Auslander
reports about the Ukrainian refugees' situation in Crimea
1
June, 2014
Auslander
reports from Crimea:
Today
after Church we went to a facility that is housing some of the
children and women from Slavyansk. The group consisted of Father and
his wife, a senior Navy officer and his wife and we two. The officer
had informed the facility of the time of our arrival and who was in
the group.
I
will not give the name or location of the facility beyond it is one
of very many old Soviet holiday sights lining the Krim coast from
north of Kerch on the east coast all the way around the peninsula to
above Yevpatoria on the west coast. This facility, like many of them,
was renovated in the last few years and is quite nice and clean as a
whistle. The evacuees housed there are not crowded together by any
stretch of the imagination and there will be more evacuees housed
there in the next few days.
Security
is tight and I'll leave it at that. The beach is beautiful, sand and
very clean, the water shallow out to about 50 m from the gentle surf.
As with almost all of these facilities there are extensive athletic
grounds including a regulation football field. Nature trails are
extant in the facility also. By the by, there are no sharks in the
Black Sea and no tide, ergo swimming is safe for the children.
The
housing facilities on sight are excellent, again clean almost to an
extreme with substantial food preparation areas and a more than
adequate dining area. The kitchen is spotless and as usual the staff
are local women for the cooking and serving and in house cleaning.
Local men do the grounds maintenance and cleaning. An efficient
administration is in place and the usual on sight medical support has
excellent rooms and modern equipment. Bath and toilet facilities are
also spotless and modern, segregated to men at one end of the
hallways and women at the other. All toiletries are provided as are
soap, towels and washing pads in abundance. No photos are allowed.
The
Evacuees
The
number of evacuees at the facility are let's just say over 100. No
men came from Slavyansk with this group. The ages of the group range
from two almost brand new babies to late teenagers with a relatively
small percentage of adult women, a few the mothers of some of the
younger children and of course the mothers of the two babies. All
will have a medical examination starting tomorrow.
The
adult women are holding up well. All are distraught to one extent or
another but all are functioning well with the children. We met with
two groups of the women in private and their distress was quite
visible when out of sight of the children. They are all very thankful
to Russia for taking the children from harm's way. The evacuees run
the gamut from upper middle class to quite poor.
Children
are children. They are quite different here than in The West even
though some of them try to mimic what they see on TV and the Internet
from the west. It is in the eyes of the teenagers, especially the
girls, where you can see the worry and fear just below the surface.
The teenaged girls are working with the children, relatives or not,
alongside of the adult women. The boys, some are worried, most are
angry at the events in and around Slavyansk and their inability to do
something about them. The boys are, after all, young men and the will
to protect their families and their homes is already ingrained in
them. There is adequate staff to assist the women with the children
and keep the teenagers in line.
It
is in the young children, the under 10 year olds, that the innocence
yet reality comes through as you talk to them. After all, here is a
group of children and teenagers who have seen far more than they
should have at their tender ages and suddenly they are in another
country in a heavily guarded facility and here are strangers
including a foreigner in their midst. Some of the teenagers and
younger children speak some English and more than one teenager was
quite fluent in English, one so fluent she relieved my wife from
translating for a while. Some of the children's comments, through the
translators:
"It
was hot that night, we had the windows open. The sounds were loud.
There was a very loud noise on a car in front of our building. There
was hail hitting our flat. There was fire outside, I could see it on
the wall. My window was broken. My mother was afraid. My father was
angry." 9 year old girl.
"A
bomb fell near our flat. It was a small one, not the big ones. The
sound is different. I am not afraid of the little ones but cats are
afraid. We know when the little ones are coming because the cats run
away. We hide when they run away." 7 year old girl.
"My
neighbor's dog was killed that night. My neighbor, she cries all the
time now. My mother said I have to leave home." 10 year old boy.
She
looked at the scars on my arm and touched them, then pulled up my
left shirt sleeve and looked. How she knew I don't know, the tattoo
is 5cm above blousing level as per regs. "You are foreign."
"Yes." "You are soldier." "I was." "Did
you come here to kill me?" Asked matter of fact. Mother of God.
How do you answer that? "No, I am not here to hurt you, I am
here to help you and to keep you safe" in my very poor Russian.
10 year old girl. My teenaged translator dissolved in to tears. The
child comforted her.
"I
want to kill all those fascist pedarasti. My mother is afraid. My
father is fighting. My father said I could not come with him, I don't
know why. I am a man." 15 year old boy.
