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British aid worker who lost limbs in Ukraine may have to fund his own prosthetics
British aid worker who lost limbs in Ukraine may have to fund his own prosthetics

The Independent

time17-02-2025

  • General
  • The Independent

British aid worker who lost limbs in Ukraine may have to fund his own prosthetics

A British aid worker who lost his arm and leg in an attack on Ukraine may have to fund his own prosthetics after he was hit by a drone while completing a civilian evacuation on the frontline. Edward 'Eddy' Scott works for Base UA, which provides shelter and helps evacuate people in combat zones, and was seriously injured when the team's armoured vehicle was hit in Pokrovsk in January. He had to have his left arm and leg amputated. Once the 28-year-old from Dorset leaves initial care, he will go to a post-surgical rehabilitation centre, where he will get plastic surgery and have prosthetics fitted. Base UA said it remains 'up in the air' about how these prosthetics would be funded, as the serious nature of Mr Scott's injuries means he may require extremely high-quality equipment which is not provided as standard. Keen to share the reality of the frontline, Mr Scott told The Independent: 'The last time I went in [to Pokrovsk], it was getting worse. It gets worse every time we go in, every day there's more houses destroyed.' 'The Ukrainians are tough, they know what they're facing. They either want to leave or they don't want to leave, there's no in-between.' He countered beliefs those who refused to leave their homes during evacuations were sympathisers and collaborators with the Russians. Mr Scott added: 'There's an incredible connection to the land. When we've come to people's houses, we've had people kissing their houses goodbye because they've lived in that house for their entire life. It's their property, it's their whole being.' He recalled attending an evacuation request for a man, put in by his daughter, where he refused to leave his home on the frontline. 'We had to record a video of him saying, 'I'm staying,'' he said. 'We can't force people to leave. It has to be their choice.' Having 'fallen in love with Ukraine ', Mr Scott acknowledged a history of 'people telling Ukrainians to leave'. He added: 'So when we come in and say, you have to leave your home. That scares them, that really scares them.' Mr Scott said within 24 hours of the attack the Weatherman Foundation, which helps those affected by the devastation of war and conflict, had offered to fund his initial recovery. 'I want to advocate for Ukrainians who haven't been able to receive the same care I have,' he said. 'Straight off the bat, I've had people helping me. Other people don't get that.' The Ukrainian Health Ministry estimated at least 50,000 citizens have lost limbs in nearly three years of war. More than £100,000 has been raised for his recovery through GoFundMe in the two weeks since the attack. Base UA said this will go towards his onward medical costs, rehabilitation and other associated expenses. 'I really feel loved and the speed at which it happened,' he said of the fundraiser. 'I came out to Ukraine for nothing more than to help people. 'The fact that so many people have seen my story, and decided that I'm someone that they want to support gives me so much positivity, and it's part of the reason I'm so positive after losing two limbs. 'The fact that I've got this incredible network of people who are looking after me and who are making sure that I'm taking care of.' Mr Scott didn't have family in Ukraine before he came to help in October 2022. When the war started, he was a sailor who initially thought he would go over for three months. He said: 'I wasn't sort of aware of what I could do. I just knew that I wanted to do something.' Since moving to Ukraine, he has found family in friends and he now has a goddaughter. He said he found a 'sense of purpose' in 'helping other people and giving back'. 'I want to settle in Ukraine,' he said. 'I have a goddaughter here, I have family here, so I will stay here and settle. I plan to buy a house and just live here. 'I've been given opportunities now that I didn't have beforehand, and I've been given a future, to be honest.' US president Donald Trump has said he intends for negotiations to begin to end the war in Ukraine, following a 'lengthy and highly productive' phone call with Vladimir Putin last week. He said he and the Russian president had "agreed to have our respective teams start negotiations immediately". The statements caused concern across Europe as Mr Trump suggested it would be unlikely that Kyiv would win back all its territory or join Nato in a deal. European leaders will this week hold an emergency summit to discuss the developments. Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky said his main issue was to 'not allow everything to go according to Putin's plan'. Mr Zelensky said: 'We cannot accept it, as an independent country, any agreements [made] without us.' Mr Scott added: 'The news coming out from America, it just breaks my heart. We've done so much to help this country, to save this country, to defend this country, and it's being thrown away.'

