The Japan Times - Kharkiv children fleeing bombs find refuge in Italy

EUR -
AED 4.261823
AFN 72.528622
ALL 95.935053
AMD 436.604425
ANG 2.077337
AOA 1064.150424
ARS 1621.684021
AUD 1.663207
AWG 2.091456
AZN 1.972013
BAM 1.954452
BBD 2.332621
BDT 142.111955
BGN 1.983601
BHD 0.438117
BIF 3439.697273
BMD 1.160469
BND 1.481865
BOB 8.020501
BRL 6.074711
BSD 1.158116
BTN 108.517535
BWP 15.868983
BYN 3.428635
BYR 22745.199827
BZD 2.329323
CAD 1.598094
CDF 2642.961246
CHF 0.915871
CLF 0.026976
CLP 1065.148777
CNY 7.998767
CNH 7.998895
COP 4299.910399
CRC 539.611441
CUC 1.160469
CUP 30.752439
CVE 110.190403
CZK 24.433652
DJF 206.240378
DKK 7.472013
DOP 69.380041
DZD 153.640876
EGP 61.01957
ERN 17.407041
ETB 179.036181
FJD 2.578854
FKP 0.867133
GBP 0.866
GEL 3.139098
GGP 0.867133
GHS 12.653325
GIP 0.867133
GMD 85.292098
GNF 10150.909299
GTQ 8.868996
GYD 242.379647
HKD 9.082976
HNL 30.666918
HRK 7.534805
HTG 151.853926
HUF 389.479638
IDR 19618.89532
ILS 3.626872
IMP 0.867133
INR 108.973471
IQD 1517.153299
IRR 1523725.306455
ISK 143.805664
JEP 0.867133
JMD 182.758401
JOD 0.822797
JPY 184.274992
KES 150.094719
KGS 101.48131
KHR 4647.753411
KMF 494.360206
KPW 1044.43909
KRW 1738.07561
KWD 0.355684
KYD 0.965134
KZT 559.094274
LAK 24934.797199
LBP 103717.344221
LKR 364.038845
LRD 212.526123
LSL 19.743978
LTL 3.426564
LVL 0.701956
LYD 7.384001
MAD 10.796712
MDL 20.256025
MGA 4835.55972
MKD 61.640187
MMK 2437.180177
MNT 4142.258418
MOP 9.333261
MRU 46.18974
MUR 54.019143
MVR 17.940903
MWK 2008.171278
MXN 20.59192
MYR 4.588517
MZN 74.165781
NAD 19.743978
NGN 1596.35309
NIO 42.620229
NOK 11.270577
NPR 173.62098
NZD 1.991586
OMR 0.446197
PAB 1.158106
PEN 4.005936
PGK 5.001506
PHP 69.543442
PKR 323.562653
PLN 4.270452
PYG 7556.884098
QAR 4.223341
RON 5.09539
RSD 117.49978
RUB 93.417
RWF 1694.279997
SAR 4.356053
SBD 9.332465
SCR 16.6447
SDG 697.44196
SEK 10.82353
SGD 1.483712
SHP 0.870653
SLE 28.554417
SLL 24334.475204
SOS 661.82344
SRD 43.331609
STD 24019.373166
STN 24.482898
SVC 10.134008
SYP 128.752055
SZL 19.742295
THB 37.923957
TJS 11.112577
TMT 4.073248
TND 3.397
TOP 2.794131
TRY 51.462205
TTD 7.868571
TWD 37.054951
TZS 2979.57356
UAH 50.862514
UGX 4336.951829
USD 1.160469
UYU 47.198048
UZS 14129.252068
VES 532.514054
VND 30571.405319
VUV 138.685458
WST 3.177599
XAF 655.490648
XAG 0.015768
XAU 0.000253
XCD 3.136226
XCG 2.08726
XDR 0.81522
XOF 655.513227
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.891239
ZAR 19.661367
ZMK 10445.613833
ZMW 21.918162
ZWL 373.670667
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.63

