
'Accept me': Near Ukraine front, a haven for outcasts
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.
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
5 days ago
- Euronews
Saudi Arabia tackles sweltering heat as Hajj pilgrimage starts
Over a million Muslims have begun the once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage, Hajj, on Wednesday in Saudi Arabia's Mecca, as additional measures are taken to contend with this year's sweltering heat, expected to exceed 40 degrees Celsius. Over the span of five days, Muslim pilgrims - who can afford it and are physically fit - will immerse themselves in religious rituals that originated more than 1,400 years ago. After entering Mecca, pilgrims will start their journey by circling the Kaaba, a black cube-shaped structure in the centre of the Great Mosque and Islam's holiest site, seven times in a anti-clockwise direction to express a unified devotion to one God. Pilgrims will then travel to other sacred sites in Mecca, where they will perform additional rituals and acts of worship. Before leaving the holy city, Muslims will circle the Kaaba another seven times, signifying a spiritual farewell to the sacred sanctuary. A successful completion of the Hajj, a spiritual experience of a lifetime, is a chance to seek God's forgiveness and can wipe the slate clean of past sins. While it's only required to do the pilgrimage once in a lifetime, some Muslims perform the Hajj multiple times. The Hajj occurs once a year during the 12th and last month of the Islamic calendar, called the lunar month of Dhul-Hijja. This year, the annual pilgrimage falls at the start of summer, making the heat an additional challenge to pilgrims completing the journey. After last year's suffocating temperatures, reaching up to 47 degrees Celsius, resulted in more than 1,300 deaths, Saudi authorities are taking additional measures to ensure the safety of visitors. This year, Riyadh has spent billions of dollars on crowd control and cooling systems. The world's largest and a one-of-a-kind cooling system installed in the Grand Mosque will keep pilgrims comfortable at temperatures ranging from 22-24 degrees Celsius, local media reported. Pilgrims are also being told to avoid going out during the day and uncovering their heads, unless necessary such as during rituals and are given an official safety kit offering advice on what to wear and bring and explaining how to recognise and treat heat exhaustion and dehydration symptoms. Representing one of the biggest policy changes in years, Riyadh has also introduced a ban on the participation of children younger than 12 years old in this year's Hajj. Children are exempt from doing the Hajj and are not required to fulfil other religious obligations, such as praying and fasting, until they reach puberty. Hajj is one of the Five Pillars of Islam, in addition to faith, prayer, almsgiving and fasting. Ukraine's security service (SBU) released new drone footage of Operation "Spiderweb", showing how exactly Kyiv struck 41 Russian heavy military bombers last Sunday. The footage released on Wednesday shows Ukraine's first-person-view drones striking four Russian airfields: Dyagilevo in the Riazan region, Ivanovo in the Ivanovo region, Belaya air base in the Irkutsk region, located in south-eastern Siberia over 4,000km east of the frontline, and Olenya air base in Russia's Murmansk region, some 2,000km away from Ukraine's border. Kyiv said these were the airfields where Russian strategic aviation "had been based". The damaged aircraft include A-50, Tu-95, Tu-22, Tu-160, as well as An-12 and Il-78. Moscow uses these heavy bombers for daily attacks on Ukrainian cities. The SBU also revealed that it used a modern UAV control technology during this operation. It combined autonomous artificial intelligence algorithms and manual operator interventions. Ukraine's security service says some of the UAVs lost signal and would switch to an artificial intelligence-assisted mission following a pre-planned route. The warhead then automatically detonated as it approached and made contact with a specific target. Earlier, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that 117 drones had been used in Operation Spiderweb, each with its own pilot. The General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces confirmed on Tuesday that Russia lost 41 military aircraft. Zelenskyy said it took Kyiv "one year, six months, and nine days from the start of planning to effective execution." Kyiv managed to smuggle FPV drones deep inside Russia and hide them inside trucks in mobile log cabins. The cabins' roofs were then opened remotely, and the drones proceeded to launch their attack on Russian military bombers. Social media footage widely shared by Russian media appears to show the drones rising from inside containers, while the panels lie discarded on the road. On Wednesday, Ukraine's president said Kyiv would not have launched its drone strike on Russian strategic bombers if Moscow had accepted Kyiv's calls for a ceasefire. Zelenskyy said Ukraine has repeatedly urged Russia to accept the US-backed 30-day ceasefire proposal, which could be the first step to putting an end to Russia's all-out war against Ukraine. However during the second round of talks on Monday, Moscow rejected the proposal once again. "If there had been a ceasefire, would the operation have taken place? No," Zelenskyy explained, adding that roughly half of the planes will be impossible to repair, while others will require significant time to be put back into service.


