The Borneo Post

Two years of war: Ukrainian refugees face lasting exile

- Anne Beade

Ukraine’s future is not clear. I think that the war will not stop, even in one or two years.

Maryna Troshchenk­o

VIENNA: Iryna, Maryna, Katya - three generation­s from one family - fled their home in southern Ukraine just a er the war started, hoping to return quickly.

But two years later, these hopes are fading.

Just a few days ago, a fresh a ack blew off the roofs of many buildings in their home city of Mykolaiv.

“Ukraine’s future is not clear. I think that the war will not stop, even in one or two years,” said Maryna Troshchenk­o, 43, while showing photos of the damage sent by relatives still living in the port city.

Troshchenk­o, her mother and her daughter, who all now live in Vienna, are among six million Ukrainian refugees, marking the biggest exodus since World War II, according to the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR).

Germany and Poland host the largest population­s, with about one million Ukrainian refugees in each country.

Incessant bombings and a lack of progress on the front make their return in the short term increasing­ly improbable.

‘Started from scratch’

A er months of housing problems and rejected CVs, Troshchenk­o finally landed a job in a supermarke­t, enabling the trio to move into their own apartment this year.

“I started from scratch” at the bakery department before being promoted to head cashier, said the former purchasing director who did not speak a word of German when she arrived.

“We are happy to have been able to accomplish so much in two years,” the divorcee added.

Her daughter, Katya, 17, has managed to obtain her Ukrainian school graduation certificat­e while a ending a Viennese high school, from where she is eyeing to graduate next year.

Katya’s grandmothe­r, Iryna Simonova, 64, meanwhile has been able to find a volleyball team to practice her favourite sport and has made friends.

But tears stream from her eyes as soon as she thinks of her home country as she recalls leaving behind her mother, who at 87 refused to join them.

‘Build a future’

At refugee help organisati­on Diakonie in Austria, workers note that many Ukrainian refugees have decided to try to se le a er being paralysed by the ‘dilemma of waiting’ to return home.

“For a long time, it was very difficult for them to decide how to proceed further,” Sarah Brandste er, deputy at Diakonie’s Ukrainian refugee advice centre, told AFP.

“Two years later, the situation has changed - people are now planning to stay in the country. They have their children here in schools. They want to build a future for themselves,” she added.

But especially mothers of young children who find themselves alone to take care of them continue to struggle.

The initial surge of solidarity is also running out of steam in some places.

In Austria - which hosts some 80,000 Ukrainian refugees - “the increase of energy costs and high inflation was a game changer”, according to Christoph Riedl, a migration and integratio­n expert at Diakonie.

In neighbouri­ng Germany, antimigrat­ion discourse is also on the rise amid a spike in the number of asylum-seekers from outside of Europe, weighing heavily on reception capacities.

Demographi­c challenge

Until March 2025, under EU rules, Ukrainians are eligible for temporary protection, a status allowing them access to the labour market, housing, and social and medical assistance.

But what is next, experts wonder. Riedl said the EU should agree now on a lasting status.

“When a conflict lasts for two or three years, people change their minds. It’s a reality check. They integrate, they have a new life,” he told AFP.

Faced with a real demographi­c challenge, Ukrainian authoritie­s fear the massive exodus - and in contrast to other nations want refugees to be able to return.

“We find a somewhat specific situation in Ukraine - a country at war, which also wants to maintain the greatest possible connection with its population,” Philippe Leclerc, UNHCR Director for Europe, told AFP.

Katya Troshchenk­o too insists on the importance “for young Ukrainians to come back to rebuild Ukraine, to build a new, modern country, which will be in EU too”.

However - still traumatise­d by the nights in air raid shelters at the start of the war - she is ‘afraid’ to return.

“I don’t want to see how it’s absolutely ruined by Russians, and I don’t want to see my ruined childhood,” she said.

And she has no illusions - she will probably have to stay in Vienna for her university studies.

 ?? — AFP file photos ?? Nina Gonchar, sits in front of a destroyed house in Bohorodych­ne village in Kramatorsk, Donetsk region amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
— AFP file photos Nina Gonchar, sits in front of a destroyed house in Bohorodych­ne village in Kramatorsk, Donetsk region amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
 ?? ?? An aerial picture taken on April 18, 2022 shows coffins being buried during a funeral ceremony at a cemetery in Bucha, Ukraine.
An aerial picture taken on April 18, 2022 shows coffins being buried during a funeral ceremony at a cemetery in Bucha, Ukraine.
 ?? Er shelling in Chasiv Yar, near ?? An elderly woman stands in her backyard a Bakhmut.
Er shelling in Chasiv Yar, near An elderly woman stands in her backyard a Bakhmut.
 ?? ?? Maksym Katerin stands in the yard of his damaged house a er his mother and his step father were killed during shelling in the city of Lysychansk.
Maksym Katerin stands in the yard of his damaged house a er his mother and his step father were killed during shelling in the city of Lysychansk.
 ?? ?? A wounded man and his wife sit in the yard of their heavily damaged house following a rocket a ack in the town of Bakhmut, Donetsk region.
A wounded man and his wife sit in the yard of their heavily damaged house following a rocket a ack in the town of Bakhmut, Donetsk region.

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