Bay of Plenty Times

DEATH, EVACUATION­S & GUNFIRE

- Kiri Gillespie is an assistant news director and a senior journalist for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post, specialisi­ng in local politics and city issues. She was a finalist for the Voyager Media Awards Regional Journalist of the Year in 202

Tenby Powell has spent 21 months in and out of war-torn Ukraine, ferrying refugees to safety and delivering medical and humanitari­an aid – often under gunfire. Now, Tauranga’s former mayor, who has also been grappling with cancer, is home and considerin­g what’s next, not just for Ukraine but for himself. He speaks with Kiri Gillespie.

Tenby Powell says he was lost for words when he walked through mass grave sites near Izium. The sanitisati­on spray used by authoritie­s failed, he says, to mask the smell of death and decay.

“You wander around the grave sites wondering how people can do this to other people. The vast majority were civilians.”

The former Tauranga mayor and army colonel arrived two days after several mass graves were discovered after Ukrainian forces recaptured Izium from the invading Russian army. One grave contained at least 440 bodies, according to Ukrainian authoritie­s.

“It was so overwhelmi­ng.

“The police and whoever else had come in and they had sprayed it because you can imagine the smell – so there was this heavy damp chemical smell, I guess mixed with the smell of death.” Powell believes a genocide is occurring in Ukraine and the brutality of the conflict is hard to comprehend.

Media have reported that children are being stolen and that Russian soldiers are raping women and castrating male captives.

Asked how often his mortality came to mind, Powell says, “Constantly”.

When Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, he had been waging a personal battle with stage four prostate cancer for more than a year.

He started Kiwi K.A.R.E, a volunteer organisati­on delivering humanitari­an aid and medical treatment to Ukrainians impacted by the war.

A crucial part of its work involves using seven decommissi­oned New Zealand ambulances as military medical units.

Food, treatments, water boilers and stoves are transporte­d to civilians in need along with hand-knitted teddy

bears for children. No one is paid for their work and the organisati­on is funded solely from donations. Powell pays for his own travel and “humble” accommodat­ion.

From one battle to another Powell’s Ukraine mission began not long after his own bitter battle within the Tauranga City Council’s chambers came to a sudden and dramatic end.

On November 19, 2020, Powell resigned as Tauranga’s mayor and called for commission­ers to be appointed, following months of infighting among elected members - particular­ly involving Powell and unsuccessf­ul mayoral candidates.

Powell’s Ukraine efforts have been welcomed by the country’s Deputy Defence Minister, Nataliia Kalmykova, who wrote to him asking for more ambulances.

All things going to plan, more are on the way. Kiwi K.A.R.E is also helping to support a New Zealand documentar­y on Ukraine’s struggles.

“You have to ask, ‘How the hell did seven New Zealand ambulances make such an impact?”’ Powell says.

Seated at a cafe table in Tauranga, Powell explains the decommissi­oned ambulances were mechanical­ly sound, the bodywork was good and despite accumulati­ng more than 300,000km, they had “all the bells and whistles” needed – just not for New Zealand roads.

“We painted them camouflage … we made sure they were serviced fully and reattached oxygen bottles … they were ready to go.”

Powell says another 35 ambulances should be available from April.

“I’m hoping that we will be able to move 16 fairly soon, they are not from New Zealand, and then we can look at the rest later.” the push for armoured ambulances powell has also called on the New Zealand Government to help supply light armoured vehicles (LAVS) to protect medical workers on Ukraine’s battlefiel­ds.

Powell gave nearly three decades of military service to the New Zealand Army regular and reserve forces and was a deputy commander of a United Nations mission in Lebanon and Israel. His military service includes a tour of duty in the Middle East.

Powell shares a video he made appealing for greater Government support. He’s filmed with others wearing a helmet and armour in the back of one of the ambulances.

He stares directly into the camera and explains that during their time in the warzone they have experience­d incoming artillery fire.

“It’s not without some trepidatio­n that we are traversing back across some very open country in what is effectivel­y a soft-skinned vehicle, so the New Zealand LAVS [light armoured vehicles] would be amazing for this to take out a number of wounded soldiers to hospital …”

Powell tells the Bay of Plenty Times Weekend he knows full well what the outcome of shrapnel hitting an ambulance can be for occupants - fatal injuries are a real possibilit­y.

The push for the LAVS remains ongoing, he says.

