Presentación de diapositivas

En el «Tren de la Esperanza» de Ucrania a Moldova

calendar_today30 Diciembre 2022

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KYIV, Ukraine/CHIȘINĂU, Republic of Moldova – On 5 November, the capitals of Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova were connected by direct rail for the first time in 24 years. The new train line aims to offer refugees fleeing the war a safe route out of Ukraine and into the neighbouring Republic of Moldova – especially with a harsh winter looming and heating cuts already widespread.

Since the onset of war in Ukraine, more than 700,000 people have left the country for the Republic of Moldova, which is now also facing its own energy crisis. Some 100,000 refugees remain in the country, two thirds of them women, who face particular challenges when fleeing conflict.

“For them, displacement will bring increased vulnerability to violence, sexual abuse and exploitation,” said UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Natalia Kanem on International Women’s Day 2022.

But for many, the risk of staying behind in Ukraine and facing the threat of Russian attacks and a bitterly cold winter without heat or power outweighs any risks associated with making for Moldova – especially with the new train route providing passengers a secure pathway across borders.

The Kyiv-Chișinău train offers them hope that better, safer days are ahead. Follow along for one of its cross-border journeys between Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova, which transports passengers from the threat of peril towards the opportunity of peace.

[Pictured above]  A conductor checks tickets before letting passengers board the train. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

The train from Kyiv to Chișinău leaves at 5 p.m. On the platform, in the dim lamp light, passengers say goodbye and embrace those staying behind. Many leaving Kyiv will not be back soon, having made the difficult decision to leave the country before the onset of a bitter winter.
 

Larisa is a conductor and one of the veterans of Ukrainian Railway. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

The conductors check tickets, and soon after, the train starts moving. Those remaining on the platform, visible through duct-taped windows, wave the train goodbye. The windows are sealed in case Russian missiles explode nearby. 

One of the conductors, Larisa, recalls working non-stop to help evacuate people as soon as full-scale war broke out. 

“We spent weeks taking hundreds of people out of Kramatorsk and Kharkiv. Most of them simply slept in aisles between compartments, and left their luggage at the stations,” she said. “Women and children were a priority for us; they were the first to board a car that had at least some free space. We tried to support and care for them.” 

Larisa’s last train trip to Kramatorsk was on 8 April. On that day, the Russian army fired a rocket at the railway station; the attack killed many civilians who were waiting to be evacuated.
 

Tatiana is the mother of a soldier who lost an eye in the war. They are now on their way to the Republic of Moldova to fly to Türkiye, where her son will have an operation. 
© UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

The train stops to allow new passengers to board. Tatiana enters Larisa’s train car with her 23-year-old son. The young man was wounded while serving on the front lines; he sits alone in one of the train’s compartments, his head wrapped in bandages.

“He already lost one eye, but there is a chance to save the second one,” Tatiana said. “We decided that we needed to get treatment in another country.”

Mother and son are travelling together through the Republic of Moldova to Türkiye, where he will seek another operation. 

“The doctor said that God has big plans for my son – almost no one survives with his injuries. For me, the greatest happiness was to learn that he survived,” Tatiana said. In the intensive care unit where her son recovered, many others did not.
 

Violeta tries to calm the children on the train. In a couple of hours they will arrive in Chișinău, where a new stage of their lives will begin. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

The train has seven carriages, each a separate world. In one, children laugh, play and watch cartoons while their mothers chat and prepare for the train’s arrival in Chișinău. 

Marina and Violeta are friends. Each of them has two children: Older daughters and younger sons. This is their second time leaving Ukraine for Europe, as they have decided to spend the winter in Chișinău. 

Marina’s family lost electricity after a rocket attack on Kyiv, and her son caught a cold when the house grew chilly. She hopes Chișinău will not only be safer, but warmer.

“We knew that the winter would be hard. But after the latest attacks on infrastructure, everything changed,” Marina said. “We have small children, and we cannot risk their health and lives.” 

