The Fort Worth Press - Ukraine displaced fear losing homes again

USD -
AED 3.673014
AFN 70.133986
ALL 94.635739
AMD 396.059903
ANG 1.799356
AOA 912.000028
ARS 1025.779825
AUD 1.60155
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.694813
BAM 1.8785
BBD 2.015848
BDT 119.310378
BGN 1.88099
BHD 0.376157
BIF 2952.312347
BMD 1
BND 1.356673
BOB 6.899102
BRL 6.730497
BSD 0.998415
BTN 84.985833
BWP 13.866398
BYN 3.267349
BYR 19600
BZD 2.009028
CAD 1.435665
CDF 2870.00052
CHF 0.89956
CLF 0.035853
CLP 989.289863
CNY 7.298203
CNH 7.306215
COP 4412.81
CRC 506.939442
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 105.90693
CZK 24.18415
DJF 177.719407
DKK 7.175397
DOP 60.817365
DZD 134.848703
EGP 50.903598
ERN 15
ETB 127.121932
EUR 0.961795
FJD 2.31865
FKP 0.791982
GBP 0.797255
GEL 2.810189
GGP 0.791982
GHS 14.676079
GIP 0.791982
GMD 71.999797
GNF 8628.919944
GTQ 7.690535
GYD 208.884407
HKD 7.766545
HNL 25.367142
HRK 7.172906
HTG 130.547952
HUF 396.2398
IDR 16175.55
ILS 3.652565
IMP 0.791982
INR 85.41365
IQD 1307.880709
IRR 42087.50203
ISK 139.559837
JEP 0.791982
JMD 155.558757
JOD 0.709302
JPY 157.097498
KES 129.039946
KGS 86.999622
KHR 4012.870384
KMF 466.125016
KPW 899.999441
KRW 1458.744964
KWD 0.30818
KYD 0.832061
KZT 517.226144
LAK 21834.509917
LBP 89407.001873
LKR 294.251549
LRD 181.712529
LSL 18.564664
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.901311
MAD 10.068386
MDL 18.420977
MGA 4709.215771
MKD 59.008296
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3397.99987
MOP 7.98713
MRU 39.855929
MUR 47.069621
MVR 15.398858
MWK 1731.258704
MXN 20.16505
MYR 4.481503
MZN 63.903729
NAD 18.564664
NGN 1541.159938
NIO 36.738222
NOK 11.42489
NPR 135.977525
NZD 1.76951
OMR 0.383954
PAB 0.998415
PEN 3.717812
PGK 4.05225
PHP 58.329744
PKR 277.955434
PLN 4.100759
PYG 7786.582145
QAR 3.631177
RON 4.784901
RSD 112.211193
RUB 100.003366
RWF 1392.786822
SAR 3.754301
SBD 8.383555
SCR 14.257023
SDG 601.500369
SEK 11.080102
SGD 1.358905
SHP 0.791982
SLE 22.798836
SLL 20969.503029
SOS 570.619027
SRD 35.058011
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.736493
SYP 2512.530243
SZL 18.572732
THB 34.170087
TJS 10.922538
TMT 3.51
TND 3.183499
TOP 2.342104
TRY 35.174021
TTD 6.784805
TWD 32.7065
TZS 2420.584035
UAH 41.863132
UGX 3654.612688
UYU 44.441243
UZS 12889.593238
VES 51.575819
VND 25430
VUV 118.722003
WST 2.762788
XAF 630.031215
XAG 0.033795
XAU 0.000382
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.7655
XOF 630.031215
XPF 114.546415
YER 250.375031
ZAR 18.62425
ZMK 9001.208119
ZMW 27.630985
ZWL 321.999592
  • BCC

