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Ukrainian mum tearfully hugs children at border after being separated in chaos

Two children were tearfully reunited with their mother at the Ukraine border thanks to the kindness of one stranger.

Anna Semyuk, 33, hugs her son at the Beregsurany border crossing in Hungary on February 26, 2022. Picture: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo
Anna Semyuk, 33, hugs her son at the Beregsurany border crossing in Hungary on February 26, 2022. Picture: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo

A mum stranded outside Ukraine when Vladimir Putin’s tanks rolled in has been pictured hugging her son joyfully as he arrives safely at the border.

Anna Semyuk, 33, also gave her daughter a loving cuddle as the two children were reunited with her — thanks to the kindness of a stranger, The Sun reported.

Their father had taken them out of the line of fire to the Hungarian border but could not cross himself because of a decree that all ­fighting-age men must stay to help repel the Russian invaders.

He desperately asked Nataliya Ableyeva, a woman he had never met, if she would take his son and daughter to their mother.

He handed over the children, their passports and Anna’s number — then prayed they would be safe.

The frightened children crossed into Hungary among the steady stream of refugees fleeing the war.

A short time later they were in the arms of mum Anna, who had raced to the town of Beregsurany from Italy.

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Anna Semyuk, 33, hugs her son at the Beregsurany border crossing, Hungary on February 26, 2022. Picture: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo
Anna Semyuk, 33, hugs her son at the Beregsurany border crossing, Hungary on February 26, 2022. Picture: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo
Anna Semyuk’s son and daughter crossed the border with a stranger. Picture: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo
Anna Semyuk’s son and daughter crossed the border with a stranger. Picture: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo

After she wiped away tears she told how she had tried to reassure them.

She said: “All I can say to my kids now is that everything will be all right — that in one or two weeks we will go home.”

In the nearby border town of Zahony, 68-year-old Vilma Sugar said: “My son was not allowed to come. My heart is so sore. I’m shaking. I can’t calm down. They did not let him come.”

The heart-rending scenes came as refugees fled in their thousands.

Anna with her two children. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo
Anna with her two children. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo

Nine-mile queues formed at crossings with families waiting up to 12 hours in freezing weather.

More than 120,000 have left already — the first wave of a possible five million-strong exodus as Europe braces for the worst refugee crisis since World War Two.

Poland declared its 330-mile border with Ukraine open, even for those without official documents Nine reception centres were set up.

Women, children and the elderly were bedding down in sports halls and rail stations. On the first day of the invasion 29,000 made it across. By yesterday that had risen to more than 120,000.

Refugees, mostly students of Ukrainian universities are seen at the Medyka pedestrian border crossing in Poland fleeing the conflict on February 27, 2022. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP
Refugees, mostly students of Ukrainian universities are seen at the Medyka pedestrian border crossing in Poland fleeing the conflict on February 27, 2022. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP

Poland’s Deputy PM Jacek Sasin said: “Our Ukrainian neighbours need real support today.”

In Medyka, a village just over the Polish border, roads ground to a halt as relieved Ukrainians made it to safety and were welcomed by relatives.

“Ludmila, 30, whose husband was not allowed to cross, said: “We leave all our fathers, men, husbands at home and it feels like sh**.”

Marta Buach, 30, from the west Ukrainian city of Lviv, added: “In Lviv it is OK but in other cities it is really a catastrophe.

‘I feel safe here’

Teacher Olha, 36, said after arriving at the Polish border town of Przemy: “I come from Kyiv. I heard the explosions next to my building and packed.

“I feel safe here but I cannot really help my relatives and friends. Many of them are in danger and cannot leave as quickly.”

Poland is also sending a train to western Ukraine to take the wounded to Warsaw for treatment.

More than 10,000 refugees arrived in Romania on the first day of the invasion and nearly 3000 landed in Slovakia.

Ukrainian citizens are seen arriving at the Medyka pedestrian border crossing. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP
Ukrainian citizens are seen arriving at the Medyka pedestrian border crossing. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP

At the border crossing with Moldova, where a tent village has sprung up, the UN’s refugee chief for Central Europe, Roland Scholling, said: “The situation is absolutely heartbreaking.”

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, said: “The humanitarian consequences on civilian populations will be devastating.”

Yet not all travel was in one direction. Poland’s Border Guard said 9000 headed into the war zone on Day One as they rushed to support their countrymen.

A mother and her child at the Medyka pedestrian border. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP
A mother and her child at the Medyka pedestrian border. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP

Cars were queuing in both directions at the Medyka-Szeginie border crossing in south eastern Poland with garages reporting ­petrol shortages as men filled up before driving into Ukraine.

A 26-year-old called Vladek said: “I love Ukraine. We can face Russia. We will fight for our country.

“One Ukrainian will be like 10 Russians.”

Another Ukrainian in his 20s, Andriy, said: “We are going home to defend our country.

“This is our duty. We didn’t do anything wrong to Russia.”

A third man, who has left his wife and son in Poland, said: “You have to defend your country. I do not want to go to Russia. I want to live in Ukraine, in Europe.”

Activist prepare water at the Medyka pedestrian border crossing. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP
Activist prepare water at the Medyka pedestrian border crossing. Picture: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP

‘I want to live in Ukraine, in Europe’

Inside Ukraine, shortages of fuel, cash and medical supplies were reported, and cities were gridlocked.

A 15-mile (24-kilometre) jam developed on the E40, the main highway west out of Kyiv, with families thumbing lifts to flee the fighting.

Languages student Ludmilla Orovsky, 20, said after packing her bags into her parents’ Toyota: “We have to leave Kyiv — it is just too dangerous to stay.

“No one here can understand why Putin is doing this to us and how quickly our lives have changed. This is a nightmare.”

But among the shelling, one young couple married to the sound of air raid sirens — before rejoining defence forces.

Yaryna Arieva and her husband Sviatoslav Fursin brought forward their wedding date so they could tie the knot on Thursday — the day Russia started its invasion.

Yaryna said it was the happiest moment of her life but scary.

She added: “We maybe will die — and we just wanted to be together before all of that.”

This story first appeared on The Sun and has been republished here with permission

Originally published as Ukrainian mum tearfully hugs children at border after being separated in chaos

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Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/news/world/ukrainian-mum-tearfully-hugs-children-at-border-after-being-separated-in-chaos/news-story/074faa8db0b1c96aefdb22aefda9f77e