Gulf News

Evacuees from Mariupol steel plant reach safety

- ZAPORIZHZH­IA/MARIUPOL

Dozens of evacuees who cowered for weeks in the bunkers of a steel works in Russian-occupied Mariupol reached the safety of Kyiv-controlled Zaporizhzh­ia yesterday where hospitals were ready to treat people for anything from burns to malnutriti­on. Exhausted-looking people, including young children and pensioners laden with bags, clambered off buses that pulled into the car park of a shopping centre in Zaporizhzh­ia in southern Ukraine not far from the front lines.

More than 200 civilians remain in the Azovstal steel plant, according to Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boichenko, with a total of 100,000 civilians still in the city that has been devastated by weeks of Russian siege and shelling.

“Thanks to the operation, 101 women, men, children, and older persons could finally leave the bunkers below the Azovstal steelworks and see the daylight after two months,” Osnat Lubrani, UN humanitari­an coordinato­r for Ukraine, said.

The sprawling Azovstal industrial complex and its many bunkers and tunnels became a refuge for both civilians and Ukrainian fighters as Moscow laid siege to Mariupol.

The United Nations and Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) coordinate­d the five-day operation that began on April 29 to bring out women, children and the elderly from the steel works. Other families and individual­s from outside the steel works joined the convoy of buses and ambulances on its way, the ICRC said.

‘We just want rest’

“I can’t believe I made it, we just want rest,” said Alina Kozitskaya, who spent weeks sheltering in a basement with her bags packed waiting for a chance to escape.

One middle-aged woman walked away from the evacuation bus sobbing. She was comforted by an aid worker.

A few women who greeted the convoy held up handmade signs, calling on Ukrainian authoritie­s to evacuate the soldiers — their relatives and loved ones — who are trapped in Azovstal and encircled by Russian forces.

“They don’t have food, water or ammunition,” shouted aa woman. “They’re forgotten by everyone.”

Hospitals had been stocked up and supported by volunteers to prepare for the arrival of the convoy, Dr Dorit Nizan, World Health Organisati­on (WHO) Incident Manager for Ukraine, said by Zoom from Zaporizhzh­ia.

“We are ready for burns, fractures and wounds, as well as diarrhoea, respirator­y infections. We are also ready to see if there are pregnant women, children with malnutriti­on. We are all here and the health system is well prepared,” she said.

She said some people had arrived recently by making their own way from villages near Mariupol and had minor injuries, but that mental health was the “big issue”.

In Mariupol, 64-year-old resident Tatyana Bushlanova is so used to Russian bombardmen­ts that she does not flinch when shells explode. “You wake up in the morning and you cry. You cry in the evening. I don’t know where to go at all … everything is destroyed, everything is broken,” she said on Monday.

 ?? Reuters ?? A family of Ukrainian evacuees from Mariupol embraces after arriving at a registrati­on centre for internally displaced people in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine, yesterday.
Reuters A family of Ukrainian evacuees from Mariupol embraces after arriving at a registrati­on centre for internally displaced people in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine, yesterday.

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