Home News Ukraine: In Kyiv, locals make hard choices as fighting draws near

Ukraine: In Kyiv, locals make hard choices as fighting draws near

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As Ukraine’s commercial airspace closed with fighting intensifying, hundreds of thousands of Kyiv residents escaped the capital. The mass departure transformed the city on Friday from a vibrant, noisy, traffic-snarled metropolis into a desolate cityscape of empty buildings and deserted streets.

Couples and families sprawled on the ground or sat on luggage as throngs of people eddied through the main railway station pulling suitcases and walking bowed under oversize backpacks. Others crowded beneath electronic schedule boards as they scanned for updates on delayed trains, necks craned heavenward.

Why We Wrote This

With the battle between Russian and Ukrainian troops creeping closer, residents of Kyiv face a dilemma: flee with what they can to safer territory or risk the danger in their homes.

“We don’t want to leave,” says Lilya Hnatkivskyi, who is fleeing Kyiv with her family. “But this is reality, and you have to be sensible. Ukraine is under siege by a brutal dictator.”

The decision of some residents to stay rather than seek refuge in the country’s quieter western region could appear a dangerous sort of magical thinking from the outside. But with night drawing near Friday, their reasons for remaining sound grounded in the gravity of the moment.

“This is about a country’s independence,” says Dzianis Haurylavets, who moved to Kyiv five years ago from Belarus. “We cannot abandon our nation or our principles.”

Kyiv, Ukraine

An air-raid siren’s distant howl filtered through the main railway station in the Ukraine capital Friday as Arsen and Lilya Hnatkivskyi waited with their two children for an afternoon train. The invasion of Russian forces that began earlier this week had reached the outskirts of the country’s largest city by morning as many of its 3 million residents continued to flee in a tense exodus.

The Hnatkivskyi family’s poise diverged from the general mood in Kyiv, where sporadic explosions during the past 48 hours cracked the sense of calm that had prevailed in recent days even as the threat of war loomed.

Couples and families sprawled on the ground or sat on luggage as throngs of people eddied through the terminal pulling suitcases and walking bowed under oversized backpacks. Others crowded beneath electronic schedule boards as they scanned for updates on delayed trains, necks craned heavenward.

Travelers looking to leave Kyiv consult a schedule board at the main railway station as invading Russian forces moved toward Ukraine’s capital, Feb. 25, 2022. Trains continued to run but with reports of delays.

Why We Wrote This

With the battle between Russian and Ukrainian troops creeping closer, residents of Kyiv face a dilemma: flee with what they can to safer territory or risk the danger in their homes.

“Panicking won’t help anything. We just have to be ready to go,” Mr. Hnatkivskyi says. A video game developer, he moved with his wife and children to Kyiv five years ago from Ternopil in western Ukraine, and the family planned to return there provided their train arrived on time – and in time.

After weeks of tracking the news, the couple bought tickets Sunday evening, a night before Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops over the border. “We paid attention and planned because we knew this was possible,” Mrs. Hnatkivskyi says. They packed five suitcases of clothes, electronic devices, and mementos, and a face mask dangled from the neck of each family member, more out of concern with COVID-19 than a gas attack.

“We don’t want to leave,” she says. “But this is reality, and you have to be sensible. Ukraine is under siege by a brutal dictator.”

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