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Racism is another war front for African students stuck in Ukraine

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While a million people have fled the advancing Russian invasion in Ukraine, reports of racist abuse in the path of the exodus give pause to some Africans hunkering down where they are.

Zakari Ojonugwa, a Nigerian medical student in Sumy, Ukraine, ran to a bunker with other students when shelling started on the third day of the war. Huddled, discussing how to flee on WhatsApp and Telegram groups for international students – one-sixth of the university’s students are foreigners, mostly from India and sub-Saharan Africa – they realized the depth of their predicament.

Why We Wrote This

A group of African students huddled in a bunker in Ukraine are experiencing not just the hardship of war, but fear of racist attacks in the path of flight. Their dilemma – to stay or leave – is a window on another cultural dynamic at play in Ukraine.

Hundreds of miles from borders to the west and south, they would be exposed, if they left, to Russian attacks and the racial abuse they’d heard about. Moreover, Western reporting and appeals to humanity based on the fact Ukraine is a white, Western nation fan a tone of racism some Black people say is ever present in Ukraine.  

After a night of fierce bombardment, Ms. Ojonugwa said today that her group’s water supply is down to two days.  

“Imagine that you’re in the same situation as everyone else, and you still have time to be racist,” she said, her voice breaking on the phone. 

JOHANNESBURG

Three days after Russia invaded Ukraine, Zakari Ojonugwa was trying to pretend life was going on as normal in her university halls. She’d woken up early, showered, and was brushing her hair, when the first mortar shell exploded.

“I don’t think anything prepares you for war – it was like my heart stopped beating,” she says, speaking over a crackling line from Sumy, a city in northeastern Ukraine, just 30 miles from the Russian border. “I was thinking, is this real?”

As panicked students fled to a bunker, where they hugged each other and tried to confirm what was happening, Ms. Ojonugwa, a medical student from Nigeria, had another grim realization. With Sumy State University located just a stone’s throw from the invading country, the closest ways to safety would be hundreds of miles west or south to the borders of Poland, Moldova, Hungary, or Romania.  

Why We Wrote This

A group of African students huddled in a bunker in Ukraine are experiencing not just the hardship of war, but fear of racist attacks in the path of flight. Their dilemma – to stay or leave – is a window on another cultural dynamic at play in Ukraine.

As those huddled began discussing how they might flee on WhatsApp and Telegram groups for international students – one sixth of the university’s students are foreigners, mostly from India and sub-Saharan Africa – another fear cropped up, one that some Black people say is ever present in Ukraine. 

Reports of racism against those fleeing Russian attacks gripped the students who felt frozen in place.



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