Zürcher Nachrichten - 'This is my third war': Ukraine's elderly are conflict's forgotten victims

EUR -
AED 3.873085
AFN 71.98403
ALL 98.091865
AMD 410.865926
ANG 1.906142
AOA 961.670233
ARS 1056.356293
AUD 1.632295
AWG 1.89276
AZN 1.796773
BAM 1.955638
BBD 2.135523
BDT 126.389518
BGN 1.958718
BHD 0.396967
BIF 3123.440963
BMD 1.054463
BND 1.417882
BOB 7.308394
BRL 6.112667
BSD 1.057612
BTN 88.859931
BWP 14.458801
BYN 3.461213
BYR 20667.465977
BZD 2.131923
CAD 1.486845
CDF 3021.035587
CHF 0.936631
CLF 0.03727
CLP 1028.384713
CNY 7.626405
CNH 7.630566
COP 4744.106555
CRC 538.255361
CUC 1.054463
CUP 27.943258
CVE 110.255856
CZK 25.271148
DJF 188.334381
DKK 7.463529
DOP 63.724715
DZD 140.438353
EGP 51.981689
ERN 15.816938
ETB 128.080678
FJD 2.399904
FKP 0.832305
GBP 0.835979
GEL 2.883997
GGP 0.832305
GHS 16.895599
GIP 0.832305
GMD 74.867216
GNF 9114.244125
GTQ 8.168323
GYD 221.171657
HKD 8.209133
HNL 26.709785
HRK 7.521754
HTG 139.038469
HUF 408.314303
IDR 16764.161957
ILS 3.948029
IMP 0.832305
INR 89.078624
IQD 1385.485097
IRR 44384.968904
ISK 145.147177
JEP 0.832305
JMD 167.96607
JOD 0.747724
JPY 162.746281
KES 136.968641
KGS 91.215016
KHR 4272.645655
KMF 491.985906
KPW 949.015895
KRW 1471.950676
KWD 0.32429
KYD 0.881427
KZT 525.596411
LAK 23240.072622
LBP 94711.445261
LKR 308.984375
LRD 194.603861
LSL 19.241504
LTL 3.113554
LVL 0.637834
LYD 5.165572
MAD 10.544126
MDL 19.217406
MGA 4919.592002
MKD 61.604891
MMK 3424.85323
MNT 3583.063688
MOP 8.480797
MRU 42.220499
MUR 49.781576
MVR 16.291845
MWK 1833.947905
MXN 21.463322
MYR 4.713979
MZN 67.384089
NAD 19.241504
NGN 1756.545202
NIO 38.916773
NOK 11.69185
NPR 142.176209
NZD 1.797139
OMR 0.405466
PAB 1.057612
PEN 4.015067
PGK 4.252647
PHP 61.930171
PKR 293.652946
PLN 4.319842
PYG 8252.315608
QAR 3.85558
RON 4.982551
RSD 116.987298
RUB 105.311966
RWF 1452.579533
SAR 3.960703
SBD 8.847383
SCR 14.594154
SDG 634.2631
SEK 11.576538
SGD 1.416885
SHP 0.832305
SLE 23.83472
SLL 22111.557433
SOS 604.449871
SRD 37.238876
STD 21825.245831
SVC 9.254233
SYP 2649.368641
SZL 19.234405
THB 36.739624
TJS 11.274465
TMT 3.701164
TND 3.336823
TOP 2.469661
TRY 36.323111
TTD 7.181404
TWD 34.245573
TZS 2813.266686
UAH 43.686277
UGX 3881.678079
USD 1.054463
UYU 45.386236
UZS 13537.877258
VES 48.222799
VND 26772.804141
VUV 125.187913
WST 2.943628
XAF 655.902604
XAG 0.034867
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.849738
XDR 0.796734
XOF 655.902604
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.483869
ZAR 19.17963
ZMK 9491.432086
ZMW 29.037592
ZWL 339.536511
  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    6.82

    +0.59%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

'This is my third war': Ukraine's elderly are conflict's forgotten victims
'This is my third war': Ukraine's elderly are conflict's forgotten victims / Photo: Ed JONES - AFP

'This is my third war': Ukraine's elderly are conflict's forgotten victims

Shuffling down the corridor of a refugee centre in Ukraine with his grey tracksuit sleeve rolled to his shoulder, 71-year-old Vladimir Lignov reveals the remains of a severed limb he says he can still feel.

