USA TODAY International Edition

Confident in army, residents stay put

The number of refugees fleeing decreases

- Trevor Hughes

PALANCA, Moldova – The number of refugees fleeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has dropped dramatical­ly, driven at least in part by social media posts and news coverage suggesting to Ukrainian civilians that their military is winning.

More than 3.9 million Ukrainians have fled the country, according to the United Nations; most of those refugees crossed the border in early March. As the conflict drags on, many Ukrainians say they’re committed to their homeland.

Tuesday, a Russian missile slammed into a nine- story government building in Mykolaiv, killing nine people. The Russian military said it had drasticall­y reduced its activity near Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital – an assertion U. S. officials greeted with skepticism.

“We are ready. We expect that Russia will come. And we will fight,” said Odesa resident Alex Kobzev, 44, who coordinate­s aid distributi­on. “We are supposed to be all brothers, but we did not invite them here.”

Ukrainian women and children are free to leave the country, but men of fighting age must remain. While Mykolaiv is eerily deserted except for soldiers, police officers and firefighters, Odesa remains largely functional, its shops and cafes open. Children play with dogs and kick soccer balls or walk with their families, and the electric trolleys are running.

At the height of the evacuation­s in early March, about 140,000 people fled across the Polish border every 24 hours. Now, about 30,000 refugees arrive per day in Poland, according to U. N. data.

In Moldova, daily refugee counts topped out at about 20,000 refugees per day in early March. It’s dropped to

about 2,000 per day, and 21,000 refugees have actually gone back home.

Odesa resident Natasha Mala, 47, said she’s not scared: “Nyet. We believe in the Ukrainian army, and we don’t want to be a part of Russia.”

The city’s residents have hardened their homes against attacks, taking down street signs to make navigation harder for Russian invaders and welding star- shaped vehicle barriers from railroad tracks along major roads. Around the city, billboards blare a message to the invaders: “Russian soldiers and sailors, go home.”

Even though the refugee numbers are dipping, the overall tally is staggering: Nearly 4 million refugees have been forced to flee the country in the fastest- growing refugee crisis in Europe since World War II, according to the U. N. refugee agency.

An additional 6.5 million Ukrainians have been internally displaced, the United Nations said.

Many of the first to leave were people with money and vehicles, especially those with savings or remote- work jobs. Aid groups whisked thousands of orphans to safety early on.

Left behind are the elderly and the poor, people who lack the resources to leave their homes and vehicles, potentiall­y forever.

Stephanie Nawyn, a Michigan State University associate professor of sociology and expert on forced migration, said it makes sense that refugee flows from Ukraine would slow more than a month into the war.

“What we have now maybe are people who are mostly stuck,” Nawyn said. “The shelling is happening more in certain places in Ukraine than others, so there’s people that maybe are staying put because they don’t know if the fighting is going to make it to them. But I don’t think we’re done seeing refugees ( and) asylum seekers from Ukraine until Russia is done attacking.”

At shelters in Moldova’s capital of Chisinau, managers report a steady stream of refugees seeking help, but those arriving more recently come by bus, not personal car, suggesting the newcomers have less money.

Complicati­ng matters, the early arrivals who had savings snapped up hotel rooms, apartments and Airbnbs, tightening the market for later arrivals.

Many Ukrainians interviewe­d by USA TODAY on both sides of the border said viral Twitter and TikTok videos of soldiers destroying Russian tanks and farmers towing them away indicate Russia’s invasion is failing. Others cited group chats on the Telegram messaging app as a valuable source of informatio­n, inspiratio­n and daily military movement updates.

“Every day, I talk with my friends who are soldiers. They say in two or three weeks, there will be victory,” said Mykolaiv resident Suliman Altinsoy, 39, who was in Turkey when the war began.

In Chisinau, shelter managers said there’s little to indicate the war will end soon.

“For many, many people, those who are staying in Moldova, they want to be close to home and return when it’s possible. And it’s important that they retain that hope,” said Conor O’Loughlin, the lead coordinato­r of emergency refugee services in Moldova for Catholic Relief Services. “There’s a huge level of anxiety and concern for the future. Whatever we can do to provide reassuranc­e is a huge step.”

At the Moldova- Ukraine border, Altinsoy waited in his Mercedes sedan for his wife to bring her parents and their three dogs across.

The family lives part- time in Turkey, and Altinsoy was torn between going to their home in Mykolaiv or returning to Turkey where his young son lives.

“If we didn’t have our son in Turkey, we would go back, too. Our house is there. Our work is there,” Altinsoy said. “The Russian people thought our army was very weak. But the whole world can see that’s not true. Yes, we have had a lot of help, but we are fighting. And the one who believes will win. We believe. So we will win.”

 ?? MICHAEL SEAMANS FOR USA TODAY ?? Andre Maygyr tries to comfort his daughter Masha as she and her mother, Luda, leave Ukraine March 27.
MICHAEL SEAMANS FOR USA TODAY Andre Maygyr tries to comfort his daughter Masha as she and her mother, Luda, leave Ukraine March 27.

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