Kiwi K.A.R.E plans to help transport medical workers to makeshift surgery clinics made from buried shipping containers where some of the those injured on the frontlines are treated. Helicopter airlifts are not available due to the fighting and treating injured people is often hampered by difficulti­es of getting people to hospital.

Evacuation­s under military fire

Powell believes the world needs to be worried about Russian president Vladimir Putin and internatio­nal leaders like him “making overt statements about their aspiration­s”.

“Putin has made it very clear he doesn’t recognise Ukraine as a sovereign state … he just wants his own way under any circumstan­ces.”

He questions how Russian forces will ever be prosecuted due to the vastness of the crimes they are accused of.

Powell admits he questioned what he had got himself into “many, many times”.

He spent about 14 months in Ukraine and refers to his first rescue of an elderly woman trapped in a heavily hit city. She lived alone eight storeys high and every window in the building was blown out by arterially shockwaves. She’d lived like that for six months before her rescue. She now lives in Germany.

He says such evacuation­s are typical and “we’ve been under military fire” often.

“Everybody has because it just happens … You don’t get used to it.”

The Kiwi K.A.R.E team is eight people including Australian­s, an American and Ukrainians.

“We are not soldiers. We are not pretending to be soldiers. We are not involved in the conflict. What we can do, is have people … who understand the issue of trauma, who’ve seen death before, who understand how to help people in tough situations. At the same time, we aren’t going to take any undue risks that will put anyone’s life at risk,” Powell says.

“Because of our relationsh­ip with government officials, military commanders and a whole lot of other people … we have contacts enough to be escorted into places where there is great need and sometimes when we are going to close that, we need to have a military escort. That happens fairly regularly now.”

Powell estimates Kiwi K.A.R.E provided 80 per cent humanitari­an aid and 20 per cent medical aid with “piecemeal evacuation­s” when it started in June 2022. The proportion­s had since flipped, with “organised and way more sophistica­ted evacuation­s”.

Virtually every evacuee is administer­ed oxygen and sometimes drugs by qualified medical staff in the back of the ambulances as they flee. The medical treatment is desperatel­y sought after.

‘It’s terrible driving away, terrible’

Powell estimates more than 1000 Ukraine hospitals and medical centres have been attacked or damaged during the conflict.

“It’s why ambulances are needed … because there’s nowhere else to go,” he says.

“And so when we roll up with an ambulance, you’ll have 100 people surround you in half an hour.”

Powell says the team is overwhelme­d every single time.

“The thing that consistent­ly breaks my heart is that we will always run out before we can deliver and there’s going to be a queue of people left and we have an empty van. I have never got used to that.

“It’s terrible driving away, terrible. Arguments break out. Particular­ly in villages where people know each other, they say this person would have this or that.”

Kiwi K.A.R.E works with local councils to ensure appropriat­e distributi­on of goods to the right people in need.

“There’s still a queue left though, there’s still tears,” Powell says. In a rare vulnerable moment, Powell’s eyes well up as he recalls those moments.

The Yuri Bea movement

Powell’s heartache is tempered by a movement known as Yuri Bears Teddy bears hand-knitted by Australasi­an pensioners - named after a young Chernobyl refugee adopted by an Australian woman now working for a retirement village chain.

“So on every mission we take bucketload­s of Yuri Bears everywhere we go and give them to the kids and the kids love them. I have so many photos of Yuri Bears, it’s endless. Can you imagine a [shipping] container-full? We will have Yuri Bears forever.”

Powell and his team are also buoyed by the response to their distributi­on of vital wood-burning stoves (burzhuykas) and water boilers (Voda Naharivach), recycled from electrical water cylinders and stamped “Love from NZ”. More than 1000 devices have been given to people whose homes and towns have been destroyed.

Powell shares another video, showing grateful recipients in villages blanketed in snow, with damaged buildings all around.

“I do feel pride but I anguish when I see those living conditions, when you’re living in a house that has mostly fallen down or you’re trying to find shelter somewhere but want to remain in your village or town and this is the only water or heating you’re going to get, you drive away going, ‘Oh my God’.”

Now, film producer Scott Mcjarrow has approached Kiwi K. A.R.E for help with the planning and management of a documentar­y about the war.

My Name is Ukraine aims to capture the stories of war victims voiced by a close family member, as if they were the fallen soldier or civilian. It’s expected the documentar­y will include New Zealanders.

