Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mariupol steel plant evacuees feel relief, grief

- BY CARA ANNA

ZAPORIZHZH­IA, Ukraine — When the moist concrete walls deep below ground and the mold and the cold and the weeks without fresh fruit or vegetables became too much to bear, some in the bunker underneath Elina Tsybulchen­ko’s office decided to visit the sky.

They made their way, through darkness lit by flashlight­s and lamps powered by car batteries, to a treasured spot in the bombarded Azovstal steel plant, the last Ukrainian holdout in the ruined city of Mariupol. There, they could look up and see a sliver of blue or smoky gray. It was like peering from the bottom of a well. For those who could not, or dared not, climb to the surface, it was as distant as peace.

But seeing the sky meant hope. It was enough to make Elina’s adult daughter, Tetyana, cry.

The Tsybulchen­ko family was among the first to emerge from the steel plant in a tense, days-long evacuation negotiated by the United Nations and the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross with the government­s of Russia, which now controls Mariupol, and Ukraine, which wants the city back. A brief cease-fire allowed more than 100 civilians to flee the plant.

They arrived safely in the southern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzh­ia this week. There, they described for The Associated Press their two months at the center of hell, and their escape.

Hundreds of civilians and Ukrainian fighters remain trapped at the plant and Russian forces have pushed their way inside. The seizure of Mariupol is expected to play a central role in Moscow’s celebratio­n on May 9 of Victory Day, historical­ly marking the end of World War II.

In the earliest days of Russia’s invasion Tsybulchen­ko, 54, was shocked by the bombardmen­t of her city. Like many residents with memories of civil defense drills, she knew the steel plant had the only real bunkers in town. When she, her husband Serhii, her daughter and her son-in-law Ihor Trotsak decided to hole up in the one under her office, she assumed they would stay a few days.

“We didn’t even take toothbrush­es,” Elina said. But a few days turned into 60.

They had brought only their documents, three blankets, two dogs and fruit carried in a basket they used for Orthodox Easter. They didn’t think they would mark the holiday there weeks later.

The steel plant has a maze of more than 30 bunkers and tunnels spread out over its 4 miles, and each bunker was its own world. Evacuees had little or no communicat­ion with those elsewhere in the plant; they would eventually meet on the buses to Zaporizhzh­ia and compare experience­s.

Their isolation complicate­s estimates of the number of civilians and Ukrainian fighters who remain. A few hundred civilians are still trapped, the Ukrainian side said this week, including more than 20 children. Another evacuation effort was reported underway Friday.

 ?? AP PHOTO/FRANCISCO SECO ?? From left, Serhii Tsybulchen­ko, Ihor Trotsak, Tetyana Trotsak and Elina Tsybulchen­ko, who fled from the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine, arrive by bus Tuesday to a reception center for displaced people in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine.
AP PHOTO/FRANCISCO SECO From left, Serhii Tsybulchen­ko, Ihor Trotsak, Tetyana Trotsak and Elina Tsybulchen­ko, who fled from the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine, arrive by bus Tuesday to a reception center for displaced people in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine.

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