Ukrainian veterans in Poland prepare to re-enlist as Russia tensions
mount
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[February 14, 2022]
By Joanna Plucinska and Kuba Stezycki
WROCLAW, Poland (Reuters) - Dmytro
Dovzhenko, 40, has been living in Poland with his wife and two children
since 2019, running a business handling anything from hairdressing to
beauty to food.
But he still wears a large signet ring with the inscription "Loyal
forever" from his military marine unit back home in Ukraine. And, if
Russia invades his home country, he will report for military duty, ready
to fight, as soon as he can.
"If there's a war, a battle... I only need 24 hours. Within 24 hours,
I'm back in the military," Dovzhenko, who is from the central Ukrainian
city of Poltava, told Reuters from his home in Wroclaw, a city in
western Poland.
Washington has said Russia, which has more than 100,000 troops massed
near Ukraine, could invade at any moment. Moscow denies having any such
plans.
Dovzhenko, who runs a foundation of Ukrainian veterans across the
European Union, says he is one of an estimated 700 soldiers in Poland
who would be ready to return home to take up arms.
He suspects that, taking into account all 10,000 Ukrainian veterans
across the EU, the number of those ready to re-enlist is substantially
higher than 700 - likely closer to 7,000.
The Ukrainian Ministry of Veterans said in an emailed statement there
are no statistics on how many veterans from the conflict that started in
2014 are abroad but there are a total of 420,000 people registered as
having once defended Ukraine.
The veterans who are readying to go back now are also better prepared
than the Ukrainian soldiers who took up arms in the Donetsk and Luhansk
regions to fight separatists after Russia annexed Crimea in 2014,
members of the foundation told Reuters.
"We will be able to give even more of our professionalism, our
experience this time... If you've already done it once, it's very easy
to do it again," said Ukrainian veteran Serhii Sklarenko, who asked
Reuters to use a modified last name to protect his identity.
He and Dovzhenko showed Reuters pictures from their time fighting in
2014 and the years that followed, pointing out weapons from the 20th
century and a hodge podge of military attire donated by the Germans,
Canadians and other nationalities.
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Dmytro Dovzhenko, a Ukrainian veteran and military medical
instructor, shows an Ukrainian flag, a souvenir from the army from
the war in Donbas, during an interview with Reuters at his home in
Wroclaw, Poland February 12, 2022. REUTERS/Kuba Stezycki
Since then, the Ukrainian army had
received substantial international support and was much better armed
and trained.
"Now we have modern weapons, modern medicine. We
have everything we need," Dovzhenko said.
OTHER WAYS TO HELP
Yuriy Tokar, the Ukrainian consul in Wroclaw, said he expected many
Ukrainians to help not just by enlisting to fight but also by
collecting resources from the diaspora.
"Gathering various necessary items (clothes, food, medicine) for our
army and also financial support are very important," Tokar told
Reuters. "There's no need to go to Ukraine to provide such support."
He added he didn't expect a mass exodus of Ukrainians, as countries
like Poland have warned. Ukrainians, instead of migrating, were
trying to register for gun licences en masse in order to defend
themselves, Tokar said.
Jurii Kubrytskyi, a 49-year-old lawyer by training from Cherkasy, a
city in central Ukraine, said he would be ready to return and enlist
for the first time if war were to break out.
He had already run campaigns collecting essential items, ranging
from personal hygiene products to food to special military attire,
for soldiers in eastern Ukraine back when he lived in Cherkasy. He'd
also worked as a police officer.
But despite his comfortable job at an accounting office in Poland,
he told Reuters he was now ready to die for Ukraine if needed.
"Weapons do not fire. People fire and Ukrainians know how to shoot
and want to shoot," Kubrytskyi said. "I am a citizen of Ukraine,
Ukraine is my country. I'm certain that it is my duty to defend my
country."
(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk in Kyiv, Editing by William
Maclean)
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