A warm welcome for displaced Ukrainians in Russia's Rostov region

News Stories, 31 October 2014

© AP Photo/P.Golovkin
A Ukrainian couple cross the border earlier this year into Russia's Rostov region, where some 43,000 people from eastern Ukraine are sheltering.

KRASNY DESANT, Russian Federation, October 31 (UNHCR) Lidia resents the presence of camera crews outside her house, saying she only did what anyone else would have done in her position, and the figures bear her out.

The widow, like hundreds of other people living in and around the Russian city of Rostov, took in families displaced by the fighting in eastern Ukraine, which is still simmering despite a ceasefire and autonomy pledge in September. Lidia opened her home in Krasny Desant to eight people from two families.

According to government estimates, some 60,000 people from Ukraine were sheltering in the Rostov region.in mid-July, but the number has fallen to about 43,000 as some people returned home or moved elsewhere in the Russian Federation. About 95 per cent are staying with friends, relatives or generous families.

The government reports a similar pattern in other host areas in Russia, with only a small percentage living in public buildings or temporary accommodation facilities. Some lived in tents, but the government has moved them to sturdier accommodation ahead of the winter. Those staying in Russia, worry about the volatile situation back in Ukraine.

Lidia never hesitated when displaced families started arriving in the Rostov region. "I did the least a human being would do in this situation," stressed Lidia, a woman in her 60s whose children long ago left the nest. She lives on her own in a big village house and, like many of her neighbours, makes wine from grapes she grows.

She was able to offer room to the families, and they in turn helped her in the vineyard, the kitchen and about the house. Lidia also welcomed their company in a house that had become quite quiet since her children moved out there were four noisy teenagers among her guests.

Lidia received a small amount of money from the government to compensate for helping the families, but acted above all out of a sense of solidarity and humanitarianism. As UNHCR Representative to the Russian Federation Bayisa Wak-Woya noted, "Samaritans are most needed at times of social crisis."

The two families staying with Lidia plan to move on soon to start a new life in Russia's Far East, but the Ukrainians staying here want to see what happens back home and are preparing for the cold winter. The regional authorities have closed several tented camps and are moving those not living with host families to more solid and better protected accommodation, including holiday homes, health resorts and recreation centres in the Rostov region.

All the Ukrainians, those staying in private accommodation and those in facilities provided by the government, are grateful for the help and warm welcome they have received. In the temporary accommodation centres, this included three meals a day, clean linen, medical services and a free supply of sanitary items.

Humanitarian assistance has been provided by the Russian Red Cross Society while locals have also given relief items, including blankets, medicine, clothing, kitchen utensils, nappies, toys, food and more. NGO volunteers from Rostov and other regions have helped collect and deliver aid, put the displaced in touch with landlords, organize activities for children and provide counselling for those suffering from trauma and loss.

Lidia, meanwhile, is preparing for life on her own once the two families leave. She will miss them, but people are still fleeing their homes in eastern Ukraine and she might one day open her house to other displaced families.

By Galina Negrustueva in Krasny Desant, Russian Federation

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UNHCR country pages

Displacement, Disability and Uncertainty in Ukraine

To date, around 275,500 people have been displaced by fighting in Ukraine. They include some who live with disability, including Viktoria, aged 41, and her husband, Aleksandr, 40, who both have cerebral palsy. Life is difficult enough under normal circumstances for the couple, who also have two sons; 20-year-old Dima, and Ivan aged 19 months. Now it has become a real struggle.

At the end of July, shelling in the eastern Ukraine city of Donetsk forced Viktoria and Aleksandr to flee to the neighbouring Kharkiv region. It wasn't long before Viktoria's medication ran out. In a desperate bid to help, Aleksandr called the Rinat Akhmetov Foundation, which found them transportation and accommodation in Kharkiv.

From there, they were taken to the Promotei Summer Camp, located near the town of Kupiansk. The forest, fresh air and a lake near the camp offered a perfect setting to spend the summer. But, like 120 other internally displaced people (IDP) living there, all Viktoria and Aleksandr could think about was home. They had hoped to return by the Autumn. But it soon came and went.

Today, it is still not safe to go back to Donetsk. Moreover, the camp has not been prepared for the coming winter and the administration has asked people to leave by October 15. Neither Viktoria nor Aleksandr know where they and their young son can go next. The following photographs of the couple and their youngest child were taken by Emine Ziyatdinova.

Displacement, Disability and Uncertainty in Ukraine

Ukraine: Sorting through the Wreckage

Conflict has changed the city of Sloviansk in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine. "We used to have such a beautiful, calm, tidy city," says Angelina, a social worker. Today, it is full of destroyed homes and infrastructure, a casualty of the fighting between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian forces. More than half of the inhabitants - some 70,000 people - fled the city during the combat earlier this year. In recent weeks, with the city back under government control, some 15,000 have returned. But they face many challenges. Maria, aged 80, returned to a damaged home and sleeps in the kitchen with her family. She worries about getting her pension. The UN refugee agency has transported several tons of hygiene items and kitchen equipment to the city for distribution to those who lost their homes. Photojournalist Iva Zimova recently accompanied UNHCR staff as they visited more than 100 families to give put aid.

Ukraine: Sorting through the Wreckage

Displacement in Georgia

Tens of thousands of civilians are living in precarious conditions, having been driven from their homes by the crisis in the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia.

On the morning of August 12, the first UNHCR-chartered plane carrying emergency aid arrived in the Georgian capital Tbilisi, the first UN assistance to arrive in the country since fighting broke out the previous week. The airlift brought in 34 tonnes of tents, jerry cans, blankets and kitchen sets from UNHCR's central emergency stockpile in Dubai. Items were then loaded onto trucks at the Tbilisi airport for transport and distribution.

A second UNHCR flight landed in Tbilisi on August 14, with a third one expected to arrive the following day. In addition, two UNHCR aid flights are scheduled to leave for Vladikavkaz in the Russian Federation the following week with mattresses, water tanks and other supplies for displaced South Ossetians.

Working with local partners, UNHCR is now providing assistance to the most vulnerable and needy. These include many young children and family members separated from one another. The situation is evolving rapidly and the refugee agency is monitoring the needs of the newly displaced population, which numbered some 115,000 on August 14.

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