Euronews
5 days ago
- Euronews
Aid group halts deliveries in Gaza after shootings near aid sites
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) has paused food delivery in the Strip on Wednesday after reports claimed dozens of Palestinians were killed in a series of shootings near their three distribution sites. The US and Israel-backed aid distribution group stated that it was in discussions with the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) to enhance safety measures, including methods to manage civilian presence near aid hubs and improve military training protocols. The pause in aid comes after Israeli forces acknowledged opening fire near a GHF aid distribution site in Rafah, a southern Gazan city now largely empty and declared a military zone. At least 27 people were killed on Tuesday, according to the Red Cross and the UN. The IDF denied firing on civilians, stating it shot near people they described as suspects who ignored warning shots. It said it was reviewing reports of civilian casualties. A further 80 people were reportedly killed since the GHF opened the aid distribution sites last week, in similar incidents on Sunday and Monday. In both cases, the Israeli military claimed to have fired warning shots. Both the US and Israel said they supported the creation of a new aid distribution system in Gaza aimed at stopping Hamas from war profiteering by diverting humanitarian supplies to fund its armed activities. The UN has repeatedly denied that Hamas has systematically diverted the aid on a significant scale. It said safeguards are in place to prevent misuse. The UN has declined to participate in the new distribution system with the GHF, stating it violates humanitarian principles by giving Israel control over who receives aid and requiring Palestinians to travel to collect supplies from only three hubs. Earlier this year, Israel imposed a complete aid blockade on food and other supplies into Gaza for two and a half months before easing restrictions in May. Humanitarian experts warned earlier this year that the Strip faced famine unless Israel lifted its blockade and stopped its renewed military campaign that began in March. Israel has vowed to seize control of Gaza and fight until Hamas is destroyed or disarmed and exiled, and until the militant group returns the remaining 58 hostages seized in the incursion that sparked the war. The Israel-Hamas war in Gaza began when Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on 7 October 2023, killing around 1,200 people, most of them civilians. Hamas took 251 people as hostages and is currently holding 58, of whom 20 are believed to be alive. A subsequent Israeli offensive has to date resulted in the deaths of at least 54,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry, whose figures do not distinguish between fighters and civilians. The Israeli military says 862 of its soldiers have died since the start of the war. Hamas has been vastly depleted militarily and lost nearly all of its senior leaders in Gaza.


France 24
5 days ago
- France 24
World Boxing say 'not correct' to have named Khelif in sex test statement
The international federation said it was introducing the policy after the furore surrounding boxers including women's welterweight gold medallist Khelif at last year's Paris Olympics. World Boxing will organise the boxing competition at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics after being granted provisional recognition by the International Olympic Committee. World Boxing said it had informed the Algerian Boxing Federation Khelif would have to undergo the test if she wanted to compete at the Eindhoven Box Cup in the Netherlands on June 5-10. But the federation rowed back on having named Khelif in their statement. "The president of World Boxing does not think it was correct to have a named a specific athlete in a statement issued last Friday," the body said. World Boxing, it continued, "has written personally to the president of the Algerian Boxing Federation to offer a formal and sincere apology which acknowledges that greater effort should have been made to avoid linking the policy to any individual". Under the new policy, all athletes over 18 that want to participate in a World Boxing owned or sanctioned competition will need to undergo a PCR, or polymerase chain reaction genetic test, to determine what sex they were at birth and their eligibility to compete. The PCR test is a laboratory technique used to detect specific genetic material, in this case the SRY gene, that reveals the presence of the Y chromosome, which is an indicator of biological sex. The test can be conducted by a nasal or mouth swab, or by taking a sample of saliva or blood. National federations will be responsible for testing and will be required to confirm the sex of their athletes when entering them into World Boxing competitions by producing certification of their chromosomal sex, as determined by a PCR test. Khelif's success at the Paris Olympics, along with that of Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting, sparked a raging gender eligibility debate, with high-profile figures such as US President Donald Trump and Elon Musk weighing in. Khelif and Lin were disqualified from the International Boxing Association's 2023 world championships after the organisation, the long-standing governing body of amateur boxing, said they had failed gender eligibility tests. The IOC has severed links with the IBA over financial, governance and ethical concerns. The IBA is led by the Kremlin-linked Russian Umar Kremlev. Last month the IOC provisionally recognised World Boxing as the body to oversee the sport at future Games.