Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ukraine war's youngest victims fight for their lives

EUR -
AED 4.293301
AFN 80.91469
ALL 97.787327
AMD 448.804147
ANG 2.09223
AOA 1072.009797
ARS 1467.66093
AUD 1.776117
AWG 2.107194
AZN 1.996407
BAM 1.954947
BBD 2.35987
BDT 142.117981
BGN 1.954947
BHD 0.440608
BIF 3482.380329
BMD 1.16904
BND 1.495547
BOB 8.093468
BRL 6.502088
BSD 1.16879
BTN 100.194276
BWP 15.604191
BYN 3.824831
BYR 22913.180953
BZD 2.347676
CAD 1.601293
CDF 3373.84901
CHF 0.929043
CLF 0.028934
CLP 1110.325467
CNY 8.38032
CNH 8.386429
COP 4691.85253
CRC 589.442774
CUC 1.16904
CUP 30.979556
CVE 110.216903
CZK 24.665221
DJF 208.129175
DKK 7.461806
DOP 70.379287
DZD 151.705797
EGP 57.855752
ERN 17.535598
ETB 161.022032
FJD 2.62128
FKP 0.865594
GBP 0.864387
GEL 3.167714
GGP 0.865594
GHS 12.154696
GIP 0.865594
GMD 83.600903
GNF 10140.57477
GTQ 8.978082
GYD 244.523293
HKD 9.175561
HNL 30.573658
HRK 7.534001
HTG 153.403057
HUF 399.554125
IDR 18972.815253
ILS 3.894224
IMP 0.865594
INR 100.333429
IQD 1531.031875
IRR 49231.189978
ISK 142.400936
JEP 0.865594
JMD 186.89844
JOD 0.82891
JPY 171.328617
KES 151.004104
KGS 102.232519
KHR 4685.955103
KMF 492.341083
KPW 1052.13586
KRW 1612.293457
KWD 0.357481
KYD 0.973975
KZT 610.663514
LAK 25188.008244
LBP 104720.201315
LKR 351.47662
LRD 234.337738
LSL 20.841105
LTL 3.451871
LVL 0.70714
LYD 6.314245
MAD 10.527106
MDL 19.787365
MGA 5177.740494
MKD 61.508159
MMK 2454.439773
MNT 4192.345121
MOP 9.450276
MRU 46.492711
MUR 53.144715
MVR 18.00875
MWK 2026.615608
MXN 21.771016
MYR 4.971343
MZN 74.771705
NAD 20.841105
NGN 1786.900626
NIO 43.01123
NOK 11.83933
NPR 160.311042
NZD 1.940154
OMR 0.449494
PAB 1.16879
PEN 4.144391
PGK 4.831891
PHP 66.037306
PKR 332.36396
PLN 4.253144
PYG 9058.047173
QAR 4.260841
RON 5.081582
RSD 117.098899
RUB 91.210197
RWF 1688.863
SAR 4.384484
SBD 9.733995
SCR 16.480808
SDG 702.005309
SEK 11.176844
SGD 1.494853
SHP 0.918682
SLE 26.304978
SLL 24514.185634
SOS 667.908532
SRD 43.497044
STD 24196.7645
SVC 10.226537
SYP 15199.68675
SZL 20.847902
THB 37.929457
TJS 11.295971
TMT 4.10333
TND 3.419508
TOP 2.738005
TRY 46.93678
TTD 7.940535
TWD 34.184946
TZS 3029.977753
UAH 48.831091
UGX 4189.171894
USD 1.16904
UYU 47.259377
UZS 14766.556046
VES 133.584453
VND 30528.89102
VUV 139.873191
WST 3.045947
XAF 655.670873
XAG 0.030452
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.159388
XDR 0.815444
XOF 655.670873
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.732516
ZAR 20.949517
ZMK 10522.773788
ZMW 27.056193
ZWL 376.430353
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Ukraine war's youngest victims fight for their lives
Ukraine war's youngest victims fight for their lives

Ukraine war's youngest victims fight for their lives

Thirteen-year-old Milena was fleeing to safety from Mariupol, a key Ukrainian port city besieged by Russian troops, when she was struck by a bullet.