Text size:

"It was on the 21st of March, I went out to smoke. Then a shell hit. I lost my arm," he says, recalling the strike on his home in Avdiivka, an industrial hub in east Ukraine and a military priority for invading Russian forces.

Now in relative safety in the central Ukraine city of Dnipro the former train conductor is among what aid workers say is a particularly vulnerable segment of the population -- the elderly.

In the Dnipro maternity hospital, hastily opened up to accommodate people fleeing Moscow's forces, Lignov is struggling to come to terms with what happened and why -- not to mention what might come next.

Medical staff at the Myrnorad hospital near ongoing fighting and where Lignov was treated after the strike say he should return for treatment in a week.

Staff in Dnipro, he says, told him he should return in three days.

"I don't understand what's going on. Maybe it's better if I just go to the graveyard. I don't want to go on living," he says, as another elderly man hobbles past him in the corridor.

A van arrives from the east ferrying three elderly people groaning in pain as volunteers lower them gingerly into wheelchairs.

- 'I cried constantly' -

Other passengers are erratic. One man, dazed, reaches for his cigarettes as soon as he gets out of the van and grabs his belongings as if he is rushing to saftey.

"The hardest are the people who spent long stretches in cellars," says Olga Volkova, the volunteer director of the centre, that houses 84 residents, most of whom are elderly.

"A lot of people were left on their own. We helped them before the war, but then they were left to fend for themselves."

The elderly are "often forgotten, very vulnerable" in times of war says Federico Dessi, the Ukraine director of the NGO Handicap International, a group that provides equipment and will financially help the Dnipro home.

"Cut off from their families" and "sometimes unable to use telephones or communicate" they are particularly vulnerable in conflicts, Dessi said.

Leaving aside physical health, the elderly often they require "additional help, which is often not available".

Aleksandra Vasiltchenko, an 80-year-old ethnic Russian from Ukraine is luckier than most of the other new arrivals.

For one, she is sure on her feet, despite other ailments, and her grandson comes to pick her up as soon as she arrives at the Dnipro home.

She was relieved to have escaped after spending weeks alone in her three-room apartment in the eastern Ukraine city of Kramatorsk, where Russian strikes recently killed nearly 60 people trying to flee by rail.

"I was hiding all the time in the bathroom. I was constantly crying. I was imprisoned in my own flat," she tells AFP, saying she wished death on Russian President Vladimir Putin and his children.

Perched on a bedside, her hands gripping a walking aid, Zoya Taran considers herself among the lucky ones -- that's despite having only one working kidney, precarious balance, diabetes and poor eyesight.

That because her rock musician son quit a career in "show business" two decades ago to care for her.

"I am that elderly babushka," she says smiling. "My son is my eyes, my hands and my legs. I have nothing on my own."

- 'What do they want from us?' -

So as Russian strikes edged closer to Sloviansk, Taran, who had initially hesitated to leave, finally decided it was time in order to "save my son".

"Why do we need this war? What do they want from us?" she says, sobbing.

Citing Ukrainian government figures, Handicap International estimates that 13,000 elderly Ukrainians or people with disabilities have arrived in the wider Dnipro region since Russia launched its invasion in late February.

Another hub, mainly for evacuees from the besieged and destroyed port city of Mariupol, and their children, has also offered shelter to elderly residents from the east.

"Even if you open 10 places like this, they will all be full, says Konstantin Gorshkov, who runs the centre with his wife Natalia.

Among the 30 new arrivals joining the roughtly 100 existing residents is 83-year-old Yulia Panfiorova from Lysychansk the eastern in the Lugansk region under attack by Russian forces.

The former economics professor -- now hard of hearing -- was "very scared" by the sound of shooting in her town and the three shells that stuck close enough to her home to blow out her windows.

"This is my third war," she said, referring first to World War II, then the outbreak of fighting in 2014 between the Ukrainian army and pro-Kremlin separatists.

"Lysychansk was freed from the Nazis in 1943. I remember how we returned home. Of course I have some memories about it.

"They were Nazis. Then our country was invaded, and now our country has been invaded by a foreign state. "Then the freedom of our state was at threat. Now it is the same.

"We should fight... But the war is so scary."

L.Zimmermann--NZN