Ukraine: 'I've lived a whole life in one week'
- Published
A teaching assistant from Ukraine said she has "lived a whole life" in a week as her mother and sister fled the country and attempted to reach the UK.
Tanya Mikulova, who lives in King's Lynn, Norfolk, said her terrified family hid in their cellar near Kyiv following the Russian invasion.
They had escaped to Bulgaria and were "confused and frightened", she added.
Her MP, Conservative James Wild, said he had reassured Ms Mikulova the pair could apply for Visas from Friday.
An extension of the government's Ukraine Family Scheme, external will start on Friday and will allow her mother Olha and sister Svitlana to apply to join Ms Mikulova in the UK.
"It was such a dramatic experience for them," said Ms Mikulova, describing the attack on her country.
"Planes and military vehicles were going through the village, flying over the house.
"Sirens were on and off all the time, and they used the cellar as a place to hide.
"They were extremely frightened."
'Really distressed'
By Saturday, she said, her mother and sister risked being "isolated from the whole world" as fuel supplies ran dry across the country.
"Luckily a taxi driver, their friend, had a bit of fuel left and he agreed to take them to [the city of} Bila Tserkva on Tuesday night," she added.
The pair spent 24 hours in the city, 80km (49 miles) south of Kyiv, before boarding an emergency government evacuation train for women and children, which took them to Budapest.
"It was a very difficult experience - [Bila Tserkva] was under military attack," she said.
"There was shooting, there were explosions.
"I kept calling mum all night and she was really, really distressed, crying, not knowing what to do.
"I told them you stay where you are, you have to hope, you have to pray, everyone was praying for them."
Her mother and sister, while safer in Bulgaria since the beginning of the week, were struggling with the language barrier and "complicated" documents, she added.
She said North-West Norfolk MP Mr Wild had shown "amazing kindness" and she hoped the new scheme would make things easier.
Asked how she was feeling, she said: "It feels this week I have lived a whole life, it's endless.
"It's very tiring, very stressful, I've been constantly on my phone worried out my family my very good friends who went on the frontline to defend Kyiv.
"They will never accept a person like that [Russian president Vladimir Putin] ruling their country, ruling their freedom and destroying everything.
Mr Wild said: "It's an incredibly stressful situation for her.
"I'm pleased her family have got to safety and now the focus is on trying to get them to the UK as soon as possible so they can be reunited."
Find BBC News: East of England on Facebook, external, Instagram, external and Twitter, external. If you have a story suggestion email eastofenglandnews@bbc.co.uk, external
Related topics
- Published3 March 2022
- Published2 March 2022
- Published1 March 2022