Text size:

Travelling in a car with a sign in the window that said "children," the rest of her family was unharmed.

The same Russian soldiers who opened fire then drove the wounded girl and her family to a nearby hospital, said Milena’s mother, who declined to give her name.

Today Milena is at a special children's hospital in Zaporizhzhia, where the most critically injured children from eastern and southern Ukraine, where fighting has been hardest, are being brought for treatment.

Her dark brown hair in braids, a big laceration runs across Milena's cheek and across to her neck. An oxygen tube taped up her nose, Milena's eyes are dazed and her body convulses with pain.

Yet doctors say Milena is one of the more fortunate of the children at the hospital as she is likely to make a full recovery, although her case is not straightforward as one of her vertebrae was hit and her face will remain scarred.

Milena's family was one of many trying to escape Mariupol, where Ukrainian authorities say almost 100,000 people are trapped among the ruins and facing starvation, thirst and relentless Russian bombardment.

Tens of thousands of residents have already fled, bringing harrowing testimony of a "freezing hellscape riddled with dead bodies and destroyed buildings", according to Human Rights Watch.

- 'On the edge of death' -

Yuriy Borzenko, the chief physician at the hospital, said many of the children being brought in have severe injuries.

He shows a picture on his phone of a boy brought in recently from Mariupol. Laid out on a stretcher, he is attended to by ten medical professionals, and has bone-deep lacerations to his thighs, calf and lower legs, as well as burns to his groin.

"I don’t think anyone wants to see the things we see," said Borzenko.

"We have children with penetration lesions in the skull, amputations, perforated abdomens and bone fractures," he added.

"Some of them are on the edge of death."

In the bed next to Milena is five-year-old Vladislav, who was shot in the abdomen as his family tried to escape advancing Russian troops in their village this week.

Vladislav's tiny pale chest struggles up and down as he breathes with help from a ventilator and doctors fear he may not make it through the night.

If he survives, doctors said he will be given a colostomy bag and will have it for the rest of his life.

Vladislav is alone as his parents are also in a serious condition with gunshot wounds and are being treated in another hospital in the city.

- Born to the sound of gunfire -

The city of Zaporizhzhia remains relatively safe, although fighting rages in the surrounding region and sometimes distant blasts can be heard.

At the children's hospital, yellow tape has been placed across the windows to minimise the threat of flying glass in case of an explosion nearby.

White sandbags are piled up in the alcoves, and doctors and nurses move busily among the room attending to the children.

There is an improvised bomb shelter in the basement where mothers feed babies on white metal beds.

For safety and ease, the hospital has relocated the most serious patients from its newborn baby intensive care unit to the basement.

Among the painfully small babies there is two-week-old Misha, who screws his tiny pink face up and grips his fists tight as he is about to cry.

Misha was born to the sound of gunfire in Tokmak, which is now controlled by Russian troops.

There was no medical help available and, due to complications with the birth, he was starved of oxygen.

He now has respiratory problems, and damage caused to his brain means he will likely have a neurological disability for the rest of his life.

- 'Panics' at loud noises -

Ivan Anikin, head of the newborn unit, said the number of war-injured children has increased "many times" since a conflict first broke out in 2014 between Russia-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces.

Staff work long hours and Anikin said he brought his own 14-year-old daughter to work each day to make sure she was safe.

Sometimes, a child cries out in pain and it echoes through the corridors.

Doctors say most of the patients that arrive will be disabled for life.

Among them is Masha, 15, who like Vladislav is from a village in the Polohy district of Zaporizhzhia.

She was walking home on March 13, a quiet, sunny day, with her sister Arina and mum when a Grad missile struck nearby.

Her mother covered her and Arina with her body and saved them both –- everyone survived.

However, Masha lost her right leg and her right arm was badly damaged, while her mum lost her left leg.

Her grandmother, Valentyna Feshchenko, said: "After four surgeries, Masha is much better. But she panics when she hears loud noises".

(U.Gruber--BBZ)