Sunday Mirror

CROWD FUND

- BY JOHN SIDDLE

A WOMAN taking refuge in Britain is battling to save her IVF baby dream after being forced to leave a frozen embryo in wartorn Ukraine.

Iryna Litvinova, 37, longs to be a mum and wants to defy Vladimir Putin, whose bombs forced her to leave her home city of Kharkiv.

She had one embryo left from an IVF cycle and managed to transport it to safety in Kyiv before heading here.

But the war is preventing her from being able to access the embryo. Her husband Sergey, 36, is back home, as men aged 18-60 are not allowed to leave the country unless there are exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

There is no way of knowing when – or where – they will be reunited, let alone resume their bid to have a family.

But Iryna, who has suffered the anguish of a stillbirth, has new hope – to get Sergey’s frozen sperm transporte­d 1,750 miles to the UK to start fertility treatment here.

It will cost around £5,000 in shipping and clinical fees – and Iryna’s UK host has set up a fundraisin­g page.

She tells the Sunday Mirror: “Putin’s war is not just about killing and physical destructio­n. He is also destroying hopes and plans.

“All the time this war rages, my chances of motherhood are diminishin­g. The clinic has said because of the war there are staffing issues and there aren’t the correct protocols in place to allow the release of the genetic material.

“Now the plan is for Sergey to go to a clinic which has the right licence to be able to transport sperm and find a courier that can get it out of the country and to the UK.”

Iryna, who suffers low levels of oestrogen and progestero­ne, was undergoing IVF in

Kharkiv when Russia invaded.

Her first round of

IVF, costing £2,500 in 2016, ended in heartbreak when the couple lost a daughter in a stillbirth at 35 weeks.

Three more attempts were unsuccessf­ul.

Of her daughter,

Iryna said: “I had a

C-section and when

I woke up the doctors would not tell me what had happened. Sergey came in and I realised from his face we’d lost her. We cried together but I felt guilty, that it was my fault. I never got to see or hold my baby, and part of me died that day. It wasn’t until last year that I could talk about it without crying.

“Now war has brought terrible loss again, the loss of life as we knew it.

“We had a settled, happy life before the Russians invaded.

“I grew up on my parents’ farm outside Kharkiv, and Sergey and I met in 2004 through friends. We married in 2011.

“We’re very happy. He’s my best friend. We loved our apartment and going to the cinema together.

“Now all that is gone. The war was knocking on our door. Our apartment was damaged by bombing and then we heard about the Bucha massacre.

POWERLESS

“My husband said to me, ‘I can’t protect you here. If I have to join the army, I’ll be calmer if you’re safe’.

“Our life had been turned upside down. It was hard even to do normal things like get up and brush your teeth.

“Eating was just about survival. The war is totally out of our hands, the same as with the stillbirth. I felt powerless and had the feeling I was dead again.”

But after arriving in England, Iryna has begun to piece her life together. She adds: “After the stillbirth and three unsuccessf­ul attempts, I was worried about trying again.

“Even if I became pregnant, I was terrified of losing my unborn child. If that happened, I wasn’t sure if I could survive physically or mentally. But war has shown me I do have the strength to try for a baby again.

“Even though Sergey is not here, and we don’t have enough money, and everything is so uncertain, I’ve realised IVF is a thread that can give me hope. It means life.”

Iryna is living in Rye, East Sussex, with British host Amy Maynard, 42. She arrived in April.

Her sister Marina fled here too and is in Dartford, Kent, with her husband and two children.

Marina’s

 ?? ?? BABY MISSION Iryna and husband Sergey
HEARTBREAK Baby was stillborn in 2016
BABY MISSION Iryna and husband Sergey HEARTBREAK Baby was stillborn in 2016

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