    -0.49%

  • BCE

    0.0700

    25.83

    +0.27%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2800

    15.69

    -1.78%

  • RELX

    -1.3500

    32.46

    -4.16%

  • BCC

    1.6900

    73.57

    +2.3%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.33

    +0.33%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    0.9300

    86.77

    +1.07%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    14.66

    +1.23%

  • GSK

    0.9600

    52.95

    +1.81%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    11.86

    +1.52%

  • AZN

    1.7100

    185.78

    +0.92%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    57.76

    -0.28%

  • BP

    1.2200

    44.79

    +2.72%

Kharkiv children fleeing bombs find refuge in Italy
Kharkiv children fleeing bombs find refuge in Italy / Photo: MIGUEL MEDINA - AFP

Kharkiv children fleeing bombs find refuge in Italy

An Italian aid programme had for years provided Viktoria Shakshyna with a respite from the children's home where she lived in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine. When the bombs began falling, it became her lifeline.

Text size:

"You could hear the shots and the sounds of missiles... many buildings in the city centre were destroyed, like our cinema," the 16-year-old told AFP, recalling the torment in her city after Russia's invasion.

But unlike so many others still trapped in Kharkiv, her nightmare ended on March 7 when, after a long journey by train and bus, she arrived in Cusago, near Milan, into the care of the family she has stayed with twice a year since she was nine.

Here, her room is filled with cuddly toys and happy memories of Italy that helped sustain her during the worst days.

"If I have to die, I die. But I will have had a happy life, I was lucky, I managed to visit Disneyland in Paris, Berlin and Sicily," she had told her foster parents while in Kharkiv.

- Chernobyl disaster -

Viktoria came to Italy with the help of "The Children of the East", an Italian association which grew out of Europe-wide efforts to give children from Ukraine fresh air and new possibilities after the 1986 nuclear disaster at Chernobyl.

She regularly spent three months in the summer and one month in the winter in the quiet, green surroundings of Cusago.

It was a welcome break from Kharkiv, where she lived in one of Ukraine's notorious children's homes, which host orphans but also those separated from parents deemed unfit for various reasons, from criminality to alcoholism.

Since Russia invaded its neighbour on February 24, Ukraine's second-largest city has faced a daily barrage of Russian rocket attacks, day and night.

When the air raid sirens went off, Viktoria -- known as Vika -- took refuge in a school basement. Wrapped in a sleeping bag, she passed the time by playing Burraco, an Italian card game.

With her host mother, 47-year-old graphic designer Michela Slomp, nearby she says her future is Italy.

"My house is here, I want to finish school and go to university," she said in almost perfect Italian, her face lit up with a large smile.

Vika was not even born when Chernobyl's number four reactor exploded on April 26, 1986, causing the world's worst nuclear accident, killing hundreds and spreading radioactive contamination west across Europe.

But the desire to help the children of Ukraine lives on through the "Children of the East" association, run by Federica Bezziccheri.

Since the war began, her telephone has rung day and night with Italian families searching desperately for their foster children -- and young Ukrainians trying to get out.

"We are experiencing the war live. When we call the children via videolink, we can hear the bombing," Bezziccheri said.

- 'Die like rats' -

"The girls tell us how they only had to walk a hundred metres to see the dead. The boys signed up as volunteers, filling sandbags or digging trenches," she told AFP at her apartment in Milan.

"Some young people say it is better to risk being injured or killed helping their country, than to die like rats in a cage under a building."

So far, the association has brought 280 refugees to Italy, out of more than 100,000 Ukrainians who have sought refuge in the Mediterranean country.

The Italian foster family of Yana Alieva, 20, got her out of Kharkiv in January, anticipating Russia's invasion.

She too was brought up in a children's home but is now safe in a Milan apartment, a blue and yellow Ukrainian flag draped from the balcony.

"I am heartbroken. In a few days my world has disappeared. My boyfriend and my friends survived the bombs in the cellars before moving to safer areas, I fear for those who stayed," she said.

She is also angry. Before the war, "we were all united, Russians and Ukrainians, as one people", but now "we see who they really are".

She has enrolled in the Catholic university in Milan, but hopes to return to Ukraine after the war.

"My home is there," she said, adding she hoped "to participate in the reconstruction of my city and make it even more beautiful".

K.Inoue--JT