Violeta agrees the decision to leave was difficult. “We still do not know what to expect, how to deal with the children’s education, how to settle down. But the main thing now is that we are safe.”
 

 Yulia, a young mother from Kyiv, is also moving to Chișinău with her young son, Vlad. Vlad was born a week after the war began: He is a child of war. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

In an adjacent compartment, a young mother named Yulia holds her baby boy, Vlad, who was born just a week after the start of the war. 

“The military was assigned to our maternity hospital to protect us if the Russian army entered Kyiv,” she said. “It was scary in those days; we heard explosions.” 

Yulia worries that her son’s short time on earth has been dominated by conflict. He is a little afraid of men, as since his birth, he’s spent most of his time with women. “He is a child of war, and we don’t know when it will all end,” she said. 
 

Pavlina, a UNFPA safe space manager at the Chișinău station. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

After 18 hours of travel, the train arrives at the Chișinău railway station – its final destination. And it is warm. 

Pavlina, the manager of UNFPA Moldova’s safe space at the station, greets arriving passengers. Safe spaces are facilities set up by UNFPA to address the humanitarian and psychosocial needs of refugees and others. Inside, newly arrived Ukrainians are offered compassionate care: First aid, dignity kits, essential information, cups of tea. 

Safe spaces also provide reproductive health and crisis prevention services. For the hundreds of thousands of women fleeing Ukraine, the risk of gender-based violence remains high, as does the risk that their reproductive health needs will go unmet – with potentially life-threatening consequences.
 

A safe space centre in the Chișinău railway station building. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

Pavlina recalls a particular woman who passed through the Chișinău safe space on her way from Kyiv to her parents in Tbilisi, Georgia. “We began to talk, and she burst into tears. She said that her husband stayed in Kyiv, and she was pregnant,” Pavlina said. 

The UNFPA team provided the young woman with some essentials and offered psychosocial support. She later wrote to Pavlina from Tbilisi, asking where UNFPA was located in the city. 

“The next day, she said she was bleeding,” she said. “The girl lost her child.” 
 

Chișinău railway station. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

The train makes a reverse trip from Chișinău for Kyiv every day at 5:45 p.m. It used to run every two days, but the schedule changed for the holidays.

Although returning to Ukraine carries certain risks, many choose to make the trip back across the border to celebrate Christmas and the arrival of the new year in their home country among family and friends. The pull is strong. “East or West, home is best,” one passenger, 29-year-old Yulia, said.

With heavy bags in hand, people at the Chișinău railway station on their way to Kyiv head towards a blue train with yellow stripes – the colours of the Ukrainian flag. In 18 hours, the train will arrive at the Kyiv railway station, decorated with a Christmas tree whose lights are powered by pedalling a bicycle. Hugs and smiles await those reuniting with loved ones. 

For the train of hope’s passengers, the rail link is a lifeline, providing both a route to safety and a way back home.
 

Kyiv landscape near the railway station. © UNFPA/Mihail Kalarashan

UNFPA’s humanitarian response to the war stretches across Ukraine, the Republic of Moldova and several other countries hosting refugees. The agency is working with its partners to deliver essential services for women and young people, including by expanding safe spaces and online services to support survivors of gender-based violence and by providing reproductive health services and psychosocial support in hard-to-reach areas. As of December 2022, a total of 118 tons of life-saving reproductive health, medical and hygiene supplies had been distributed to health facilities in areas affected by the war.

In Moldova specifically, UNFPA is responding to the protection and health needs of refugees, including women and girls, through interventions such as Orange Safe Spaces, where refugees and host communities can get support related to gender-based violence and sexual and reproductive health. UNFPA also helps upgrade perinatal centers to ensure safe births, and works with the Government to ensure refugee women and girls have free access to sexual and reproductive health services and psychosocial support.
 

