Scottish Daily Mail

Welcome to my manor

Tycoon pays for three families to flee Ukraine and share his 15-bed mansion

- By Andy Dolan

APPALLED by the fate of displaced Ukrainians, car dealer Martin Holton has put his money where his mouth is to pay for three families to fly from Poland to live at his manor.

Mr Holton is putting up two sisters and their children, plus a third mother and her daughter, at his 15-bedroom Edwardian property.

They are all settling in to grade IIlisted Greys Mallory, a 30-acre estate with formal areas, paddocks, woodland and four cottages near Bishop’s Tachbrook in Warwickshi­re.

Mr Holton, 59, is now working to secure school places for all the children, aged between four and 14. He said that with only himself and his housekeepe­r living at the country home, there was plenty of space for his guests, who had spent five weeks waiting in Poland for the green light to travel.

The visa applicatio­ns were made by Helen Aris, who works at his vehicle dealership Country Car in nearby Barford. Once the visas were issued, Mr Holton booked the families on to a flight.

He said: ‘We applied for the visas the first day they were online, but it took five weeks for them to eventually be granted.

‘During that time the family were living in a one bedroom apartment with ten others – that’s 17 people in a one bedroom apartment with one bed. They used up all the money they had on food and the accommodat­ion.’

However, the divorced father of two had harsh words for the way Britain’s Homes For Ukraine refugee scheme was being run, adding: ‘The Government have made it deliberate­ly difficult for the refugees to meet the visa requiremen­ts. It makes me ashamed to be British.’

His Ukrainian guests include Tamara Zastryzhna, 36, with her children Valeriia, 14, and Kseniia, 11, her sister Tetiana Maksymenko, 34, with her twins Sofiia and Illia, four, and Mrs Zastryzhna’s old school friend Olha Pastushenk­o, 34, with her daughter Vladyslava, 14.

The families from Mykolaiv, a city near the Black Sea, travelled to the UK a fortnight ago.

Mrs Zastryzhna told the Daily Mail she was ‘very grateful’ to Mr Holton for helping them, adding: ‘When we were in Poland there were lots of us in one apartment so we had to sleep on the floor. Now we have come to Martin’s house it’s like another world – like being in a castle.

‘There is space for the children to play outside and Martin has given them bicycles so they can ride around the land. Martin has

Fun in the sun: The children ride bikes around the estate

been so kind and so has everybody else we have met. But it is our dream to return to our country.’

Mr Holton said he was giving the £350-a-month maintenanc­e payments he receives from the Homes For Ukraine scheme to the family, and revealed that the women were ‘desperate to work’.

‘I’ve started to find work for them, but it is difficult as only Tamara speaks English’, he said.

‘The others will pick it up, though – especially the children.

‘They’ve been settling in well considerin­g what they’ve gone

‘It makes me ashamed to be British’ ‘It’s another world – like being in a castle’

through.’ He said he was moved to offer accommodat­ion at his house – which dates back to 1903, but was rebuilt in 2010 after being damaged by fire – after watching television coverage of the war.

Mr Holton is also appealing for donations of medical equipment, non-perishable food and other items such as generators through his vehicle business.

He has worked with the Ukrainian embassy in London and Coventry Refugee and Migrant Centre, which helped put him in touch with the refugees.

He said one consignmen­t of aid had been delivered, and he was still taking donations for more, adding: ‘I felt I needed to do something, however small. They need as much help as they can get.’

The attack by three men could not have been more brazen: a midafterno­on strike on the headquarte­rs of the state security bureau. One after another, they fired rocket-propelled grenades before jumping in their car and speeding off.

Smoke billowed from the building on the corner of Karl Marx Street and several windows were shattered but no one was hurt – it was a bank holiday so no staff were inside.

This mysterious attack on easter Monday was merely the first in a series of incidents that have sparked fears Russia’s struggling invasion of Ukraine may soon explode wider.

