After fleeing Kyiv, Turkish father and son try to leave trauma behind
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[March 17, 2022]
By Mert Ozkan
ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkish student Utku
Ozdemiroglu and his father Cengiz were packing their bags for a flight
home from Kyiv when the first bombs landed.
Cengiz was in the city to accompany his son, a third year medical
student, through to the end of his academic term at Kyiv University. By
the time they heard that war was imminent and bought their tickets for
Turkey, it was too late.
"When the first explosion went off, the first bomb was fired, it shook
the apartment like an earthquake... The windows were rattled. I thought
they were shattering," 24-year-old Ozdemiroglu told Reuters.
Fearing the worst, he texted his mother in Ankara.
"Am I going to die here? Is it over? Will my life end here? I had all
these fears coming to my mind and I texted my mom and my younger
brother" 'I love you so much and I may not be able to see you again',"
he said.
He was among 5,000 Turks studying in Ukraine, according to figures
released by the education consulting company ELT. They found themselves
in danger when Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.
Moscow calls the offensive a "special operation" to disarm and "denazify"
Ukraine.
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Soon, there were no flights out of
Ukraine. After staying in a shelter for a couple of days, the father
and son found a bus headed for Romania. By then, their nerves were
frayed.
"When the bus started to run, I turned to Utku who
was next to me and told him: 'Son, where did the bomb go off? Let's
go to the shelter immediately.' He said: 'No, dad. It's just the
engine of the bus'," Cengiz Ozdemir said.
Now back in Ankara, he tries to overcome the trauma by mingling in
crowds. "I feel the need to speak and listen to people."
Turkey's foreign ministry says around three-quarters of an estimated
20,000 Turks have now been evacuated from Ukraine, but some remain
in peril.
Ukraine's embassy in Ankara said last week that 86 Turks, including
34 children, were sheltering in a mosque in the besieged southern
port city of Mariupol. Turkey has not commented on the numbers but
said evacuating citizens from Mariupol is a priority.
"War is an experience we don't want anyone to live," said the older
Ozdemir. "God forbid anyone should see it."
(Reporting by Yesim Dikmen; Editing by Dominic Evans and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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