Mcjarrow tells the Bay of Plenty Times there’s so much “that needs to be told” and it’s “very much in our interests that we support Ukraine”.

Battling an ‘all-consuming’ war - and cancer

For Powell, a man diagnosed with stage 4 prostate cancer, the past two years have been a lot emotionall­y and physically.

“It is exhausting and it’s neverendin­g. War is all-consuming,” Powell says.

But he’s not stopping.

“The world has let them down by not giving them all the things they promised”. He lists F16s fighter jets, heavy machinery and ammunition which Ukraine is running out of as examples.

“Americans, the Republican­s, have stopped their aid, Europeans are slow to act, but the ammunition — in Afghanista­n a heavy day of fire was 350 rounds, in Ukraine: 5000 a day easily. Can you imagine?

“Giving up now would just be terrible and I believe they can win this war … And it’s critical they do because the only pathway to peace for Europe and probably the free world is victory for Ukraine - there is no other option. Putin won’t stop.”

He says it’s frustratin­g but understand­able the media spotlight on Ukraine has waned in recent months due to the Gaza conflict.

Powell does not know how long he’ll be distributi­ng equipment or helping people flee the warzone but there is a succession plan for Kiwi K.A.R.E should his health deteriorat­e.

The cancer diagnosis came shortly before his resignatio­n as mayor. Commission­ers have since been appointed and Powell has chased his dreams, making the most of the time he has.

“Because of the health situation, it has very much crystallis­ed my thinking about who I want to be and what I want to do in the world,” he says.

“I think if you’re diagnosed with any stage four cancer, you do say the race might run itself a little bit short at some stage.”

Life after a war zone

-Powell had surgery to remove the cancer and every six months has a blood test to check his PSA (prostate-specific antigen) levels stay at a safe level. In each sixmonth block, he aims to have made a significan­t, positive difference to society, he says.

“As it transpires, these sixmonth plans for Kiwi K.A.R.E had been probably a lot bigger than they would’ve been and a lot more compressed in terms of being able to deliver results than had I not done it like that.

“It’s kind of been a good thing for me to do personally, and at the same time I’ve done things like the master scuba diving course because I love diving, I’ve learned how to fly. So, where I used to try to do something big-ish by learning something big every five years and something small every year, now I try to do something big-ish every six months. This has been Kiwi K. A.R.E.”

Powell says he’s learned he can still be effective running the operation from home and is focusing now on the extra ambulances.

He is also in discussion regarding at least two commercial directorsh­ips “which has been lovely”, he says.

“But at the same time, I’m being very choosy about what I do how I do it and what the impact on the world is with anything I do, including directorsh­ips and the companies that I might end up supporting.”

Powell says that living life on six monthly cycles means it’s hard to know what’s next but he hopes that whatever unfolds, it’ll make a positive impact - here and in Ukraine.

“Life has to go on for people, it has to.”

 ?? PHOTO / ALEX CAIRNS ?? Former Tauranga mayor Tenby Powell is back from Ukraine where he distribute­d humanitari­an and medical aid for vulnerable civilians through his Kiwi K.A. R.E initiative.
PHOTO / ALEX CAIRNS Former Tauranga mayor Tenby Powell is back from Ukraine where he distribute­d humanitari­an and medical aid for vulnerable civilians through his Kiwi K.A. R.E initiative.
 ?? PHOTO / ALEX CAIRNS ?? Tenby Powell and his daughter Charlotte pictured in March 2023 with one of the ambulances and medical supplies to be sent to Ukraine.
PHOTO / ALEX CAIRNS Tenby Powell and his daughter Charlotte pictured in March 2023 with one of the ambulances and medical supplies to be sent to Ukraine.
 ?? ?? Kiwi K.A. R.E aid charity founder Tenby Powell in Ukraine.
Kiwi K.A. R.E aid charity founder Tenby Powell in Ukraine.
 ?? ?? Former New Zealand ambulances in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Former New Zealand ambulances in Kyiv, Ukraine.
 ?? ?? Ukrainian children pictured with their Yuri Bears, knitted by Australasi­an pensioners and distribute­d to young people impacted by the Russian conflict.
Ukrainian children pictured with their Yuri Bears, knitted by Australasi­an pensioners and distribute­d to young people impacted by the Russian conflict.

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