29 August, Thursday, 2024
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HomeSourcesbbc.comOnly 21, but on Ukraine's front line 'to keep heroes alive'

Only 21, but on Ukraine’s front line ‘to keep heroes alive’

In southern Ukraine, the city of Kherson has been liberated, but in the east, close to the Russian border, fighting still rages and casualties mount. In a trauma centre under daily Russian shelling, a dedicated team of medics – many of whom volunteered for service at the start of the war – are saving lives. The BBC spent almost a week with them.

Blood, iron, sweat and dirt are soaked into the walls and floors of the Ukrainian field hospital. No matter how hard the Ukrainian army medical staff scrub, a metallic smell haunts the place. It clings to the doctors’ clothes and in the ambulances its presence is overpowering.

“Even when you wash away the blood, and sprinkle with peroxide, there is always this smell. You never forget it,” says Valeria, 21, an anaesthetist’s assistant.

The trauma centre has been set up in an abandoned building, where more than a dozen doctors and nurses work and live together under fire. The roar of outgoing artillery fire is constant. In the five days I spend with them, Russian bombs fall around their clinic almost daily, while Ukrainian dead and injured arrive at their door.

The Brigade – its full name can’t be revealed for reasons of operational security – has already lost two medical stabilisation points to Russian fire, and five of their medics.

Sourcebbc.com
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