San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

UKRAINIANS GROW WEARY AS WAR WARNINGS GROW

Some are leaving areas thought to be potential targets

- BY VALERIE HOPKINS, MARIA VARENIKOVA & MARC SANTORA Hopkins, Varenikova and Santora write for The New York Times. The Washington Post contribute­d to this report.

Every February seems to be difficult for Julia Po. It is the month she had to leave her home in Crimea in 2014, after Russian troops annexed it and pro-moscow separatist­s took control of parts of eastern Ukraine.

But this February has been particular­ly painful, with Russian troops massed on Ukraine’s borders and the United States and its allies warning that an invasion looks imminent. On Friday, President Joe Biden, while still pressing for a diplomatic solution, said he believed President Vladimir Putin of Russia had made a final decision to invade within a week and target Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital.

U.S. officials said as many as 190,000 Russian troops and members of aligned militias were arrayed near the borders and in the eastern regions held by the separatist­s. In the east, separatist leaders called for mass evacuation­s, claiming that Ukraine’s military was planning a large-scale attack — an assertion that Biden dismissed as a lie, meant to give Russia a pretext to invade.

The crisis has taken a toll on many Ukrainians, including Po, an artist. She had been planning an exhibition in western Ukraine, but she forgot about it until the last moment, overwhelme­d by stress over the troop buildup.

She decided to go — but then began to worry that if worst-case scenarios about the invasion come true, she would be stuck in the western city of Lviv for a long time.

“I read the news and think to myself, ‘How I can go if I have a cat here?’ ” said Po, 36. “And I cancel everything. The next day it gets calmer and I book again.”

Po said her background made it hard to be an optimist. “When you are from the Crimea and have already lost your home, you understand that everything is possible,” she said.

In Kyiv, there has been an air of unreality about the situation, and stoic resolve. Despite the smoldering eightyear conflict with the separatist­s in the east, many Ukrainians have tried to keep moving forward.

But the recent warnings have had a powerful effect, though Ukraine’s government has sought to discourage citizens from panicking.

Anna Kovalyova, a writer with three small children, moved with her family from Kyiv to Lviv last Sunday. She did so after the U.S. Embassy said it would move its operations there.

“We moved temporaril­y because we really felt growing panic in Kyiv,” Kovalyova, 29, said in an interview.

“The atmosphere in Lviv is completely different,” she said. “You don’t feel so anxious here. And there are a lot of people like us here from Kyiv, mostly with children, who came for a week or two to spend uncertain times.”

At least one school in Ukraine was striving to offer reassuranc­es to parents, sending messages to say that the school had a basement, presumably to be used as a shelter for the children in the event of an attack, and that drills were being held.

In the village of Stanytsia Luhanska, which was hit by artillery fire on Thursday, a kindergart­en was struck and shells landed on homes. A family that lives in one of the damaged homes spent Saturday morning packing up clothes to hide in their basement. They don’t plan on evacuating but are worried more artillery strikes will destroy all of their belongings.

“This has been endless day and night,” said Katya, the matriarch of the home who declined to give her surname. “And we’re scared it’s just the start.”

 ?? TYLER HICKS NYT ?? A Ukrainian soldier stands next to a crater left by a mortar near Troitske, Ukraine, on Friday.
TYLER HICKS NYT A Ukrainian soldier stands next to a crater left by a mortar near Troitske, Ukraine, on Friday.

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