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The road to Kyiv: Albanese, Zelensky and the staff with no embassy

By Ben Packham

When the Russian invasion of Ukraine started on February 24, Australian embassy staffer Nadia Teriokhina had one thought on her mind - she didn’t want to get trapped behind enemy lines.

She told Anthony Albanese she counted herself among the lucky ones.

Australian embassy staffer Nadia Teriokhina talks to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese near her destroyed house in Irpin: “We were one of the lucky ones.”

Australian embassy staffer Nadia Teriokhina talks to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese near her destroyed house in Irpin: “We were one of the lucky ones.” Credit: AAP

Hundreds were massacred in Bucha, outside of Kyiv, and about 10 minutes from her home in Irpin, including women and children. Some women were raped before they were killed.

“We didn’t know what to do, how to behave or where to run,” she said. “I said to my husband, I just don’t want to be in the occupied territory, so we went to Kyiv.”

Ukrainian tanks were headed in the opposite direction as they fled.

The executive assistant embraced her boss, Australian Ambassador Bruce Edwards, when they reunited during the prime ministerial visit outside what was left of her apartment block.

Both are waiting for the Australian Embassy to reopen again in Kyiv so they can start work.

Irpin is the scene of the massacre on the bridge as residents tried to flee on Saturday March 5, a week into the invasion.

Irpin is the scene of the massacre on the bridge as residents tried to flee on Saturday March 5, a week into the invasion. Credit: AP

Teriokhina’s own flat was undamaged, but the building was condemned as unsafe.

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“I had somewhere to stay, in Kyiv right now. But some of my neighbours, especially the elderly people, have nowhere to go,” Teriokhina said.

The prime minister entered the country from Poland under a veil of secrecy, travelling on an armoured diplomatic train used by a string of world leaders in recent months.

He travelled with a party of seven, including his social media photographer, foreign affairs adviser, national security adviser, a senior member of his department and one of his personal political staffers.

He also brought in just three members of the media, including this reporter, a photographer and a television cameraman, whose names were drawn from a hat.

Other members of the parliamentary press gallery who travelled with him to Madrid and Paris over the past week were barred from the trip on security grounds.

At least a dozen Australian Special Forces soldiers were on the ground to ensure the prime minister’s safety, dressed in sports coats, chinos and dark sunglasses.

They were discretely armed, but the travelling party was assured there was “no way in hell” that any harm would be allowed to befall them. Their vehicles carried additional weapons, body armour for the prime minister and other members of his team and mobile medical facilities in case of emergency.

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Ukrainian special forces, in full battle kit, also shadowed the Prime Minister’s every move.

Albanese travelled first by motorcade to Bucha, to pay his respects at the mass grave where 416 civilians were buried by Russian forces after they were executed.

“Bucha is now a notorious name,” local council head Tars Shaprovskiy told him. “This is a very sad place

“Every one of them shot. This was not collateral damage, this was intentional. One of the slaughter houses was a summer camp. There were four volunteers there. They were all shot.”

Albanese told him: “Australia shares your desire to seek justice for these war crimes, and we will continue to do so.”

Forensic teams are still combing the mass graves discovered in Bucha.

Forensic teams are still combing the mass graves discovered in Bucha. Credit: Anastasia Vlasova/Getty

The grave, behind the town’s Church of St Andrews, has become a pilgrimage site for visiting dignitaries.

In a chapel underneath the church, Albanese joined the congregation, lighting a candle for the victims of the massacre.

Lighting a candle at St Andrew’s Orthodox Church in Kyiv has become a rite of passage for many visiting dignitaries.

Lighting a candle at St Andrew’s Orthodox Church in Kyiv has become a rite of passage for many visiting dignitaries. Credit: AAP

Albanese travelled in an armoured Land Cruiser in a motorcade of about 10 vehicles. Local traffic was blocked wherever they went, with soldiers and police stationed along the route.

Central Kyiv appeared largely undamaged to the visitors, but concrete blocks and sandbags protect major buildings, and large welded steel road spikes sit at the sides of key routes into the city, ready to be deployed of the invaders try and attack the city again.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Ukranian Ambassador to Australia Vasyl Myroschnychenko and Australian Ambassador to Ukraine Bruce Edwards take a selfie as they visit Maidan square.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Ukranian Ambassador to Australia Vasyl Myroschnychenko and Australian Ambassador to Ukraine Bruce Edwards take a selfie as they visit Maidan square.Credit: AAP

Shops and hotels are open once again and daily life has returned to the city. There was even a smaller group of tourists milling around near the Intercontinental Hotel, which Albanese’s team used as a base during the visit.

But 30 minutes to the north of the city, the signs of the war are obvious - blown out buildings, missile craters, broken windows, piled-up wrecks of burned out cars and sandbagged foxholes under the cover of trees.

Ahead of his meeting with President Volodymyr Zelensky on Sunday afternoon, Albanese also visited the destroyed Hostomel Airport, the site of the failed Russian paratrooper assault in the initial days of the invasion.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese looks at apartment buildings and vehicles damaged by Russian shelling in Irpin.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese looks at apartment buildings and vehicles damaged by Russian shelling in Irpin.Credit: AP

He shook his head as he surveyed the wreckage of what was once the world’s largest aircraft, the Anatov Mriya, which translates to “The Dream”.

He spoke to members of the national guard unit that repelled the Russian attack in the face of a determined attack by Russian forces to land helicopters at the airfield, which could have changed the course of the war.

As he left, they gave him a model of the famous Anatov plane to take home to Canberra.

Albanese said as a former aviation minister, he was touched by the gesture, and the model would take “pride of place” in his prime ministerial office.

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Ukraine’s Ambassador to Australia, Vasyl Myroschnychenko, travelled to Kyiv for the visit, which he agitated for behind the scenes after delivering an official invitation for President Zelensky.

At first, Australian Foreign Affairs officials pronounced the trip “impossible”. But within weeks, plans were underway to make it happen.

An advance security team comprising 2nd Commando and Special Air Service Regiment personnel were deployed to the country to work with the Ukraine Defence Force and the Australian Embassy - now based temporarily in Poland - to make the visit happen.

A member of the team said the capital was mostly safe. The main risk was a potential missile strike. Russia has recently upped its use of rockets against targets across the country in retaliation for Ukraine’s use of American-donated HIMARS missiles.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks to members of the Ukrainian National Guard at Hostomel airport.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks to members of the Ukrainian National Guard at Hostomel airport. Credit: AAP

Ukraine’s Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Mykola Tochytskyi said things were “much more difficult in the east”, where Ukrainian forces are being pounded relentlessly by Russian artillery.

“If you look at the quantity of her artillery, it is one to seven (to Russia),” he said.

“That’s why we appreciate Australia’s support, in Bushmaster (protected vehicles), and M777 artillery. They are very effective.”

The trip was made under a strict media blackout imposed by the prime minister’s office on the advice of the Australian Defence Force.

Albanese’s presence in the country was supposed to remain a secret until he was back in Poland. The media’s phones and other devices had to be surrendered in order to make the trip.

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But his presence in the country was revealed on social media, as he travelled around the Ukrainian capital, and its surrounds.

Albanese also met the Australian Embassy’s driver, Oleksander Lazarachuk, who fled the fighting in February with his elderly mother, taking her 400km to Lutsk, in the country’s west.

“She didn’t want to leave, but I just took her and off we went,” he said.

Lazarachuk had mixed feelings about meeting the prime minister, who was driven by his special forces team.

“I should be driving you today,” he said. “I am the embassy driver.”

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5ayt7