

I am now pregnant and thinking about accessing an abortion, which has been legal in Ukraine since the 1950s. Iryna* she introduces herself, as I slowly explain my situation: I am a 20-year-old student and an internally displaced person who was raped. Ukrainians are approaching Russian soldiers and telling them to go home.Īs for me, I will stay in Kharkiv until the last moment, bringing the voice of Ukraine to the rest of the world because we are a brave and proud nation and will not surrender.When I call the Kharkiv Pregnancy Assistance Center, I hear a sympathetic woman’s voice in the receiver. They are reporting on the number of Russian troops they see and checking the rooftops of houses. People are sharing information on how they can help. There are queues at blood donor stations because people want to help the army with everything they have. Ukrainians have started numerous volunteer initiatives to support the army with medical aid and food supplies. A reporter I know has joined them and now carries a rifle. In Kharkiv, volunteers are joining Territorial Defence units en masse. There is huge emotional support for our military.

We feel that this is our only chance to protect our country. It is trying to destroy Ukrainian military infrastructure and force Ukraine to surrender. Russia has turned the lives of Ukrainians into a nightmare. Others sleep in corridors or in baths, to be as far from the outer walls of their homes as possible. Some of my friends who live in areas where there is heavy shelling spent the night in shelters. Yesterday, I visited my nearest metro station, a five-minute walk from my apartment, to check if there was enough space there, in case I needed to evacuate urgently overnight. People shelter in Pushkinskaya underground station in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on February 24 I don’t want to let Vladimir Putin get away with these crimes. It is like a robber has broken into your home and destroyed everything that is valuable and dear to you. Luckily, there were no casualties but it made me feel so angry. It landed five metres from a home in a busy residential area. Yesterday, a Russian missile hit a residential area two kilometres (1.2 miles) from where I live. But the unreality of this unjustified war strikes me constantly. I give constant updates to the outside world, with the aim of documenting Russian war crimes so that they might, one day, be punished. I am glued to my screens, collecting news from across the country. In these awful times, the Ukrainian people are more united than ever. In a local group chat on a messenger app, people share jokes, emergency information and requests for help. The shelling continues.īut, despite this, our morale is high and we are determined to defend our country. This formerly vibrant place of university students, coffee shops and IT firms, sometimes referred to as Ukraine’s “Silicon Valley”, is now a place where mothers hide with their small children in metro stations and basements. Occasionally, I peek through them to see how many lights are on in other windows.īut, this city of 1.5 million people 40km (25 miles) from the Russian border, where I was born and raised is frozen in horror. So I write this from my apartment in downtown Kharkiv, my emergency bag close by and my curtains closed in the hope that will protect me should an explosion send shards of glass flying into my home. In those hours, my mission had become clear to me: instead of leaving, I had to stay in Kharkiv for as long as I could and become a source of information. Interview after interview followed until most of the day had passed. Instead, I rushed to pack a bag, ready to evacuate.īut almost immediately, I started to receive calls from news outlets around the world, wanting to know what was happening. I was supposed to take the train to the capital, Kyiv, where I was due to speak at a conference about Russian disinformation and later meet some friends. It should have been an ordinary working day for me. Then I switched on my phone and the messages poured in – friends and colleagues across the country telling me that their cities, too, were under attack. For those first few moments, I couldn’t quite believe what I was hearing.

On Thursday, I woke at 5am to the sound of my hometown, the city of Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine, being attacked.