"I
miss my boyfriend. He could not come, there was no more room on the
bus. He kissed my before I got on the bus, right in front of my
mother. I love him. I miss my mother. I want to go home." 14
year old girl.
"I
miss my mother. I miss my father. I want to go home. Mother said I
can't come home soon." 12 year old girl.
"They
killed my neighbor. He was a kind man, he never hurt anyone. I was
the first one to him after he fell off his bicycle. There was a lot
of blood. He was dead. His wife was screaming. He took me fishing."
15 year old boy.
"It
is so quiet here. There is no noise at all. I wish my mother and
father were here with me. My mother likes to swim." 6 year old
boy.
After
we spoke to the women and children we spoke to the administrator. She
assured us the children and women had everything they needed. The
officer's wife asked about bathing suits for the children and dolls
for the young girls.
We
then had lunch with the evacuees. Lunch was excellent with plenty of
food for the children, as much food, juice and milk as they wanted,
fresh baked bread from the kitchen, gallons of tea for the adults.
After lunch Father and I went to the only private shop in the
facility, down by the beach. It sells bathing suits, shorts, sun tan
oil, sun hats and other sundries for the beach. After we looked at
the prices Father had a talk with the owner and an understanding was
made. The children and women will get what they need for the beach at
no charge to them. Father and I will split the bill and the prices
will be normal market, not as marked. Father's assistant and the
officer's wife will tomorrow get enough dolls for the young girls.
All will be identical and will be delivered to the facility before
dinner tomorrow by the officer's wife and other officer wives. Father
and I will split that bill also along with the officer. I got to
watch Father, though. He's pretty quick with a ruble....
When
we returned the child who asked if I was there to kill her was my
wife's shadow. On seeing me she ran to me. Got me a big hug and a
smooch right on the cheek. I looked at my wife, she looked at me and
we smiled grimly. If worse comes to worse for this child we will take
her. We pray it won't come to that. She cried when we left. I told
her we would be back in 2 days to see her and the other children. I
asked her if she likes dogs. She said yes.
As
of 15:54 today, 01 June 2014, no more evacuees are allowed to leave
Slavyansk or Donetsk City. Ukraine Armed Forces have blockaded all
the roads and rail lines out of both cities. No one is allowed in or
out. There will be not be more children coming to this facility.
Donations
are not needed at this time: all is being taken care of by Mother and
locally. Under no circumstances should anybody send money to
charities here or in Ukeland. There are a couple that are legitimate
but there's a lot of scams out there already. Figures, and totally
disgusting.
Auslander
If you went north on the road from Kerch that would be the Sea of Azov. I think that it is important to point-out that Crimea is hosting refugees from the Ukraine's military assault on the seperatists in eastern Ukraine who voted by a 70% margin to secede and then were later largely denied the ability to vote in the recent Presidential election too.
ReplyDeleteI found this item on the refugee evacuation of Slavyansk on RT.com too:
http://rt.com/news/162712-slavyansk-children-evacuation-crimea/
As well as this item about Ukrainian shelling of Slavyansk on ITAR-TASS:
http://en.itar-tass.com/world/734144
Tuesday, June 3
08:45 GMT:
A total 181 people, including 59 Kiev troops, have been killed in the military operation in Donetsk and Lugansk Regions in eastern Ukraine, the country’s acting Prosecutor General Oleg Makhnitsky said at a press conference. There were 239 injured.
Monday, June 2
21:08 GMT:
Russia has introduced a new UN Security Council draft resolution in Ukraine aimed at immediately ending the violence and creating humanitarian corridors in part of eastern Ukraine, UN envoy Vitaly Churkin told reporters.
"We submitted a draft resolution to the Security Council on the humanitarian situation in Ukraine," he said after a closed meeting of the Security Council, Ria Novosti reports. Churkin said the document drawn up by the Russian Federation "is not politicized."
"It demands the immediate cessation of violence and the creation of humanitarian corridors that would allow the public to safely leave the areas engulfed by the fighting," Churkin said.
15:00 GMT:
Russia has called for an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council on 2000 GMT, during which it will ask for the military operation against the separatists to cease, and for the sides to sit down at the negotiating table. Previous Russian resolutions on Ukraine have been vetoed by the Western powers who make up the majority of the Security Council.
Gee, why no media coverage in the US?
http://rt.com/news/eastern-ukraine-army-operation-680/