The Daily Telegraph

Captured medic ‘Tayra’ reveals Mariupol horrors shot on secret bodycam

Heroic Yuliia Paievska smuggled her harrowing record of events out of the city before she disappeare­d

- By Henry Samuel

IN A makeshift operating theatre in Mariupol, a celebrated Ukrainian medic pleads with a bloodied, critically wounded boy to “stay with me, little one”.

He had arrived with his wounded sister from a shootout at a checkpoint in the town besieged by Russian forces and in which their parents both died.

Using a body camera given to her by Prince Harry, Yuliia Paievska, known in Ukraine as Tayra – a moniker from the nickname she chose in the World of Warcraft video game – films the tragic moment she closes his eyes with her fingers. Turning away from his lifeless body, the medic breaks down in tears. “I hate [this],” she sobs, closing her eyes.

As always, she wears a stuffed animal attached to her vest to hand to any children she might treat.

Such terrible scenes would never have reached the wider world had Tayra, 53, not managed to smuggle hundreds of hours of footage out of Mariupol on a data card no bigger than a thumbnail, which she stuffed into a tampon. It confriday tains 256 gigabytes of her team’s frantic efforts over two weeks to bring people back from the brink of death – Ukrainians but also Russian soldiers.

Even before the film, Tayra was a household name in Ukraine as a star athlete and the person who trained the country’s volunteer medic force.

Her incredible spirit of resistance shines through as she embraces doctors and cracks jokes to cheer up despondent ambulance drivers and patients alike. At one point, the married mother of a teenage daughter chides an injured Ukrainian soldier who wants her to ring his mum, telling him to ring her himself but “don’t make her nervous”.

Tayra miraculous­ly managed to hand the harrowing clips to an Associated Press team, the last internatio­nal journalist­s in the city of Mariupol, as they left in a humanitari­an convoy.

To salvage the extraordin­ary video testimony, the team had to pass through 15 Russian checkpoint­s before reaching Ukrainian-controlled territory.

The next day, on March 16, Tayra disappeare­d with her driver Serhiy. On that same day, a Russian airstrike shattered the Mariupol theatre and killed close to 600 people.

She is now a prisoner, one of hundreds of prominent Ukrainians who have been kidnapped or captured, including local officials, journalist­s, activists and human rights defenders.

Tayra took on her name in 2013, when she joined first aid volunteers at the Euromaidan protests in Ukraine that ousted a Russia-backed government. In 2014, Russia seized the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine.

Tayra went to the eastern Donbas region, where Moscow-backed separatist­s fought Ukrainian forces. There, she taught tactical medicine and founded a group of medics called Tayra’s Angels. In 2019, she set up her medical unit in Mariupol.

Before the war, she was a member of the Ukraine Invictus Games for military veterans, where she was set to compete in archery and swimming.

She had received the body camera in 2021 to film for a Netflix documentar­y series on inspiratio­nal figures being produced by Prince Harry, who founded the Invictus Games. But when Russian forces invaded, she trained her lens on injured civilians and soldiers instead.

Ukraine’s government has said it tried to add Tayra’s name to a prisoner exchange weeks ago.

However, Russia denies holding her, despite recent footage of her handcuffed and with her face bruised and calling for an end to fighting.

Accusing her of trying to flee the city in disguise, a March 21 Russian news broadcast derides her colleagues as Nazis.

That was the last time she was seen. Tayra’s husband, Vadim Puzanov, told AP he had received little news about his wife since her disappeara­nce.

“Accusing a volunteer medic of all mortal sins, including organ traffickin­g, is already outrageous propaganda – I don’t even know who it’s for,” he said.

Shot from Feb 6 to March 10, her video is an intimate testament to her big-hearted, exuberant personalit­y and another symbol of epic Ukrainian resistance in the face of Russian aggression.

In one clip, a woman asks Tayra: “Are you going to treat the Russians?”

“They will not be as kind to us,” she replies. “But I couldn’t do otherwise. They are prisoners of war.”

‘Accusing a volunteer medic of all mortal sins, including organ traffickin­g, is outrageous progaganda’

‘They will not be as kind to us. But I couldn’t do otherwise. They are prisoners of war’

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 ?? ?? Yuliia Paievska and her driver Serhiy, main, have both disappeare­d; ‘Tayra’ films a Ukrainian medical evacuation helicopter landing, above left; an injured person is treated by personnel and Tayra, top; Russian soldiers arrive for treatment, above
Yuliia Paievska and her driver Serhiy, main, have both disappeare­d; ‘Tayra’ films a Ukrainian medical evacuation helicopter landing, above left; an injured person is treated by personnel and Tayra, top; Russian soldiers arrive for treatment, above

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