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Ukrainians at London protest tell of fears for their families

Some demonstrators in Trafalgar Square, central London, were visibly emotional as they sang the Ukrainian national anthem.

Sophie Wingate
Saturday 05 March 2022 16:21 GMT
Protesters gather in London against the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Hundreds have gathered in central London to protest against Russia’s assault on Ukraine, with some recounting their fears for their families living through the war at home.

Some demonstrators in Trafalgar Square were visibly emotional as they sang the Ukrainian national anthem and chanted: ā€œStop Putin, stop the war.ā€

They carried placards saying ā€œPutin terroristā€ and ā€œProtect Ukraine, save Europeā€, and many were draped in the blue and yellow national flag of Ukraine.

The rally began with a prayer led by Archbishop Claudio Gugerotti, the papal nuncio to Great Britain, who said: ā€œToday we are all Ukrainians.ā€

It came on the 10th day of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, as the heavy bombardment of many cities by Russian forces continues and refugees stream out of the country to join the more than a million who have already fled.

Protesters Volodymyr Shevetovskyy, 31, and his girlfriend Nadiia Soshenko, 27, from Kyiv, said they were grateful for support from western countries but called for a no-fly zone to be imposed over Ukraine.

Ms Soshenko told the PA news agency: ā€œThere are already a lot of deaths in our country.

ā€œNato is afraid to close the skies saying that they’re afraid to start the third world war.

ā€œExcuse me, what’s happening right now? Why the whole world can’t stop one insane, mad person? I just honestly do not understand why our people are dying, are dying for what?ā€

Mr Shevetovskyy said: ā€œWhat Russians are doing is they’re bombing people from the sky and we are quite weak in that department, Russia’s military is much stronger there and we need the United States, Nato and the UK, the developed world, to step up and to close our skies.ā€

Mr Shevetovskyy, who has lived in the UK for 13 years but whose family were based in Kyiv and Kharkiv, said their lives had ā€œturned 180 degreesā€ since the invasion began.

The couple said they felt ā€œguilty and ashamedā€ of being safe in London while their family and friends ā€œare there being attacked, under shellingsā€.

They wake up twice at night to check whether their relatives are safe and whether Kyiv is still under Ukraine’s control.

Mr Shevetovskyy, who sells tiles in the UK from his father’s Ukraine-based business, said: ā€œThe communication goes: ā€˜Is it quiet?’ and they say ā€˜yes’ and you say ā€˜thank God, I love you’, because you don’t care about business, you just care for people to actually survive.ā€

Although the couple’s families have moved to western Ukraine in recent days, their concern for them has not diminished as ā€œthere’s no safe place in Ukraine, unfortunately right now at allā€.

Ms Soshenko is worried that her 20-year-old student brother will be forced to fight although he ā€œdoesn’t even know what a gun looks likeā€.

ā€œI’m so scared to death that something is going to happen to him,ā€ she said.

She has a friend who is in a Kyiv shelter and is due to give birth, and she can hear bombs when she speaks to her grandparents in hard-hit Kharkiv, on the phone.

Michael Green, 53, from London, said he was at the protest to stand up against Russia’s ā€œtotally egregious breach of international lawā€.

The economist said his Ukrainian wife’s family were fleeing the country, ā€œbut sadly many friends are left behindā€.

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