Lots of small, hopeful stories of solidarity from the border. Ran into a group of German paramedics from Frankfurt. They’ve travelled 11 hours in their ambulance bus to help, a vehicle they’ve had for 30 years. At the end of the day they’re handing over the bus to the Ukrainians.
They’re not even sure what’s happening to it or where it’s going: “i just know they need it far more than we do”, the paramedics’ team leader tells me.
This is their weekend, they’re back at work in Frankfurt at 6am Monday morning.
Not before they’ve spent today providing medical care to anyone who needs it at one of the crossings, especially the kids. They’ve brought a bus load of jackets, baby formula, medicines and other provisions.
The German paramedic team are providing medical care first but also giving out chocolate and a teddy bear each for the kids.
The German ambulancebus is now taking a coachload of women and children to the nearest town.
Some faces from the bus.
This is Nasia, Gelb and Ira. They’ve been travelling for two days. Gelb (the boy in the middle) is by all accounts a cracking little Traditional Ukrainian folk dancer. They’ve saw shelling at Kharkiv. They’ve no idea when they’ll see their Dad again.
Another family on the bus-this time three generations. Irina, Alina and little Lev. He’s only three weeks old.
They told us their journey to the border was hell; it was freezing, there was fighting en route. Hard enough for adults, imagine it with a newborn.
He struggled at first as the journey began but has battled through it and is doing well, all things considered. His name means “lion”, which clearly couldn’t be more appropriate.
This lady has one foot. The journey, as you can imagine, has been difficult. She also desperately needed insulin as she’d run out, en route. It was provided by the ambulance bus.
We arrive at our destination. Everyone on the bus has to carry on their journeys.
Wherever the big crossing points are there’s more generosity on display. Offerings of transport as far as Scandinavia. People offering free packs of socks. Free sweets and hot dogs for kids.
But there’s also that other theme which permeates everything here, alongside the generosity: the exhaustion. This little boy was so tired that even though he was being trundled along the pavement by his Mum on top of a suitcase, he barely moved a muscle.
It’s the little moments which strike you. On the bus one of the grandmothers was helping with the baby. She then sat down. She closed her eyes and started breathing through her mouth. She was trying to centre herself. You could see the weight of the world on her shoulders.
Lots responding that stories like the German paramedics restore their faith in humanity. I know what you mean and the wider generosity here is something to behold. What is unsettling about it though is that it’s only necessary because of the evil which brought everyone here.
Ie they coexist with each other, one flows from the other. It’s both comforting and dispiriting at the same time.
Enough for one day- to those asking, will let you know how little Lev gets on. We have his family’s contact details.
Oh and btw the German ambulancebus was handed over to the Ukrainians at the border late this evening. It’s off to be of use to the 🇺🇦 injured as you read this.
Some people asking what the bus was used for in Germany- domestic emergencies, mainly but among other things had been used at Frankfurt Christmas market every year for decades.
Another day another station. This time Rzeszów, filled with refugees to take them to Krakow, Warsaw and beyond,
Every carriage packed to the rafters
Train to Krakow. At this time on a Monday guard says this train would normally be almost empty. Instead it’s taking refugees to the rest of Poland and beyond.
Polish Border Guard say that the million threshold was breached at at 8pm: “a million tragedies, a million forced from their homes by the war. One million people who after crossing the border heard from the Polish Border Guard- ‘you’re safe.’”
1.36 million people have now left Ukraine. UN Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi: “This is the fastest moving refugee crisis in Europe since WW2.”
The total number of refugees leaving Ukraine in ten days is now greater than the total numbers of people who claimed asylum *throughout Europe* in the whole of the 2015 refugee crisis.
Over three quarters of a million people in Poland alone.
For context around 7 million fled Syria during the civil war.
Today I interviewed the UK Ambassador to Poland about why it is that the UK has adopted such s different approach and policy to Ukrainian refugees to virtually the rest of Europe. Tune into @BBCNewsnight at 2230 to see what she said.
To be clear the Ambassador doesn’t make UK government refugee policy. Nonetheless as HMG’s representative on the ground on the border I asked her why there is such a disparity between the UK govt policy’s on refugees and that of vast majority of the rest of Europe.
More than anything else so many who arrive on the border are in a state of nervous and physical exhaustion. Either what they’ve fled from or the journey they’ve made has been deeply traumatic, or both.
Like virtually every woman with kids we meet here, Marianna told us her husband had just enlisted. She also told us that the kids are aware of the war. Last night before she went to sleep, Amelia (10) asked her Mum whether she and the family would be shot in the night.
The thing which really strikes you about the kids here is how still they are. Virtually none are crying. They’re stunned, frightened. By the time they’re across the border they’re cold and hungry, essentially spent.
Poland already had provisions making it easier for Ukrainians to integrate than other arrivals. Today, the Polish Parliament is due to to vote on new proposals making it easier for Ukrainians to access the Polish labour market.
Compared to 2015 the response a lot of continental Europe, especially Europe’s east, is marked. Reasons?
To take 🇵🇱 as an example
1) countries like Poland had already received substantial migration from Ukraine since 2014. Has eased historic tensions.
2) Strong cultural/linguistic affinities. 3) Strong solidarity given current situation. Desire to see Ukraine succeed at any cost, as buffer between them and Russia.