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Millones de mujeres y niñas enfrentan múltiples crisis mientras Pakistán se resiente ante la peor inundación de su historia
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Una enfermera limpia a un recién nacido que fue recibido mediante cesárea en el hospital Al-Farabi, un centro que cuenta con apoyo del UNFPA en el distrito de Thatta, en la provincia de Sindh. “Las mujeres no dejan de quedar embarazadas y dar a luz en tiempos de crisis”, planteó la  Dra. Natalia Kanem, Directora Ejecutiva del UNFPA, en una declaración.

El UNFPA está pidiendo 31,6 millones de dólares en financiación para ampliar su respuesta de emergencia a fin de proporcionar servicios vitales y suministros esenciales, así como servicios de protección para apoyar a las mujeres y las niñas en el Pakistán.

Obtenga aquí más información sobre las crisis concomitantes que ponen en peligro a las mujeres y las niñas en medio de las inusitadas inundaciones de Pakistán.

© UNFPA/Shehzad Noorani
A nurse tends to a newborn baby.
Sitting in front of the rubble of her home, Baharah, 20, swings two-year-old Faraz Ali to sleep in the Shikarpur district of Sindh province. She got married four years ago, at the age of 16 and has two young children. “The village flooded and water started to enter our home,” she told UNFPA. “We were afraid and didn’t know what to do. Suddenly the house collapsed and a wall fell on my son, Soonh.” Both children were injured, but Soonh, who was just two months old, was in critical condition. “It was difficult because of the rain, but we ran to the hospital. There were many people and everyone was screaming. We waited for hours. Finally, doctors saw him and admitted him to the hospital, but he died within three hours.”
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
The family of a baby delivered by caesarean section celebrates at the UNFPA-supported Al-Farabi hospital in Sindh province. With more than 740 health facilities damaged in Sindh province and affected districts in Balochistan, UNFPA is working with partners on the ground to prioritize continued availability of and access to life-saving reproductive health services in affected areas.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
“I had been in pain for days, but when it became intolerable and I started to bleed and fainted, the elders decided to take me to the hospital in a tuk tuk.” Sita, 30, had given birth just five days earlier to baby Kinayat in the village of Ghulam Shabbir Kaladi in the Khairpur district of Sindh province. A traditional birth attendant sat with her on the way, but she went into labour during the journey and delivered on the side of the road. The birth attendant cut the cord with a blade and cleaned the baby with a cloth. Sita is one of some 650,000 pregnant women whose lives and well-being have been jeopardized by the flooding disaster in Pakistan, and who are in need of urgent reproductive health services. UNFPA is providing training and supplies to help women access skilled birth attendants and medical supplies as the country reels from the destructive floods.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
UNFPA-supported mobile health clinics are providing critical services to women and children during the crisis. In case of medical emergencies for pregnant women, the clinic has an ambulance that transports them to hospitals that are equipped to deal with both regular and complicated deliveries, including caesarean sections. Zeenat and her four children lost their home to the floods and now live in a tent on the bank of the river while they wait for the floodwaters to recede.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Sitting outside a tent by the side of a highway, a woman prepares breakfast for her family near the village of Mullah Hussain Sahro in the Dadu district of Sindh province. Villages in the Dadu district are some of the worst affected by the floods, with most people unable to commute, work or access essential services. Water has started to recede in some areas but standing pools of water breeds millions of mosquitoes. Many families that survive on daily wages remain out of work due to the massive damage to the infrastructure and agriculture fields. People are suffering from diseases like malaria, diarrhoea, malnutrition and dehydration. Pakistan is one of the countries that contributes the least to climate change yet is suffering some of the most devastating fallout.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Nadia, 20, holds her newborn son Dildar in a makeshift shelter on an embankment in Johi Taluka, in Sindh Province. Dildar was born during the floods, and Nadia lives with her husband Zulfiqar and their children on the embankment waiting for flood waters to recede so they can return to their village. Telling the story of the night she delivered Dildar, Nadia said, “It was raining really hard. I was in pain and my water broke so my mother-in-law decided to take me to the doctor. The hospital was one hour away by rickshaw. I suffered from pain for the whole night and gave birth in the morning. The baby was underweight and showed signs of pneumonia, so he was kept in an incubator. I had been told I would probably have to deliver by caesarean section, otherwise we would have called the traditional birth attendant: It’s very expensive to go to hospital.”
