Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Accept me': Near Ukraine front, a haven for outcasts

EUR -
AED 4.329505
AFN 74.270955
ALL 96.412965
AMD 442.829896
ANG 2.109909
AOA 1081.049119
ARS 1621.868228
AUD 1.669117
AWG 2.122015
AZN 2.008805
BAM 1.955049
BBD 2.36909
BDT 143.744783
BGN 1.942405
BHD 0.44363
BIF 3488.260053
BMD 1.178897
BND 1.492727
BOB 8.127878
BRL 6.104378
BSD 1.176248
BTN 106.971909
BWP 15.575017
BYN 3.373004
BYR 23106.384132
BZD 2.365691
CAD 1.613144
CDF 2687.885928
CHF 0.914379
CLF 0.025883
CLP 1021.990551
CNY 8.144706
CNH 8.131873
COP 4349.829098
CRC 561.384355
CUC 1.178897
CUP 31.240774
CVE 110.22266
CZK 24.236994
DJF 209.469536
DKK 7.474449
DOP 72.302227
DZD 153.219144
EGP 56.036475
ERN 17.683457
ETB 183.051984
FJD 2.619805
FKP 0.87456
GBP 0.874585
GEL 3.153597
GGP 0.87456
GHS 12.927034
GIP 0.87456
GMD 86.65348
GNF 10320.035759
GTQ 9.025533
GYD 246.055483
HKD 9.214084
HNL 31.119046
HRK 7.539094
HTG 154.180774
HUF 380.836877
IDR 19879.624744
ILS 3.672942
IMP 0.87456
INR 106.957625
IQD 1541.008052
IRR 49661.042612
ISK 144.993015
JEP 0.87456
JMD 183.279597
JOD 0.835885
JPY 182.758577
KES 151.621757
KGS 103.095009
KHR 4730.182992
KMF 492.779421
KPW 1061.017663
KRW 1703.795257
KWD 0.361521
KYD 0.980223
KZT 587.104475
LAK 25205.317867
LBP 105335.237518
LKR 363.940199
LRD 217.026633
LSL 18.950121
LTL 3.480977
LVL 0.713104
LYD 7.441142
MAD 10.785757
MDL 20.20224
MGA 5034.066261
MKD 61.621329
MMK 2475.775519
MNT 4205.980766
MOP 9.468963
MRU 47.097908
MUR 54.724852
MVR 18.226196
MWK 2039.716483
MXN 20.197696
MYR 4.601281
MZN 75.337468
NAD 18.950121
NGN 1583.471518
NIO 43.283374
NOK 11.229118
NPR 171.155254
NZD 1.968602
OMR 0.452986
PAB 1.176248
PEN 3.951182
PGK 5.130029
PHP 68.327115
PKR 328.738921
PLN 4.222397
PYG 7605.078657
QAR 4.287453
RON 5.100032
RSD 117.374913
RUB 90.365288
RWF 1717.940087
SAR 4.422617
SBD 9.484443
SCR 17.871135
SDG 709.110969
SEK 10.681049
SGD 1.492529
SHP 0.884478
SLE 28.887303
SLL 24720.883013
SOS 671.042232
SRD 44.368388
STD 24400.790813
STN 24.490592
SVC 10.292047
SYP 13038.101319
SZL 18.943723
THB 36.684966
TJS 11.145219
TMT 4.12614
TND 3.415188
TOP 2.838502
TRY 51.671496
TTD 7.961942
TWD 37.181831
TZS 3031.835379
UAH 50.913243
UGX 4234.373448
USD 1.178897
UYU 45.642467
UZS 14365.48178
VES 473.717869
VND 30615.958975
VUV 139.583423
WST 3.200029
XAF 655.705124
XAG 0.013965
XAU 0.000231
XCD 3.186029
XCG 2.119986
XDR 0.815487
XOF 655.705124
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.108453
ZAR 18.909381
ZMK 10611.493248
ZMW 22.272444
ZWL 379.604401
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.7500

    97.09

    +0.77%

  • NGG

    0.0100

    90.28

    +0.01%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    31.46

    +1.49%

  • GSK

    -0.8444

    59.52

    -1.42%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.8

    +0.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    18.2

    +2.2%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.65

    +0.77%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    25.8

    +0.89%

  • AZN

    -2.2500

    204.2

    -1.1%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.96

    +0.04%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.13

    +0.61%

  • BCC

    -2.2500

    82.13

    -2.74%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.08

    +1.76%

  • BP

    -0.3308

    38.18

    -0.87%

'Accept me': Near Ukraine front, a haven for outcasts
'Accept me': Near Ukraine front, a haven for outcasts / Photo: KSENIIA TOMCHYK - AFP

'Accept me': Near Ukraine front, a haven for outcasts

Whenever warm days come to Kramatorsk, near the eastern Ukrainian front, the Svitanok organisation leaves its door wide open, offering advice or a cup of tea to the city's social outcasts.

