-
Trump says comedian Colbert should be 'put to sleep'
-
Mahrez leads Algeria to AFCON cruise against Sudan
-
Southern California braces for devastating Christmas storm
-
Amorim wants Man Utd players to cover 'irreplaceable' Fernandes
-
First Bond game in a decade hit by two-month delay
-
Brazil's imprisoned Bolsonaro hospitalized ahead of surgery
-
Serbia court drops case against ex-minister over train station disaster
-
Investors watching for Santa rally in thin pre-Christmas trade
-
David Sacks: Trump's AI power broker
-
Delap and Estevao in line for Chelsea return against Aston Villa
-
Why metal prices are soaring to record highs
-
Stocks tepid in thin pre-Christmas trade
-
UN experts slam US blockade on Venezuela
-
Bethlehem celebrates first festive Christmas since Gaza war
-
Set-piece weakness costing Liverpool dear, says Slot
-
Two police killed in explosion in Moscow
-
EU 'strongly condemns' US sanctions against five Europeans
-
Arsenal's Kepa Arrizabalaga eager for more League Cup heroics against Che;sea
-
Thailand-Cambodia border talks proceed after venue row
-
Kosovo, Serbia 'need to normalise' relations: Kosovo PM to AFP
-
Newcastle boss Howe takes no comfort from recent Man Utd record
-
Frank warns squad to be 'grown-up' as Spurs players get Christmas Day off
-
Rome pushes Meta to allow other AIs on WhatsApp
-
Black box recovered from Libyan general's crashed plane
-
Festive lights, security tight for Christmas in Damascus
-
Zelensky reveals US-Ukraine plan to end Russian war, key questions remain
-
El Salvador defends mega-prison key to Trump deportations
-
Stranger Things set for final bow: five things to know
-
Grief, trauma weigh on survivors of catastrophic Hong Kong fire
-
Asian markets mixed after US growth data fuels Wall St record
-
Stokes says England player welfare his main priority
-
Australia's Lyon determined to bounce back after surgery
-
Stokes says England players' welfare his main priority
-
North Korean POWs in Ukraine seeking 'new life' in South
-
Japanese golf star 'Jumbo' Ozaki dies aged 78
-
Johnson, Castle shine as Spurs rout Thunder
-
Thai border clashes hit tourism at Cambodia's Angkor temples
-
From predator to plate: Japan bear crisis sparks culinary craze
-
Asian markets mostly up after US growth fuels Wall St record
-
'Happy milestone': Pakistan's historic brewery cheers export licence
-
Chevron: the only foreign oil company left in Venezuela
-
US denies visas to EU ex-commissioner, four others over tech rules
-
SMX Is Being Valued By Monetizing Certainty, Not Sustainability Narratives
-
SMX Is Earning Validation, and Valuation, Through Industrial Proof, Not Promises
-
SMX's Valuation Is Anchored in Fixing a Structural Supply-Chain Failure Markets Learned to Ignore
-
2026 Payer IT Outsourcing Outlook: Outcome-Based Managed Services, Production-Grade GenAI Governance, and Vendor-Risk Enforcement
-
Gold's Quiet Molecular-Level Reckoning Is Happening Outside the Spotlight
-
SMX Is Transitioning From Single Deployments to Supply-Chain Infrastructure
-
Each SMX Partnership Opens a Market, the Portfolio Multiplies the Value
-
CORRECTION: Nextech3D.ai Provides Shareholder Update on Krafty Labs Acquisition and Announces $321,917 CEO Investment
As war grinds on, Ukraine's seniors suffer
Like thousands of senior citizens in Ukraine, Zinaida Gyrenko was spending the sunset years of her life in a shelter, her retirement upended by Russia's invasion.
Her memory was foggy but the moment Russia struck her village in the northeast of the country, sending her sprawling, was crystal clear.
"It was so loud. Everyone fell to the ground. I was lying there. Then I opened my eyes again, and I thought: I'm still alive," Gyrenko, born in 1939, told AFP.
The invasion launched by the Kremlin more than three years ago has disproportionately affected Ukraine's seniors.
A quarter of Ukraine's people are older than 60, but they accounted for nearly half of civilian deaths near the front last year, according to the United Nations.
The elderly are often the last to leave frontline territories, saying they lack money or strength to relocate -- or the will to part with their homes.
Gyrenko lived in the village of Zaoskillya in the eastern Kharkiv region until last May. Russia has been advancing on the nearby town of Kupiansk further west, raining down bombs on settlements nearby.
She now stays at a dormitory-turned-shelter for senior citizens called Velyka Rodina, meaning Big Family, in Kharkiv city further north.
Gyrenko was grateful to her carers for looking after what she called the "second-hand" residents. She said she could no longer remember her age: "I'm from '39. You do the maths."
She said she had worked in the rail industry her whole life.
"I've loved the railways very, very much, ever since I was a child," she said, her blue eyes welling up with tears.
- Dignity in retirement -
The shelter's founder Olga Kleytman said the needs of elderly people were immense.
In Kharkiv alone, she estimated that 32,000 seniors who had fled their homes needed help.
There are only eight public retirement homes in the Kharkiv region -- not enough to meet demand, she said.
Authorities have not provided financial support to her establishment, which had 60 residents at the end of March and depends solely on private donations, she added.
"They have worked all their lives, and they deserve a decent old age," the 56-year-old said.
"This is about our dignity."
An architect by profession, Kleytman told AFP she had plans to expand.
Since most of the seniors come from rural areas, she wants to create a large vegetable garden with animals to reproduce village "smells and sounds".
One of the residents, 50-year-old Sergiy Yukovsky, who had both legs amputated after an accident at work, used to live in the countryside with his younger brother.
His brother was killed by a mine while "fetching wood" near the village of Kochubeivka, also in the Kharkiv region.
"I don't even know where he is buried," Yukovsky said. For a year, he lived alone before being evacuated to Kharkiv city.
The future is bleak, he confessed, but added: "Ukraine will have it all, and Putin is an asshole."
- Hopes for future -
In another room 84-year-old Yuri Myagky lay in bed facing a window.
He was from Saltivka, a Kharkiv suburb that was bombed heavily when Russian forces were attempting to capture the city at the start of the invasion.
"Has Ukraine been divided?" Myagky asked, confused -- like so many others -- by the twists and turns of the conflict.
Since September 2024, Gyrenko has been sharing a room with Olga Zolotareva, 71, who grumbled when her roommate lost the thread of their conversation.
For 28 years, Zolotareva looked after people with learning disabilities in the town of Lyptsi, not far from the Russian border.
When the invasion began, they were evacuated, but Zolotareva stayed.
In May 2024, when Russia launched a new offensive on the Kharkiv region, she was in her house when "there was a strike".
A shard "from I don't know what" broke her right leg, she said, showing her scar.
As well as peace, she hopes to be able to walk normally again.
That, Zolotareva said, and to have "the smell of a man" around her. She misses it a lot, she told AFP.
Gyrenko said she remained optimistic, despite everything.
"Happiness, as I understand, means not being hungry, not being without clothes and not being shoeless," she said.
"I'm not those things."
J.Oliveira--AMWN