Edmonton Journal

He's 18 in Canada but Ukraine wants him back home

- SIMON HOPKINS

OTTAWA • The future was just starting to appear bright for Mykyta Zakharchen­ko.

The 18- year- old's youth in Ukraine was shadowed by two major conflicts with Russia before he escaped to Canada in 2022.

With harrowing experience­s of war behind him, he recently graduated high school, competes internatio­nally as a rower and is determined to study finance in a few years.

But a recent decision to restrict consular services for fighting- aged Ukrainian men has made him feel less certain of his next steps — and worried he could be pulled back to the war.

Men eligible for military service in Ukraine will lose access to administra­tive services abroad, Ukrainian Foreign Affairs Minister Dmytro Kuleba announced in a social-media post Tuesday.

It's part of a bid to bolster Ukraine's forces, which are in need of more arms and soldiers to continue defending against the Russian invasion.

Zakharchen­ko's family was first forced to flee violent conflict between Ukraine and Russia more than a decade ago when they lived in Alchevsk, in the far east of the country.

To flee fighting in the east between Ukrainian and pro-Russian fighters, they moved west to Cherkasy, a town southeast of the capital city of Kyiv.

When Russia mounted a full-scale invasion of the country two years ago, they fled again.

At the time, Zakharchen­ko was just 16. He stood in line for two days with his mother, grandmothe­r and siblings to escape through the Polish border on foot.

He moved to Ottawa alone six months later, leaving his family in Europe. He has flourished in Canada, finished school and found a job. But his Ukrainian passport is set to expire soon, and he doesn't know if he'll be able to renew it.

“I celebrated my 18th birthday in Canada and now

I cannot get a Ukrainian passport,” he said in an interview.

Without a valid passport, he may not be able to travel or renew his visa to stay in Canada. To renew his documents, Zakharchen­ko would need to return to Ukraine — and once there, he would be barred from leaving.

Ukraine implemente­d martial law shortly after Russia's invasion in February 2022. Men aged 18 to 60 were forbidden from leaving the country and Ukraine began military conscripti­on.

Ukraine's Ministry of Foreign Affairs recently announced that all consular services would be restricted for men until May 18.

That's the day several amendments to Ukraine's martial law will come into effect.

Men living outside of the country should not be free of responsibi­lity, the foreign affairs minister said.

“Staying abroad does not relieve a citizen of his or her duties,” Kuleba wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“A man of conscripti­on age went abroad, showed his state that he does not care about its survival, and then comes and wants to receive services from this state. It does not work this way.”

Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about how Ottawa will treat applicatio­ns from Ukrainian men without valid passports.For his part, Zakharchen­ko said he wants to stay in Canada so he can financiall­y support his family living in Germany.

“I just want to be safe,” he said. “I have a new life, but I always want to go back to Ukraine and visit.”

 ?? ?? Mykyta Zakharchen­ko
Mykyta Zakharchen­ko

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