In epic detour via Russia, Ukrainians skirt war front to flee to EU
Send a link to a friend
[May 12, 2022] By
Andrius Sytas
TALLINN (Reuters) - When Pavel fled his
home region of Kherson in southern Ukraine he set his sights on reaching
Portugal, where his sister-in-law lives - but like increasing numbers of
his compatriots escaping the war, he took the long way round.
Too frightened to head west out of the Russian-controlled region and
across the conflict's front line, he and his wife and baby daughter
skirted it by travelling east into Crimea and then north through Russia,
eventually entering the EU via Estonia - a detour of more than 3,000 km
(1,860 miles).
After a journey of 90 hours in trains and buses, they reached Tallinn
bus station in the early hours of Thursday, three of the hundreds of
Ukrainians who arrive there every night on one of 12 daily bus services
from Saint Petersburg.
"How can you even think of going through the war zone, where both sides
shoot at each other?," the 38-year-old - looking exhausted and speaking
slowly - told Reuters, declining to give his family name.
"(But) it was scary to even imagine going to through Russia, where you
don't know if people would be friendly to you.
"We took care to always take the next train or bus and never stop
anywhere. Because you never know where you'd get stuck."
Pavel asked volunteers at the station to book the family a ticket on the
next bus to Warsaw, with a view to heading towards Lisbon from there. As
his daughter slept in a stroller, hugging a knitted rabbit, he added: "I
did not know travelling is so hard on young children."
DOUBLED CAPACITY
Authorities in the Baltic state estimate that more than 19,000
Ukrainians have crossed into Estonia from Russia since the war began in
late February.
The daily departures from Saint Petersburg have doubled in capacity
during that time and, along with two daily 23-hour buses from Moscow to
Riga, are among the few remaining scheduled services between Russia and
the European Union.
[to top of second column]
|
People leave the Lux Express bus from St. Petersburg at the Tallinn
Bus Station, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Tallinn, Estonia
May 11, 2022. REUTERS/Janis Laizans
Most arrive at night, due to long delays in
processing Ukrainian refugees' documents on the Russian side of the
border, which for Pavel took over two hours and included a search of
his phone.
To welcome them, Tallinn bus station has equipped a room with nine
beds and also provides hot soup for those who need to spend the
night there.
The beds are often all occupied, so dozens more settle where they
can on benches and the station floor to wait for dawn, said bus
station chief Airika Aruksaar.
She said the first arrivals from Eastern Ukraine reached Tallinn in
late March, and their numbers have been steadily going up since,
while refugees fleeing via Poland are down.
Nine out of ten Ukrainians who reach Estonia are seeking onward
travel, she said.
Many arriving late on Wednesday and early on Thursday told Reuters
they were looking to move on quickly after mostly uneventful
journeys through Russia.
But for some, the sense of loss at having left a ravaged homeland
remained overwhelming.
"I just want to go back. To die in Ukraine," said Olga Fyodorova,
69, preparing for a night in the bus station dormitory having
travelled from Russian-controlled Luhansk with her son Herman, 43.
"I just want this all to end".
(Reporting by Andrius Sytas; editing by John Stonestreet)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|