year-old Padskay to what happened according to He blames Putin, not the Russian people.

6- and A 50-year-old man who took refuge in the Czech Republic with his 8-year-old daughters Vitaliya Sıçova while only two weeks ago car was an insurance agent. “I do not want to be a refugee. I want to work. I want to go home, ”he said.

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