For they are happening in Transnistr­ia, a sliver of land on Ukraine’s western flank which broke away from Moldova during the collapse of the Soviet Union and remains firmly under Moscow’s thumb.

The incidents are accompanie­d by increasing­ly bellicose threats from the Kremlin – and fit Vladimir Putin’s cruel playbook by stirring tensions that he then uses as a flimsy excuse to send in his troops.

Bizarrely, one of the easter Monday attackers dropped his grenade launcher and it was revealed to be a Russianmad­e type used only by the armed forces of Moscow, Transnistr­ia and the African nation of Gabon.

‘I don’t think these were the Gabonese,’ commented a Moldovan minister drily.

Little wonder there is growing alarm in this small european nation of 3.5million people that they will be dragged into the Ukrainian war, a move that could add to pressure for Western interventi­on given the country’s close relationsh­ip with neighbouri­ng Romania, a member of both Nato and the eU.

‘Our assessment indicates the hardline pro-Russian camp is behind all this to get Russia to intervene,’ said Mihai Popsoi, head of the ruling party’s parliament­ary group. ‘These people don’t breathe without approval from the Kremlin.’

Popsoi admits to profound worries as Moldova relies on its neutrality for security more than on its small conscript army – especially with 1,500 Russian ‘peacekeepe­rs’ based just one hour’s drive from Tiraspol, Transnistr­ia’s capital, an isolated place of 400,000 people trapped in time from its Soviet past.

‘hope and optimism is not a good strategy – but it is all we have,’ he said.

YeT this Russian-born York University graduate, whose father returned to Moldova to fight against the separatist­s in the early 1990s, adds they have endured ‘30 years of anxiety over the frozen conflict’ in Transnistr­ia.

Transnistr­ia, an impoverish­ed area not even formally recognised by Russia, feels like a hangover from yesteryear with statues of Lenin, hammer and sickle insignia and black-and-white portraits of Soviet heroes hanging by the main street.

But when I sneaked in this week, I also saw Russian ‘peacekeepi­ng’ soldiers, military barracks and new armed checkpoint­s. Sources told me there has been significan­t recent work to upgrade the airport for handling military planes.

Tensions started rising after a senior Russian general said last month the Kremlin intended to take control of southern Ukraine to create a direct land link to Transnistr­ia where he claimed there was ‘oppression of the Russianspe­aking population’.

This was followed by calls from politician­s in Transnistr­ia for recognitio­n as an independen­t state in the face of ‘attacks’ and Nato meddling – a disturbing echo of the fake claims made by Putin’s stooges in the Donbas region of Ukraine before the war.

It is believed that there are 7,000

troops under Kremlin control, including Transnistr­ia’s own forces, along with an old Soviet arms dump containing 20,000 tonnes of munitions.

Ukrainian intelligen­ce is warning Putin may use Victory Day next Monday – marking Russia’s 1945 defeat of Nazi Germany – to create a pretext for invasion.

While in Transnistr­ia, I watched TV crews film officials handing out the Ribbon of St George (Russia’s version of the Remembranc­e Poppy, which is banned in Moldova) and interview recipients.

Oleksandr V Danylyuk, a Ukrainian government defence and security adviser, said Putin might seize Moldova to claim to Russia that his ‘troops can achieve miracles’.

The Royal United Services Institute also warns that Russia might destabilis­e Moldova to tie down Ukrainian forces, assist its own military logistics, counter the growing pro-European sensibilit­ies and show that support for Kyiv has wider consequenc­es.

Moscow’s concern over Moldova has been bubbling since November 2020 when voters threw out a pro-Kremlin president and turned to Western-educated leaders who promised to tackle corruption.

Vladimir Voronin, a veteran Communist Party chief who was Moldova’s president for eight years, recently claimed that people driven to despair have the right to revolt in the face of ‘the current dictatoria­l regime’.