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Gohar Khatoon, 20, sits with her four-month-old son Karim Buksh, and her other two children, Irum, 3, and Younus, 2, in their flood-damaged home in Sindh province. Most of the homes in her area were completely destroyed. As the water has started to recede, villagers have returned to try to rescue what they can. More than 170,000 women affected by the floods will give birth in the next year and are in dire need of health services, trained midwives and supplies to ensure a safe birth and critical postnatal care.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Zameera is 22 years old and 6-months pregnant. A nurse checks her blood pressure at a UNFPA-supported mobile medical camp, which was hastily built on the banks of a river in Goth Ramzan Mollah in the Sujawal district, Sindh province. With a focus on antenatal care, the mobile clinic provides essential and emergency medical services to women and children displaced by the flooding. In cases of medical emergencies for pregnant women, the clinic has an ambulance to transport them to hospitals with facilities for regular and complicated deliveries, including caesarean sections.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Guddi sits with 8-month-old Akshara and her two other daughters outside their home in the village of Ghulam Shabbir Kaladi in the Khairpur district of Sindh Province. Akshara is suffering from severe acute malnutrition and was taken to a clinic to be treated. She still had a cannula attached to her hands so she could be given medication quickly when needed again. When asked if she is breastfeeding Akshara, she replied, “Do you think I have anything in me to feed her?” Even before the floods, Pakistan had one of the highest rates of maternal mortality in Asia – this is now likely to rise further still as women lose access to health care and conditions such anaemia – a leading cause of maternal death in the country – soar with malnutrition.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Rani, 14, collects water from a hand pump by her home in Shikarpur district, Sindh province. One of 11 children, she told UNFPA, “No one in my family has ever gone to school. My father and three brothers work as labourers and still cannot earn enough to pull us out of poverty. Our lives were miserable anyway, and now the flood has created yet more havoc. There is less work, but we try. I will never have so many children.”
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Zaib is three months pregnant and suffering from malaria. Her husband Ahmad tries to comfort her while holding their three-year-old son Zoya. The family are currently living in a temporary shelter Ahmad built on the side of a road after the flooding destroyed their home in the Shikarpur district, Sindh province. Where possible, pregnant women are being treated in temporary camps.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Holding her newborn baby, Guddi, 36, sits with all her six children on a charpai in her one-room mud home in the village of Rasool Buksh Channa in the Khairpur Mirs District of Sindh province. The baby was born during the height of the flooding crisis and delivered by an village traditional birth attendant. Guddi works picking cotton in fields near her home. She worked until the rain started and had to stop due to heavy rain followed by floods. She said,“Everyone has been out of work since the floods, but we still have to find a way to feed our children. We will have to somehow pass these difficult times and survive.”
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Many pregnant women in remote areas have no access to skilled medical care and rely on traditional birth attendants like Bashiran, 40, who is the only birth attendant in her village. She has received no formal training on safe deliveries but has assisted over 200 births. Sitting on the rubble of her destroyed home in the village of Ghulam Shabbir Kaladi in Sindh province, she told UNFPA, “It started to rain a lot. When it entered our homes we ran for higher ground around the village. We could not take anything. The children were crying and screaming from hunger. No one came to help.”
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani
Villagers in Pakistan’s Khairpur Mirs District in Sindh province cross flooded land to get to their homes. Over 30 million people have been affected by the unprecedented flooding and 6.4 million are in need of urgent humanitarian assistance. Up to five times the 30-year average rainfall swept away homes, health centres, schools and dams within minutes, leaving millions of families displaced. As in any crisis, women and girls are the hardest hit. Many people are taking refuge in unsanitary, cramped and temporary shelters that have limited access to basic services, increasing the risk of a major public health crisis.
© UNFPA / Shehzad Noorani

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