From the BBC:
“Ukraine war: The families who
made it through the new Iron Curtain”
Moscow's move to annex parts of
Ukraine has sent a new Iron Curtain down across a vast swathe of territory -
cutting off an unknown number of people from their own country. Until 1
October, Ukrainians were able, with difficulty, to move to and fro across the
front lines. From a crossing point at Vasylivka, on the eastern bank of the
Dnipro river, some would travel to nearby non-occupied Zaporizhzhia to visit
relatives, buy food or medicines. But many left for good, carrying what they
could with them, in search of new lives in areas not under Russian occupation.
Some travelled on to Europe.
(Zaporizhzhia's makeshift reception centre sees few arrivals these days)
On average, about 1,000 people
used to arrive every day at a makeshift reception centre in the carpark of a
DIY superstore on the edge of Zaporizhzhia. On 30 September, with Russia's
self-styled "referendums" over and annexation being announced in
Moscow, local police said that figure rose to 1,616. But then the flow almost
stopped. The following day, 50 people arrived. On Sunday 2 October, it was down
to just eight. Reports from Vasylivka, meanwhile, spoke of huge lines of people
in cars desperate to leave.
(People are desperate to leave
Russian-occupied areas, Mayor Ivan Fedorov says)
"The queue to leave the
occupied territories is 4,500 people," the mayor of Melitopol, Ivan
Fedorov, told us from his temporary office in Zaporizhzhia. "An elderly
man died in the queue yesterday." Civilians from Melitopol were trying any
route they could, Fedorov said, including through Crimea, but there were long
lines that way too. "Those who left the east before 1 October managed to
cross the passage to Zaporizhzhia within two days," said a source in
Kherson who asked to remain anonymous. "But a friend of mine who left on
Thursday is still there. They have to sleep in their cars for the fourth day in
a row." On Monday, the reception
centre in Zaporizhzhia was almost deserted. The car park where barriers are
arranged to deal with convoys of vehicles was empty.
(Zaporizhzhia reception centre)
There was almost no-one in the
large white tent where blankets and clothes were piled up, ready to be handed
out to new arrivals. We met 19-year old Maksym Bezhan, travelling with his
mother, young brother and family cat - three of just 43 people to arrive that
day. They were all exhausted after a four-day trip from their home in a village
near the port city of Berdyansk. "It was frightening to get out," he
told us. "We were afraid we'd encounter a Russian soldier in a bad mood;
that we'd be turned around and sent back home." There were other worries
too. Would the soldiers check his phone? His computer? "After the
invasion," he said, "I became very pro-Ukrainian."
(Maksym Bezhan, his mother,
brother and the family cat)
The family spent nights sleeping
in the car. "It was raining on Sunday," Maksym said. "It was
very uncomfortable to sit in the car. All our bones ached. But it was too cold
to go outside." The family had very little money. Maksym's mother bought
food for his younger brother but refused to eat any herself. "People are
very tired there," he said of the queues around Vasylivka. "They're
barely surviving. They're running out of patience and money. There's an
atmosphere of tiredness and despair." One of the main holdups since
annexation is a new Russian exit form. All those who want to leave are obliged
to complete it online and wait for a reply.
It asks for a lot of information.
Not just the names and passport details of applicants, but their mobile phone
and IMEI (phone identification) numbers, contact information for their hosts,
purpose of their trip and details of all relatives living in Ukraine. "Have
you ever done military/state service in Ukraine from May 2014 to April
2022?" it asks. "If not, specify the reason." "Have you
been a member of any [political] parties of NGOs on the territory of
Ukraine?" It's basically a visa application, underlining Russia's
insistence that this is now an international frontier.
(Families who got through are
hoping for a new life beyond the reach of the Kremlin)
The head of Zaporizhzhia's
Ukrainian regional military administration, Oleksandr Starukh, said Russia was
trying to build a "state border" at Vasylivka. Until Friday, no such
form existed. Its appearance is causing fear and confusion. Telegram chat
groups set up to help people leave are full of anxious questions. "I'm
going with my daughter through Vasylivka," writes Sofia. "My husband
is in Poland. Will they let me through with her, without his permission?" "Please
help me," Andrii writes. "A 20-year old guy wants to go to hospital.
People say it's better not to say that. Who wrote what when applying for a
pass." "We've been sitting near Dneprorudny [west of Vasylivka] for 4
days," complains Viraliy. "We've not received a response yet." And
there are other, more domestic concerns too. "Maybe someone saw a grey
young cat with green eyes running around?" Olena asks. "He escaped from
the car." Another woman, posting anonymously to a Telegram channel, spoke
of families, some of them with babies, living in their cars, short of food and
running out of money. "In addition to this," she wrote, "not far
from where cars are parked, hostilities are taking place. Rockets sometimes fly
over people."
For now, movement across the
front line is impossible in either direction. Following last Friday's rocket
attack on the outskirts of Zaporizhzhia, which killed at least 30 civilians,
the authorities in Zaporizhzhia banned all movement into Russian-controlled
territory for an indefinite period, citing security concerns.
^ Russians are fleeing Russia so
you can imagine how Ukrainians in Russian-Occupied Territory feel and how
desperate they are to leave - especially with all the Russian Torture Chambers,
Russian Reeducation Camps and Russian Mass Graves filled with innocent
Ukrainians. ^
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