Dubai Telegraph - As war grinds on, Ukraine's seniors suffer

EUR -
AED 4.168522
AFN 80.765736
ALL 98.748805
AMD 443.386388
ANG 2.04543
AOA 1035.034253
ARS 1332.941456
AUD 1.772499
AWG 2.045668
AZN 1.930023
BAM 1.956241
BBD 2.298048
BDT 138.291209
BGN 1.9555
BHD 0.427702
BIF 3384.714733
BMD 1.134906
BND 1.492671
BOB 7.864636
BRL 6.447519
BSD 1.138122
BTN 97.068913
BWP 15.58083
BYN 3.724908
BYR 22244.159993
BZD 2.286235
CAD 1.573723
CDF 3265.124608
CHF 0.942154
CLF 0.027718
CLP 1063.679577
CNY 8.270022
CNH 8.280286
COP 4831.295362
CRC 573.709252
CUC 1.134906
CUP 30.075012
CVE 110.288918
CZK 24.950893
DJF 202.67949
DKK 7.464247
DOP 67.542862
DZD 150.229804
EGP 57.843776
ERN 17.023592
ETB 151.680485
FJD 2.559662
FKP 0.856072
GBP 0.852842
GEL 3.10952
GGP 0.856072
GHS 17.24374
GIP 0.856072
GMD 81.144219
GNF 9855.876871
GTQ 8.765708
GYD 238.129544
HKD 8.80522
HNL 29.506619
HRK 7.534528
HTG 148.698317
HUF 406.382076
IDR 19101.945412
ILS 4.108462
IMP 0.856072
INR 96.651273
IQD 1490.642369
IRR 47793.734246
ISK 144.893549
JEP 0.856072
JMD 180.295923
JOD 0.804762
JPY 162.208665
KES 147.288409
KGS 99.097055
KHR 4555.867581
KMF 493.11456
KPW 1021.351427
KRW 1629.991876
KWD 0.348008
KYD 0.948506
KZT 588.19756
LAK 24613.904147
LBP 101982.416476
LKR 341.40103
LRD 227.634352
LSL 21.240319
LTL 3.351083
LVL 0.686493
LYD 6.228213
MAD 10.556596
MDL 19.662091
MGA 5121.930247
MKD 61.533163
MMK 2382.287329
MNT 4021.105965
MOP 9.093148
MRU 45.094985
MUR 51.275459
MVR 17.483254
MWK 1973.584528
MXN 22.253415
MYR 4.968047
MZN 72.644972
NAD 21.240506
NGN 1833.463157
NIO 41.888161
NOK 11.838523
NPR 155.309576
NZD 1.895127
OMR 0.436944
PAB 1.138152
PEN 4.200511
PGK 4.710918
PHP 63.975227
PKR 319.910221
PLN 4.277141
PYG 9109.774924
QAR 4.149
RON 4.97724
RSD 117.215468
RUB 94.409907
RWF 1625.30951
SAR 4.257274
SBD 9.45381
SCR 16.230516
SDG 681.501912
SEK 10.924425
SGD 1.489899
SHP 0.891858
SLE 25.819047
SLL 23798.395498
SOS 650.429594
SRD 41.778144
STD 23490.26536
SVC 9.959204
SYP 14756.218222
SZL 21.230043
THB 37.971704
TJS 12.093056
TMT 3.98352
TND 3.388795
TOP 2.658066
TRY 43.610107
TTD 7.722675
TWD 36.889009
TZS 3047.22273
UAH 47.455419
UGX 4172.904959
USD 1.134906
UYU 47.73846
UZS 14659.179071
VES 94.551208
VND 29566.006839
VUV 135.961309
WST 3.146275
XAF 656.081939
XAG 0.033859
XAU 0.000339
XCD 3.067141
XDR 0.815948
XOF 656.08483
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.222503
ZAR 21.36147
ZMK 10215.509307
ZMW 32.011096
ZWL 365.439308
  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.6

