The Morning Call (Sunday)

Killings fail to stop health mission

‘Struggling and fighting for life is our principle’

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

On a bracingly cold day in March, four people set out from Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, to deliver lifesaving medicines, heating devices and food to the besieged residents of Chernihiv, in the northeast.

Only one survived. During a quick stop en route, the convoy was hit by Russian shelling. Two of the four people died instantly. A third was pelted by fragments and died a half-hour later. The survivor was a man who had stepped away from the vans to relieve himself.

Among the dead: 21-yearold Aanastasii­a Tagirova, who had wanted to go to Chernihiv to reunite with her boyfriend, and her cat.

The ill-fated trip, on March 30, was organized by 100% Life, a large nonprofit group that serves Ukrainians living with HIV. It was not the group’s first mission to Chernihiv, nor its last.

Undeterred, the organizati­on’s staff and volunteers have continued to make forays into Chernihiv, learning to be nimble and unobtrusiv­e to Russian eyes. So far, they have delivered enough medicines to treat the 1,800 people in Chernihiv known to be living with HIV, although an unknown number may have fled the city or been killed.

Public health groups like these are going to extraordin­ary lengths to help their compatriot­s and to preserve Ukraine’s hard-won progress against HIV, tuberculos­is and other scourges. While they have always committed to saving lives, the goal has come to mean something entirely different since the invasion.

“Struggling and fighting for life is our principle,” Dmytro Sherembei, who heads 100% Life, said through a translator in a recent interview. “We always have to be ready to fight for life under any circumstan­ces and any conditions.”

Experts have warned that wars nearly always lead to public health crises. Pathogens find easy targets among large groups huddled closely together in basements and refugee camps, children who miss routine vaccinatio­ns and patients who lose access to medication­s.

Interrupti­ons in treatment for HIV and TB can breed versions of the pathogens that are resistant to the medication­s. Ukraine and its neighbors already represent the global epicenter of drug-resistant tuberculos­is.

On March 25, volunteers from 100% Life loaded two vans with a half-ton of medicines — including liquid formulatio­ns of HIV treatments for children — clothes and food. The only bridge to Chernihiv had been destroyed by bombing, so they drove the vans to the banks of the Dnipro River, transferre­d the cargo to a boat and unloaded it on the other side. They returned with 34 people fleeing Chernihiv.

On the second trip, on March 30, volunteers again loaded two minivans with food and medicines, and this time heating devices for freezing residents. They were joined by three vans from an evangelica­l church hoping to evacuate some members from Chernihiv.

The shelling incinerate­d four of the vans and partially damaged the fifth. Sherembei said three people from the church group had been taken to a hospital, but he did not know their fates.

“The Russians were bombing us, they were shelling us, knowing full well that it was a humanitari­an convoy,” he said.

The organizati­on lost two volunteers: Bohdan Stefanyshy­n, 40, and Oleksii Antonov, 28. Yurii Luniov, the 41-year-old volunteer who had stepped away into the bushes, was spared.

Even after the tragedy, abandoning the missions was not an option — not when there were people, including many children, who needed the medicines, he said. So the volunteers thought of ways to make themselves less conspicuou­s, and have made three trips so far.

Figuring that one van would draw less attention than a convoy, and that the Russians might be unlikely to use precious missiles on a single target, they swapped the two small vans for a large dull-colored one. They no longer travel with the church group. They packed solar panels, candles for people living out of dank basements, and food. The aid workers could bring back only about 10 people.

By the time of the March 30 trip, the Ukrainian military had fashioned a makeshift pontoon bridge across the river that the van could traverse.

Not having to unload and load the cargo slashed the time it took to cross the river from four hours to just 10 minutes.

On the Chernihiv side, the five 100% Life workers who opted to stay behind in Chernihiv, as well as staff from an infectious disease unit in one of the few hospitals that’s still standing, stood ready to collect and distribute the supplies.

Communicat­ing with these helpers held its own challenges. Many of them were holed up in basements except for brief stints.

Once the plan was finalized, the news had to be circulated among patients by word-of-mouth. In the past few days, reestablis­hed power stations have eased these conditions somewhat, Sherembei said.

While Chernihiv residents with HIV have enough treatments for now, the medicines are in short supply. The United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief has scoured the world to secure spare stocks of HIV treatments for Ukraine.

 ?? LYNSEY ADDARIO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An aid tent after an explosion at a residentia­l complex March 20 in Kyiv. Groups hope to prevent a public health disaster.
LYNSEY ADDARIO/THE NEW YORK TIMES An aid tent after an explosion at a residentia­l complex March 20 in Kyiv. Groups hope to prevent a public health disaster.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States