Sunday Mail (UK)

We worry that we’ll have no home left when we get back

Elderly couple who fled 2000 miles to safety in Scotland tell of their fears

- Norman Silvester

An elderly Ukrainian couple who fled more than 2000 miles to safety in Scotland fear nothing will be left of their home if they ever get to return.

Viacheslav Malyna, 83, and Zhanna Malyna, 81, started a horror journey from their f lat in the battered city of Kharkiv in north- east Ukraine after Russian shelling began at the end of February.

They managed to f lee to Hungary before eventually arriving in Bridge of Weir, Renfrewshi­re, where daughter Anna White lives with her husband Geoff.

The couple are now worried that their Ukrainian home could be gone and are fearful about the fate of their friends.

Viacheslav said: “We are very sad when we hear what is happening back home. Part of the area of Donbas where I grew up has been destroyed.

“We have telephone links with some of our friends and they do not know what the next day will bring.”

The Malynas were forced to abandon the ninth-floor flat of their tower block home after shelling began on the first day of the Russian invasion on February 24. They left without any money, clothes or medication.

They took refuge in the basement of a relative’s house in another part of the city to escape the missiles.

On March 6, as the shelling became worse, they were driven to the Hungarian border. The journey took three days and passed through areas being attacked by the Russian military.

After a spell in a Hungarian refugee centre, the couple were taken by bus to the town of Godello, near Budapest, where they were joined by Anna, who had flown from Scotland.

But they then had to wait another two weeks, until March 24, before they were given the green light to come here by UK immigratio­n officials.

The family had to fight to get the correct paperwork – even though they have visited Scotland regularly in the past 18 years to see Anna, Geoff and teenage granddaugh­ter Emilia.

Viacheslav said: “I wasn’t sure we would get a visa. We were nervous waiting all the time. I was thinking about what happens if we are not allowed to travel to the UK and be with our family.”

The couple were given a six-month visa by the UK Government and arrived in Edinburgh on March 26 – over a month after they left their home.

Viacheslav, a retired mechanical engineer, added: “We are very glad to be here and have been made to feel very welcome.

“We know Scotland from our previous visit and that is why we feel so safe and comfortabl­e.

“It is now two months since we left our home and we don’t know if, or when, we will be able to go back. No one believed at the time that the Russians would attack a city of 1.4million people but they did.

“Then we had to find a place that was safe to live.”

Now that they are settled in Scotland, the Malynas plan to apply for a three-year visa and state pensions. They also hope to open a bank account and register with a GP.

Anna, who has lived in Scotland for 18 years and is a charity administra­tor, said: “People here have made them feel very welcome. Kharkiv is close to ruins

and we cannot even dream just now about making plans for the future and my parents’ return.

“There were a lot of problems to overcome in getting them here. A lot of unnecessar­y obstacles were put in our way.

“We are just grateful that we have got mum and dad here safely and can look after them.”

Home Secretary Priti Patel apologised earlier this month over delays with the visa scheme but latest figures from the UK Government said more than 21,000 had arrived.

Kharkiv, the second- largest city in Ukraine af ter the capital Ky iv, has been one of the worst-hit cities in the war with Russia.

Located only 25 miles from the Russian border, it has been decimated by airstrikes and shelling and dozens of civi l ians have been ki l led, with hundreds injured.

Viacheslav said the residents are suffering greatly from the bombing and he has heard of former work colleagues who have been killed.

Latest pictures show a burnt out-city which is still being bombarded. Regional governor Oleh Synehubov said yesterday that two people were killed and 19 more were wounded by shelling.

He said that over the past day the Russian forces f ired at the region’s civilian infrastruc­ture 56 times.

Meanwhile, Serhiy Haidai, governor of Luhansk Oblast in eastern Ukraine, wrote on the messaging app Telegram: “In addition to the fact that street f ighting continues in the city (of Popasna) for several weeks, the Russian army constantly f ires at multi- storey residentia­l bui ldings and private houses.” He added: “Just yesterday local residents withstood f ive enemy arti l lery attacks. Not all survived.”

And last week Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said 18 people had been killed and more than 100 wounded in shelling over the previous four-day period.

He said Russia’s shelling on Kharkiv had been constant.

He added: “This is nothing but deliberate terror: mortars, artillery against ordinary residentia­l quarters, against ordinary civilians.”

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 ?? ?? SCARED Viacheslav and Zhanna after they left their home in Kharkiv
SCARED Viacheslav and Zhanna after they left their home in Kharkiv
 ?? ?? SAFE AT LAST Anna
White with husband Geoff, daughter Emilia and parents Viacheslav and Zhanna Malyna
Picture Jamie Williamson
SAFE AT LAST Anna White with husband Geoff, daughter Emilia and parents Viacheslav and Zhanna Malyna Picture Jamie Williamson
 ?? ?? HORROR From far left, apartments and marketplac­e in Kharkiv are destroyed, a man searches for his belongings after his flat is hit and kids take shelter in a bunker
HORROR From far left, apartments and marketplac­e in Kharkiv are destroyed, a man searches for his belongings after his flat is hit and kids take shelter in a bunker
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