The Fort Worth Press - Poet of Irpin flees still dangerous strategic town

USD -
AED 3.672501
AFN 63.00022
ALL 81.552851
AMD 369.600389
ANG 1.789884
AOA 918.000504
ARS 1391.005978
AUD 1.398983
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.700601
BAM 1.669697
BBD 2.01454
BDT 122.725158
BGN 1.668102
BHD 0.377787
BIF 3018.023787
BMD 1
BND 1.275896
BOB 6.911331
BRL 4.982983
BSD 1.000226
BTN 94.881811
BWP 13.592996
BYN 2.822528
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011629
CAD 1.366715
CDF 2319.9999
CHF 0.785325
CLF 0.022994
CLP 904.969729
CNY 6.83825
CNH 6.83316
COP 3635.91
CRC 454.73562
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.144215
CZK 20.822797
DJF 178.109618
DKK 6.38534
DOP 59.535702
DZD 132.469596
EGP 53.618099
ERN 15
ETB 156.178918
EUR 0.85458
FJD 2.199301
FKP 0.741296
GBP 0.740265
GEL 2.689654
GGP 0.741296
GHS 11.197295
GIP 0.741296
GMD 72.999866
GNF 8777.060112
GTQ 7.641507
GYD 209.25239
HKD 7.832945
HNL 26.59267
HRK 6.4388
HTG 131.024649
HUF 311.777964
IDR 17347.2
ILS 2.952805
IMP 0.741296
INR 95.006905
IQD 1310.252086
IRR 1315499.999915
ISK 122.890087
JEP 0.741296
JMD 156.725146
JOD 0.708961
JPY 156.525503
KES 129.180517
KGS 87.4205
KHR 4010.194106
KMF 421.999859
KPW 899.850687
KRW 1477.379946
KWD 0.30751
KYD 0.833543
KZT 463.288124
LAK 21964.84907
LBP 89617.037989
LKR 319.671116
LRD 183.536604
LSL 16.767685
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.359329
MAD 9.23871
MDL 17.233504
MGA 4159.711757
MKD 52.639445
MMK 2099.682501
MNT 3578.099757
MOP 8.070846
MRU 39.664969
MUR 47.030217
MVR 15.454998
MWK 1734.393743
MXN 17.516185
MYR 3.969947
MZN 63.905001
NAD 16.767829
NGN 1375.22987
NIO 36.807302
NOK 9.324098
NPR 151.803598
NZD 1.705535
OMR 0.384511
PAB 1.000201
PEN 3.525082
PGK 4.347548
PHP 61.449939
PKR 278.735096
PLN 3.64112
PYG 6151.626275
QAR 3.658104
RON 4.428598
RSD 100.31097
RUB 74.925614
RWF 1462.265158
SAR 3.750534
SBD 8.03884
SCR 13.70276
SDG 600.500876
SEK 9.27594
SGD 1.276101
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.601568
SLL 20969.496166
SOS 571.601766
SRD 37.461008
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.918091
SVC 8.7523
SYP 110.644079
SZL 16.77204
THB 32.540963
TJS 9.381822
TMT 3.505
TND 2.919452
TOP 2.40776
TRY 45.185101
TTD 6.789386
TWD 31.614975
TZS 2605.000206
UAH 43.949336
UGX 3760.987334
UYU 39.889518
UZS 11937.826312
VES 485.587755
VND 26356
VUV 118.50632
WST 2.712188
XAF 560.041494
XAG 0.013587
XAU 0.000216
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.80265
XDR 0.697718
XOF 560.055838
XPF 101.824143
YER 238.625004
ZAR 16.79035
ZMK 9001.196025
ZMW 18.67895
ZWL 321.999592
  • RYCEF

    0.7800

    16

    +4.88%

  • VOD

    0.4850

    15.825

    +3.06%

  • RELX

    0.7200

    36.52

    +1.97%

  • RBGPF

    0.2800

    63.75

    +0.44%

  • RIO

    3.2650

    99.755

    +3.27%

  • CMSC

    0.0140

    22.834

    +0.06%

  • BCE

    0.2350

    23.495

    +1%

  • BCC

    0.3100

    79.31

    +0.39%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.05

    -0.04%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.9

    +1.24%

  • GSK

    0.9900

    52.39

    +1.89%

  • AZN

    3.8400

    189.04

    +2.03%

  • NGG

    3.1100

    89.09

    +3.49%

  • BTI

    1.0600

    58.51

    +1.81%

  • BP

    0.4000

    47.2

    +0.85%

Poet of Irpin flees still dangerous strategic town
Poet of Irpin flees still dangerous strategic town

Poet of Irpin flees still dangerous strategic town

When the shelling became so intense she thought she would die, 72-year-old Tamara Osypchuk wrote poetry to calm herself in her apartment in the devastated Ukrainian town of Irpin.

Text size:

"The explosions were very strong. Like a volcano is exploding, as if the earth explodes," she said as she rested on a chair at an evacuation centre on the outskirts of Kyiv.

"I write poems and when there are explosions I feel great inspiration."

Dressed in a long black fur coat and woolly hat, Osypchuk was among a couple of dozen people seen escaping from Irpin on Saturday, as a flood of civilians fleeing in recent days slowed to a trickle.

A day after Russia signalled that it had scaled down the aims of its invasion, the bouts shelling that rocked the area earlier in the week had also reduced in intensity, AFP reporters said.

Moscow's announcement that its "main goal" was now the eastern Donbas area has sparked speculation that it will turn its attention from Kyiv as its month-long bid to encircle the capital stalls.

US President Joe Biden, however, has said he is "not sure" that Moscow has indeed changed strategy.

Ukraine meanwhile says that it has pushed back Moscow's forces from much of Irpin, a commuter town whose strategic place on the northwestern route into Kyiv has turned into the frontline.

- 'Thought I would die' -

After asking for a phone to call her daughter in Britain, Osypchuk describes how the fighting "demolished" the corner of the apartment block where she lives on the ninth floor.

The pensioner only left because a friend's pastor called the volunteer ambulances that have been braving Russian shell fire since just after the start of the war to get people out of Irpin.

"I thought that I would die here and not leave Ukraine. I love Ukraine very much, I have travelled half the world, but neither in England, nor in the Czech Republic, nor in Poland, nor in Italy do I feel like here."

Emergency workers evacuating people say that the situation remains dangerous inside Irpin, with fighting ongoing and their vehicles sometimes coming under fire.

The numbers of people fleeing have diminished because almost everyone who is able to leave the shattered town has now done so, emergency workers said, as they tended to the new arrivals.

But still they come. The elderly woman with a bloody, bandaged head wound brought out of an ambulance on a stretcher.

The anxious-looking girl of around ten years with her mother, who clutches a plastic cup of tea with trembling hands and cries.

The exhausted middle-aged woman carrying a pink plastic pet box, walking unsteadily along a long dirt road under a rain-threatening clouds.

- Ten dogs and a cat -

Almost every family fleeing Irpin seems to bring a pet of some kind, with many having stayed as long as they did because they did not know how to get their animals out.

Charity workers make several journeys with a pick up truck, returning with civilians huddled in the back along with their pets.

Svitlana Rogutska left Irpin with ten dogs -- including seven Scottie puppies stuffed into a suitcase -- and a cat.

She said that despite weeks of violence rained down by Russian forces she "waited for volunteers" who had come to help her bring out her pets.

"The dogs are ok," she says.

W.Matthews--TFWP