Text size:

People living with HIV, those recovering from drug addiction, sex workers -- all are welcome to seek medical guidance and respite from stigma and solace as Russian troops advance toward Kramatorsk.

The refuge they find at Svitanok is vital during the war, when marginalised communities often feel left behind and face heightened insecurity and stigma.

"They support me here, they respect me. I just came to drink some tea. They'll treat me, I know they'll accept me," says Oleg Makaria, who is HIV-positive.

Makaria, who comes to Svitanok most days, hardly reacts to the air raid sirens once again wailing in Kramatorsk, just 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the front.

The 41-year-old jokes that he does not look his age. But he suddenly breaks down thinking about Donetsk, his home city now in Russian hands.

"I understand I can't return to Donetsk anymore. Never in my life. Probably... I'm here alone," he mutters through tears.

Moscow-backed separatists seized parts of the Donetsk region in 2014, a prelude to the Kremlin's full-scale 2022 invasion, which the UNHCR says has displaced nearly 11 million people.

The conflict disrupted treatment -- which needs to be taken daily to control HIV -- to some of the 250,000 Ukrainians estimated by UNAIDS to be living with the infection in 2020.

- 'I didn't break' -

Advances from Russian troops have also threatened drug treatment programmes.

Moscow and its proxies have banned opioid substitution, which replaces dangerous opioids with less harmful substances such as methadone.

Approved by the United Nations and the World Health Organisation, the treatment also reduces HIV transmission as it lowers drug injections.

No one would guess looking at Natalia Zelenina, but the bright social worker sporting a red bob and bright pink lipstick spent five years in Russian custody.

She was carrying legally prescribed drugs for her replacement therapy when she was stopped by Moscow-backed separatists controlling parts of the Donetsk region in 2017.

"I realised how strong I was," the 52-year-old said.

While her colleagues campaigned to get her out, she fought to obtain treatment for her HIV.

"I survived, I endured it all. I went through it all. I didn't break," she said.

After being released to Kyiv-controlled territory in a prisoner exchange, Zelenina returned to Svitanok.

"I knew that I could only recover in a familiar atmosphere," she says.

But even in the protective bubble of Svitanok, where most workers have HIV and a drug dependency, the boom of explosions can be heard in the distance.

One employee told AFP she started consuming "just a little bit" of drugs to alleviate her anxiety –- until her colleagues helped her get clean again.

Iryna Mamalakieva arrives holding her four-year-old son Maksym, who wobbled off at any opportunity to pick dandelions on a patch of grass.

The unemployed 31-year-old former mine operator, diagnosed with HIV in 2019, relies on Svitanok for medical and legal help.

"Some people give up, some hang themselves. I knew people like that: They found out about their diagnosis, and even if they had children, they drank themselves to death and quietly went to hang themselves," she said.

- 'Melancholy in my soul' -

The war has exacerbated stigma towards HIV-positive people and those suffering from drug addictions, counsellor Svitlana Andreieva told AFP.

"The rest of the world that's outside our doors, it tells them that they are nobody, that they're not accepted, they're not respected," she said.

Andreieva herself remembers being kicked out of hospitals and beaten up by the police because she was addicted to drugs and HIV-positive.

Then she learned law, which she shares with visitors who went through similar experiences.

"The next time they don't come with tears," she said. "They say: 'What do I need to do, which law article should I rely on?'"

But Andreieva's patience is often tested.

After an altercation with a regular, she finds a bouquet of lilacs in lieu of apologies in the office.

Hard to win over, she initially shrugs it off.

But Svitanok's workers and beneficiaries face yet another hurdle: cuts in US humanitarian aid.

Svitanok has for now survived Washington's aid freeze, but is scrambling to find alternative sources of funding for some of its many programmes, which partly rely on US money.

The uncertainty "really knocked me out of my stability", Zelenina says.

"There's such a melancholy in my soul, you know? I love my job. I simply can't imagine what I will do tomorrow."

W.O.Ludwig--NZN