Eastern Europe struggles to cope as Ukraine refugee exodus hits 3.5
million
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[March 22, 2022]
By Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Pawel Florkiewicz and Luiza Ilie
WARSAW/
BUCHAREST (Reuters) - More than 3.5
million people have fled abroad from the war in Ukraine, United Nations
data showed on Tuesday, leaving Eastern Europe scrambling to provide
them with care, schools and jobs even as daily numbers crossing borders
ease.
The millions who have left Ukraine since Russia's invasion began have
made their way on foot, by rail, bus or car to neighbouring countries
such as Poland and Romania before some travel on across Europe. Most,
however, have not done so.
While fewer have crossed borders over the past week, the scale of the
task of providing homes to those seeking safety in the European Union is
becoming increasingly apparent, above all in Eastern and Central Europe.
Poland, home to the biggest Ukrainian Diaspora in the region even before
the war, has taken in more than 2.1 million people and while some plan
to head elsewhere, the influx has left public services struggling to
cope.
"The number of children of refugees from Ukraine in Polish schools is
increasing by about 10,000 per day," Minister of Education Przemyslaw
Czarnek told public radio, saying 85,000 children had been enrolled in
Polish schools.
Czarnek said authorities were organising courses in basic Polish for
Ukrainian teachers so they could be employed in local schools and teach
preparatory classes for Ukrainian children before entering the school
system.
With men of conscription age obliged to stay in Ukraine, the exodus has
consisted primarily of women and children, many wanting to stay in
countries near Ukraine to be closer to loved ones left behind.
In a video posted on Twitter, Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski said 10,000
Ukrainian students had enrolled in Warsaw schools and that a variety of
options, including Ukrainian online classes, were needed to avoid a
collapse of the city's education system.
"We will be flexible, we will act, because we want all those young
people who are in Warsaw to be able to study, whichever option they
choose," he said.
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A girl embraces her father as he crossed the border after fleeing
from Kharkiv in Ukraine to Romania, following Russia's invasion of
Ukraine, at the border crossing in Siret, Romania, March 21, 2022.
REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne
UKRAINIAN TEACHERS
While border crossings such as Medyka in eastern Poland and Isaccea
in northeast Romania have grown less busy, officials are wary that
any intensification of the fighting in Ukraine could trigger a new
influx.
The head of the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR), Filippo Grandi, said on
Sunday the war had uprooted 10 million people since it began on Feb.
24, most of them still displaced within Ukraine rather than abroad.
Russia denies targeting civilians, describing its actions as a
"special military operation" to demilitarise and "denazify" Ukraine.
Ukraine and Western allies call this a baseless pretext for Russia's
invasion of a democratic country of 44 million.
More than 500,000 people have fled to Romania, where authorities are
sizing up the task at hand while seeking to recruit Ukrainian
teachers from among the refugees.
Cosmina Simiean Nicolescu, head of Bucharest's social assistance
unit, said 60 Ukrainian children had begun classes there this week
while many private kindergartens and schools had welcomed refugees.
With refugee numbers nearing breaking point in parts of Eastern
Europe, Nicolescu said refugees were returning to Romania in the
hope of finding a less difficult situation.
"There are people we have personally put on trains to go to the west
who we see back at the train station because conditions in countries
like Hungary or the Czech Republic don't suit them," she said.
(Additional reporting by Jan Lopatka and Jason Hovet in Prague;
Writing by Niklas Pollard, editing by Ed Osmond)
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