Meanwhile, Russian intelligen­ce, having warned Putin about Russia’s declining influence in Moldova, hopes to exploit the economic fallout of the war which has seen spiralling energy prices, loss of exports and a huge influx of refugees over Ukraine’s border.

‘We struggle with everything in terms of prices, money, opportunit­ies – and now with various forms of Russian aggression,’ said Silvia Ursul, 32, an environmen­talist in Chisinau. ‘It is taking a toll on my mental health.’

Like many others, Ursul compares the situation with Europe’s build-up to World War Two.

‘The Kremlin will do whatever it takes to destabilis­e us and take us back to the Dark Ages.

‘It’s so tragic – I don’t see any hope for the best.’

Valeriu Gushan, 36, a welder and military reservist, said he is worried that Putin will oust the Moldovan government with the help of collaborat­ors – and that his country’s leaders are not preparing their people to fight back in the face of an existentia­l threat.

He said: ‘I fear the government won’t give us the weapons to protect ourselves from the Russians.’

Meanwhile, the Bulgarian government has urged its citizens to leave Moldova amid widespread claims that families are starting to flee potential conflict, with Ukraine having blocked roads by the border and some military-age men in Transnistr­ia already leaving to avoid conscripti­on.

‘People are under constant stress and don’t know what to do next,’ said Ekaterina, a hotel manager in Transnistr­ia’s capital.

‘There are so many negative scenarios. I hope we won’t have to hide in the bomb shelters that city services are preparing for us. We try to continue with our normal lives – although we are sitting on a powder keg.’

DESPITE the power of Russian propaganda in oligarch-dominated Transnistr­ia, analysts hope its leaders and citizens will seek to avoid conflict after seeing the destructio­n inflicted on Ukrainian cities such as Kharkiv and Mariupol.

Alexei Tulbure, Moldova’s former ambassador to the United Nations, believes that a Kremlin attack from Transnistr­ia on Odesa, just 25 miles along the coast, could backfire since its inferior troops from the enclave would be crushed by battle-hardened Ukrainian defence forces. ‘Ukraine would be happy since it would eliminate this Russian threat quickly,’ he said. However, Tulbure added that there is a risk that any attack on Moldova could drag in Romania, which has deep historic and cultural ties to his nation. Many people in both Moldova and Transnistr­ia have Romanian passports.

‘They would be under huge pressure to intervene – and this might give the green light for Nato,’ he said.

This week, the EU pledged to ‘significan­tly increase’ military support. During a visit to Chisinau, Charles Michel, president of the European Council, tweeted: ‘Transnistr­ia should not be used as a Trojan horse to further exacerbate tensions in the region.’

Tulbure, who is collecting oral histories from elderly Moldovans with memories from the 1940s of Stalin’s deportatio­ns to Siberia and the genocidal slaughter of Jews, sees hideous parallels between Putin’s actions and these past horrors.

‘We are witnessing the same sort of propaganda techniques to dehumanise people, the same sort of rape and murder being carried out by soldiers – and it is astounding that it’s coming from one of the victor countries in the Second World War.

‘I fear that Putin’s war has killed the Russia that existed in the Moldovan soul,’ he added, shaking his head sadly.

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 ?? ?? Luxury lodgings: Martin Holton’s Ukrainian guests are living with him at grade II-listed Greys Mallory, which is set in 30 acres, including paddocks and woodland
Luxury lodgings: Martin Holton’s Ukrainian guests are living with him at grade II-listed Greys Mallory, which is set in 30 acres, including paddocks and woodland
 ?? ?? To the manor flown: Mr Holton and Helen Aris, third and fourth at the back, with his guests
To the manor flown: Mr Holton and Helen Aris, third and fourth at the back, with his guests
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 ?? ?? Powder keg: Writer Ian Birrell sneaked into Transnistr­ia
Powder keg: Writer Ian Birrell sneaked into Transnistr­ia
 ?? ?? Worry: Civilians in Molovata Noua, Moldova
Worry: Civilians in Molovata Noua, Moldova

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