    0.9500

    123.19

    +0.77%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    11.73

    +0.68%

  • RELX

    0.3000

    45.89

    +0.65%

  • RIO

    -0.0300

    59.2

    -0.05%

  • RBGPF

    59.8000

    59.8

    +100%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.65

    +0.42%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.24

    -0.14%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    58.86

    -0.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.1321

    23.77

    -0.56%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.15

    +0.41%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    22.9

    +0.26%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    66.3

    -0.5%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    34.03

    -0.09%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    36.26

    +0.11%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    8.43

    +0.71%

  • BP

    0.0400

    28.79

    +0.14%

Ukraine displaced fear losing homes again
Ukraine displaced fear losing homes again

Ukraine displaced fear losing homes again

When she fled the conflict zone in east Ukraine, Lyudmyla Bobova never imagined she would celebrate her 59th birthday, almost eight years later, still living in emergency housing and under the threat of fresh bloodshed.

Text size:

"We have got used to living here, we don't have a choice," she told AFP, standing in the doorway of the small room she shares with her disabled husband and elderly mother.

Now, as fears swirl that over 100,000 Russian troops camped along Ukraine's border could stage an invasion, there are fresh warnings that millions more people could join the hundreds of thousands like Bobova already forced from their homes.

It was the summer of 2014 when Bobova says she hastily packed two bags and left her native Lugansk region as it was engulfed by fighting between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed separatists.

She headed to Ukraine's second city of Kharkiv, the nearest major hub controlled by the government, in the country's largely Russian-speaking industrial east.

By early 2015 she was living in pre-fabricated housing put up in a hurry for 500 vulnerable displaced with funding from the German government.

It was meant to be a temporary solution, but years later 175 people, including 70 children, are still living in the cluster of white cubes.

The makeshift housing is showing its age. The units are creaking, taps are broken and water heaters keep breaking down more frequently.

- 'Where would we go?' -

Bobova hopes against hope that the local authorities will find a more lasting fix for their accommodation woes.

She says she can't go back to her former home where her son is buried, as it lies across the volatile front line in separatist-held territory.

And as tensions have risen over a possible new Russian offensive, she says she doesn't want to be forced to leave Kharkiv, located precariously just 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the border.

"We had to live, so we fled, my mother was still walking with her cane but now it's difficult and my husband's health has deteriorated," she says.

"And where would we go?"

The Ukrainian government says that some 1.5 million displaced people have been registered around the country since Moscow seized Crimea and war broke out in the east in 2014. Around 135,000 of them are in Kharkiv.

The Norwegian Refugee Council has warned that up to two million people living along the 427-kilometre front line risk being forced from their homes if the conflict escalates.

Activist Yevgenia Levenshtein remembers how hundreds of displaced arrived at the Kharkiv train station back in 2014 "with nothing, families and children, in tears, from the areas being bombed".

Her association, Ukrainian Frontiers, provided emergency aid -- hygiene products, food, housing, work -- to the newcomers.

Given the recent warnings, the organisation has started to prepare again for a fresh wave of evacuations by repairing its minibuses, stocking up on fuel and ordering basic necessities.

- 'Shelter' -

Some who fled the violence have returned to their homes in the self-proclaimed separatist "republics" despite the low-level fighting rumbling on.

And those who remain behind in Kharkiv have strong pro-Ukrainian views.

"They chose Kharkiv for their new life, it's their shelter," says Levenshtein.

"They are ready, at least for now, to stay and defend it. But how? That's a mystery to me."

This is the case of Olga Todorova, who still has tears in her eyes when she tells of how she fled Lugansk by train to avoid separatist checkpoints on the roads.

In the room she rents in a Soviet-era building on the outskirts of Kharkiv, the 53-year-old journalist says she has already made up her mind what to do in case of a Russian attack.

"I know how scary it is, the Russian bombing and mortars or missiles, but we won't leave," she says.

Her partner Sergiy Kolesnyshenko, who was detained and beaten by the separatists, says he is ready to join the reserve forces in case of a Russian attack.

"How much time can we spend running away?" he asks "We can run away but what's the point?"

A.Maldonado--TFWP