Pokrovsk: Inside the Ukrainian city as Russian forces advance
Pokrovsk: Inside the Ukrainian city as Russian forces advance

BBC News

time04-02-2025

  • BBC News

Pokrovsk: Inside the Ukrainian city as Russian forces advance

As he prepares to set off on another rescue mission on Ukraine's eastern front, 35-year-old Anton Yaremchuk is grateful for the fog. It will shield him and his colleague Pylyp from Russian drones hunting from the skies. His armoured van will provide more protection – but only up to a point. Every journey could be the December shrapnel from a drone attack ripped through a clearly marked armoured vehicle used by his team, causing injuries but no deaths."We were extremely lucky," he regular destination these days is the industrial city of Pokrovsk, which he says is "being attacked night and day".Russian forces are closing in – they are now less than 2km (1.2 miles) away."The last few days we were coming in, there was hell," Anton tells us. "There are around 7,000 people still there. We'll try to get some people out of that nightmare."He's been doing just that since Moscow's full-scale invasion in February his country under attack, the Ukrainian cinematographer left his life and career in Berlin, came home and co-founded a small aid organisation, Base UA. Since then, he and his team have managed to get about 3,000 civilians out of harm's way, taking them away from front lines to safer areas. Pokrovsk used to be one of those places."It's crazy," he says as we head for the city, "because this used to be the haven, the safest city in the region and the biggest hospital. The evacuation train was departing from Pokrovsk".If and when Russian forces take the city, it will deprive the Ukrainian military of a key supply and transport has already lost the output from a crucial coal mine in the area – the only one producing coking coal for its steel industry. Operations were suspended last month because of the Russian join Anton for the journey to Pokrovsk. He has a tourniquet, and a separate medical kit attached to the front of his body armour. His white high visibility jacket bears the slogan "Leave no-one behind". Before we set off, there's a warning. "When we park, get out of the vehicles and don't stand nearby," Anton tells us, "in case they are targeted".The closer we get the more explosions we hear. War has left its mark, draining the city of life. Streets are deserted, and houses boarded up. Some buildings have been flattened. There's no smoke from the chimneys on snow-capped rooves. We pass a parked car with a white we find Olga, already waiting by the roadside, wrapped up in a lilac winter coat and furry hood. She's one of six people on Anton's list for evacuation this goes to lock up her home - moving quickly despite her 71 years. And then she gets into the van and does not look back. "I have been in this house for 65 years," Olga says."It's hard to leave everything behind. But it's not life anymore, it's like hell. In the beginning we thought maybe we will sit it out, but now the ground is shaking."Her children and grandchildren have already fled the bombing. I ask if she thinks she will be able to come back one day. "Who knows," she replies, "but we hope."Along the way, whenever Anton spots people out on the street – and there aren't many - he urges them to go. He stops the car to hand out leaflets explaining that evacuation is free, and help, including a place to stay and ongoing payments, is available in the city of Pavlohrad to the west. But some are hard to persuade."I have to stay," one old elderly woman says. "My son has died, and I need to be near his grave.""I don't think he would want this," Anton says. We drive on and pass a group of three who have been out collecting water. Anton shouts another warning. "There will be street battles," he says, "unfortunately, I promise you this. I am doing this from the very first day. It's the same everywhere. This is the final stage".One of the women comes forward to take a leaflet. "God keep you safe," she tells him before going on her moves fast from address to address. When there's no answer at one house, he climbs over a high metal gate to investigate. He knocks. He shouts. He speaks to a neighbour. With no sign of the woman he hoped to evacuate, we drive on.I ask what he's expecting for 2025, now President Trump is back in the White House and pushing for peace talks."I stopped looking too much ahead," he says. "I think nobody really knows what's going to happen. I personally don't think that even if some kind of negotiations will start, they will bring a ceasefire anytime soon."More than this he expects that fighting will worsen if talks do start, as both sides will try to gain leverage. The last pick up of the day is 75-year-old Lyuba – her white hair peeping out from under a scarf. Her long life is now compressed into a few plastic bags. She looks bereft and flinches at every explosion we hear."It has been bad," she tells me. "Bad. We were left alone. There are no authorities. People are just getting killed under the sky," she says, gesturing upwards. "There's no gas, no water, no electricity."Lyuba is helped into the van, which is now full, with five elderly evacuees – their memories and their fears - and one black cat peering out from a pet carrier. No-one speaks. For Anton this is a familiar picture, but still a painful first travelled with him in the heat of summer in 2022. He was then evacuating civilians from another front-line city – Lysychansk - as Russian shells rained in Ukraine's third winter of war he – and other volunteers – are still trying to outrun moving front lines and save whoever they can."To be honest every time I see this I break down," he says, "because it's just these innocent people leaving everything behind. These are human tragedies, and you can never really get used to it. But I am glad that we manage to get people out to safety".That comes at a cost, and it is we travelled to Pokrovsk, one of Anton's teams has come under fire from a Russian drone. A 28-year-old British volunteer lost an arm and a leg – saving civilians - but is now stable in the attack, Anton's group have suspended evacuations from Pokrovsk, and from other front-line areas.A Ukrainian police unit called the White Angels is still doing rescue missions in the city. They tell us they are "trying to be very cautious and careful". Inside the city, in freezing basements and unlit homes, the remaining residents – mostly elderly – are at the mercy of Russian glide bombs and artillery, as they wait for Pokrovsk to fall. Additional reporting from Wietske Burema, Goktay Koraltan and Volodymyr Lozhko

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