    +0.87%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    22.45

    +0.71%

  • RBGPF

    63.1900

    63.19

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    72.26

    +0.76%

  • RYCEF

    0.3400

    9.84

    +3.46%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    22.01

    -0.95%

  • CMSC

    0.1700

    22.33

    +0.76%

  • RIO

    1.4900

    61.69

    +2.42%

  • BCC

    2.7600

    96.09

    +2.87%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    37.5

    +1.25%

  • SCS

    0.2000

    9.95

    +2.01%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    53.17

    +0.88%

  • AZN

    1.0400

    69.55

    +1.5%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.31

    +0.11%

  • BTI

    -0.0600

    42.45

    -0.14%

  • BP

    0.4000

    29

    +1.38%

As war grinds on, Ukraine's seniors suffer
As war grinds on, Ukraine's seniors suffer / Photo: Ivan SAMOILOV - AFP

As war grinds on, Ukraine's seniors suffer

Like thousands of senior citizens in Ukraine, Zinaida Gyrenko was spending the sunset years of her life in a shelter, her retirement upended by Russia's invasion.

Text size:

Her memory was foggy but the moment Russia struck her village in the northeast of the country, sending her sprawling, was crystal clear.

"It was so loud. Everyone fell to the ground. I was lying there. Then I opened my eyes again, and I thought: I'm still alive," Gyrenko, born in 1939, told AFP.

The invasion launched by the Kremlin more than three years ago has disproportionately affected Ukraine's seniors.

A quarter of Ukraine's people are older than 60, but they accounted for nearly half of civilian deaths near the front last year, according to the United Nations.

The elderly are often the last to leave frontline territories, saying they lack money or strength to relocate -- or the will to part with their homes.

Gyrenko lived in the village of Zaoskillya in the eastern Kharkiv region until last May. Russia has been advancing on the nearby town of Kupiansk further west, raining down bombs on settlements nearby.

She now stays at a dormitory-turned-shelter for senior citizens called Velyka Rodina, meaning Big Family, in Kharkiv city further north.

Gyrenko was grateful to her carers for looking after what she called the "second-hand" residents. She said she could no longer remember her age: "I'm from '39. You do the maths."

She said she had worked in the rail industry her whole life.

"I've loved the railways very, very much, ever since I was a child," she said, her blue eyes welling up with tears.

- Dignity in retirement -

The shelter's founder Olga Kleytman said the needs of elderly people were immense.

In Kharkiv alone, she estimated that 32,000 seniors who had fled their homes needed help.

There are only eight public retirement homes in the Kharkiv region -- not enough to meet demand, she said.

Authorities have not provided financial support to her establishment, which had 60 residents at the end of March and depends solely on private donations, she added.

"They have worked all their lives, and they deserve a decent old age," the 56-year-old said.

"This is about our dignity."

An architect by profession, Kleytman told AFP she had plans to expand.

Since most of the seniors come from rural areas, she wants to create a large vegetable garden with animals to reproduce village "smells and sounds".

One of the residents, 50-year-old Sergiy Yukovsky, who had both legs amputated after an accident at work, used to live in the countryside with his younger brother.

His brother was killed by a mine while "fetching wood" near the village of Kochubeivka, also in the Kharkiv region.

"I don't even know where he is buried," Yukovsky said. For a year, he lived alone before being evacuated to Kharkiv city.

The future is bleak, he confessed, but added: "Ukraine will have it all, and Putin is an asshole."

- Hopes for future -

In another room 84-year-old Yuri Myagky lay in bed facing a window.

He was from Saltivka, a Kharkiv suburb that was bombed heavily when Russian forces were attempting to capture the city at the start of the invasion.

"Has Ukraine been divided?" Myagky asked, confused -- like so many others -- by the twists and turns of the conflict.

Since September 2024, Gyrenko has been sharing a room with Olga Zolotareva, 71, who grumbled when her roommate lost the thread of their conversation.

For 28 years, Zolotareva looked after people with learning disabilities in the town of Lyptsi, not far from the Russian border.

When the invasion began, they were evacuated, but Zolotareva stayed.

In May 2024, when Russia launched a new offensive on the Kharkiv region, she was in her house when "there was a strike".

A shard "from I don't know what" broke her right leg, she said, showing her scar.

As well as peace, she hopes to be able to walk normally again.

That, Zolotareva said, and to have "the smell of a man" around her. She misses it a lot, she told AFP.

Gyrenko said she remained optimistic, despite everything.

"Happiness, as I understand, means not being hungry, not being without clothes and not being shoeless," she said.

"I'm not those things."

A.Padmanabhan--DT