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Post Reports

Fleeing Ukraine

Post Reports

The Washington Post

Daily News, Politics, News

4.45.1K Ratings

🗓️ 2 March 2022

⏱️ 19 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Nearly 900,000 people have fled Ukraine for safety. On today’s show, the refugees of the war in Ukraine. 


Read more:


Hundreds of thousands of refugees have left Ukraine for neighboring countries, and many are now waiting in holding centers across the region. Many are women and children; Ukrainian authorities have told men ages 18 to 60 to stay in the country to fight the invasion.


Almost 900,000 people have fled Ukraine and are looking to places like Poland, Moldova, Slovakia, Romania and Hungary for safety. Traffic data shows severe backups at nearly every border crossing over the weekend, particularly at crossings into Poland. Officials warn that the flow of refugees is likely to escalate into a full-blown humanitarian crisis. 


Today on the show, the refugees fleeing Ukraine to escape the war. 


Katya Merezhinsky is one of those people. She was in Lviv when the war began, and she recounts her harrowing journey out of Ukraine.  


Foreign correspondent and Berlin bureau chief Loveday Morris reports on the ground from the Ukraine-Poland border, where busloads of refugees are arriving in Poland. She says, “Hordes of people are [arriving] with real tales of horror.” 


Video journalist Jon Gerberg is also on the Ukraine-Poland border and reports on the discrimination some refugees of color have faced as they’ve tried to cross it.


“What starts on paper as a policy of national priority in the end effectively translates into a two-class process,” Gerberg says.


Follow our coverage on the war in Ukraine here. 


Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On the 23rd in the evening, I got back to Lviv.

0:09.3

The war is in the air, but we just refuse to believe that the full-scale invasion would

0:17.0

happen.

0:18.0

Katiya Merzinski is an American of Ukrainian descent.

0:21.8

She's moved around a lot, but she's been in Ukraine for the last six months.

0:26.5

She was in Lviv the night the war broke out.

0:28.9

A friend of mine called me at 5 a.m. waking me up and all in tears crying, telling me

0:39.9

that Russians are already entering Ukraine and it is bombing and shooting.

0:50.3

So we decided to stick together.

0:53.0

She has two small children and she also has a husband who decided to do it.

0:58.9

She joined terror defense on the same day and he left home.

1:03.8

So we decided that she would come and pick me up and then we would come up with a plan.

1:11.3

And just a few minutes later after she hung up, this siren started.

1:17.1

It's a war siren that we heard in those old movies about the World War II.

1:27.9

On the newsroom of the Washington Post, this is Post Reports.

1:31.7

I'm Alexis Dio, it's Wednesday, March 2nd.

1:36.9

Today we're going to talk about the nearly 900,000 people who have fled Ukraine since last

1:41.9

Thursday.

1:43.9

One of those people is Katiya.

1:46.3

This is not Katiya's first experience as a refugee.

1:49.1

30 years ago, she left Belarus for the US with a refugee status.

1:54.5

More recently, she returned to Belarus, but because of the political turmoil there, she

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