Ukraine says it dismissed nearly 100,000 children from institutional care. With help from U.N. child agency UNICEF, it is still trying to reach some 26,000 of them.
At the Odesa Orphanage-Boarding School four months after Russia invaded Ukraine, an air raid alarm sent nurses in white coats hurrying residents into a basement beneath the kitchen. Among them was Tanya (pictured above), a slight 12-year-old who favours a pink sun hat.
Staff at the Odesa Orphanage-Boarding School lead children to a basement shelter as an air raid warning goes off.
Children take the stairs to a basement shelter at the Odesa orphanage.
Tanya sits with other children in the basement shelter of the Odesa orphanage after an air raid warning.
Tanya is comforted by a staff member at the Odesa orphanage.
Staff member Oksana Kogat prepares soup in the dining hall at the Odesa orphanage.
Defectologist Nikolaeva Ogurtsova poses for a photo at the Odesa orphanage.
Tanya takes a nap at Lelechenya (Little Stork) rehabilitation centre after her evacuation from Odesa.
Soup is prepared for lunch at the Odesa orphanage.
Olga Slivka, 18, takes part in an activity session at the Odesa orphanage.
Tanya watches children play at the Odesa orphanage.
A child looks on during outdoor activities at Lelechenya (Little Stork) rehabilitation centre.
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The new arrivals were unpredictable, frantic, Ambrozivna said.
However, by August, Tanya was “settling well,” the director said.
($1 = 36.9246 hryvnias)
(Reporting by Sarah Slobin in New York and Joanna Plucinska in Ukraine; Additional reporting by Stefaniia Bern, Oleh Papushenko and Edgar Su in Ukraine; Photo editing by Gabrielle Fonseca Johnson and Eve Watling; Text editing by Sara Ledwith; Layout by Eve Watling)