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'Everything shook': Last Civilians Leave Ukraine Steel Mill

The last civilians sheltering in bunkers beneath a sprawling steel mill in th🌊e decimated Ukrainian port city of Mariupol arrived late Sunday night in Za𓄧porizhzhia, the first major Ukrainian city beyond the frontlines.

Pale and drawn, the last civilians sheltering in bunkers beneath a sprawling steel mill in the decimated Ukrainian port city of Mariupol arrived late Sunday ni🅰ght in Zaporizhzhia, the fཧirst major Ukrainian city beyond the frontlines.

The💫 shattered survivors spoke of constant shelling, dwindling food, ubiquitous mold — and using hand sanitiser for cooking fuel.

Ten buses slowly pulled into Zaporizhzhia's deserted s♈treets under darkness, carrying 174 evacuees froඣm the Mariupol area.

They includ🐼ed more than 30 of the 51 civilians evacuated in the last day from the Azovstal steel mill, where an estimated 2,000 Ukrainian fighters are making what appears to be their last stand.

Bothꦯ Ukrainian and Russian officials have said these civilians are the last ♎non-combatants from the industrial complex.

“It was terri꧂ble in the bunkers," said 69-year-old Lyubov Andropova, who had been in Azovstal since March 10. "Water would run down from the ceilings. There was mold everywhere. We were worried for the children, for their lungs.”

The shelling was constant, and there was fear “that our bunker 🎶would collapse,” she said.✤ “Everything shook, we didn't go out.”

The seaside steel mill is the ꦚonly part of Mariupol not under Russian control. Thanks to its warren of tunnels and bunkers deep underground, many civilians had chosen it as the safest place to take cover from the relentless shelling of the formerly thriving port city🌺 that has now been largely destroyed.

Just a few days after the war began on February 24, Dmytro Sviydakov took shelter in the bunkers with ཧhis wife and 12-year-old daughter.

They entered Azovstal on February 27. It would be more than two m🐈onths before they could leave.

Huddled in a bunker with around 50 t൩o 60 people, the first month and a half was bearable, he said, but then the shelling in⛎tensified.

A food storage area was blown up, and he and𝔉 others resorted to scavenging, including searching through workers' lockers. Fuel for cooking was scarce too, but then they discovered that hand sanitiser — well-stocked because of the coronavirus pandemic — was a good substitute.

“What can't you do when you have nothing!” he said, as he waited for a bus that would carry Azovstal e🤡vacuees to temporary accommodations in Zaporizhzhia.

Yehor, a steel mill employee sheltering in the bunker who would only provide his surname, was in the bunker with his two sons, wife and their dog. He said that when food ran low, 𝓡soldiers defending Azovstal helped.

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“We wouldn't have made it otherwise,” he said. “I don't know how long we could have survived, but for sure we wouldn't have survived until today.” In the last few 🅰days, they had just pasta, water and soꦏme spices left - enough for soup once a day.

His family entered the mill✨ on March 1 for safety, he said, after he narrowly escaped being shelled while walk꧒ing his dog.

Desp🔯ite the widespread destruction of Mariupol, some of the 51 evacuated from Azovstal chose toꦏ remain in the city, said UN officials, who were involved in securing safe passage for the evacuees.

Two — a man and a woman — were detained by Russian forces. The woman, who was held on suspicion of being🐼 a military medic, had been travelling with her four-year-old daughter.

The mother and child were separated, and the little girl made it to Zaporiz😼hzhia with the rest of the evacuees, UN officials said.

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But several hundred more who wanted to join the evacuation convoy from other areas held by Russian forces had to stay behind🌟 after Russia and Ukraine failed to reach an agreement on their evacuation.

“It was quite heartbreaking to💟 see them waiting and not being able to join us,” said UN Humanitarian Coordinator Osnat♌ Lubrani.

“Overall within a period of 10 days we've been able to bring a tot🔥al of 600 people in very complex, high-risk, very sensitive safe passage operations,” Lubrani said, adding that the UN hoped to be able to bring more civilians out in the future.

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