’I have nothing’: African students in Ukraine left stranded as they face racism while trying to flee

People fleeing from Ukraine are seen after crossing Ukrainian-Polish border due to Russian military attack on Ukraine. Medyka, Poland. Picture: Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Reuters

People fleeing from Ukraine are seen after crossing Ukrainian-Polish border due to Russian military attack on Ukraine. Medyka, Poland. Picture: Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Reuters

Published Mar 5, 2022

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They piled into a cab bound for the Polish border, some 136 miles distant, at around 8 a.m. After two hours, they hit wall-to-wall traffic. The cab couldn't go any further.

After the cab hit the bottleneck, Orakpo and her friend decided to continue their journey by foot. Orakpo said she only packed some clothes, blankets and her travel documents.

By the time they drew close to the Polish border - a day later - they faced another obstacle, one that Orakpo says was prompted by her race.

Several African and South Asian citizens in Ukraine have said they've seen a different treatment for those who are non-White, non-Ukrainian trying to leave the country, a situation that has been confirmed by the top U.N. refugee agency and other official authorities.

Orakpo and Nanyangwe say they were among those set apart and denied being evacuated from Ukraine because they were African.

As they walked, Orakpo and Nanyangwe would take breaks to rest by the road, lying on the blankets. After walking for close to 12 hours, they made it to a school's basketball-court-turned-shelter where they were able to rest, thanks to a traffic warden who offered to drive them there. "He sees that I'm very tired, and I was so grateful to him. Till this day, I'm very grateful to that guy," Orakpo said.

The next day, they made it to a bus stop in the town of Mosciska, where buses were taking people to the Polish border. When they got there, Orakpo told The Washington Post, officials started allowing only women with kids and pregnant women. The first bus took off, then the second. Pets and their owners were being loaded onto a third bus, without any noncitizens being allowed to board. Orakpo pleaded to be allowed on the bus and was initially ignored. She speaks a bit of Ukrainian, so she said she was pregnant so she could be considered.

Another bus came. "We were this close to entering," she said. Orakpo overheard other

Several African and South Asian citizens in Ukraine have said they've seen a different treatment for those who are non-White, non-Ukrainian trying to leave the country, a situation that has been confirmed by the top U.N. refugee agency and other official authorities.

people in the station saying in Ukrainian: "Why are the Blacks entering?"

"It was very devastating," she said. Orakpo turned to a Ukrainian woman organizing the line and asked her: "What's wrong with us entering the bus? When will you start loading us?" The woman looked at her and said: "Only Ukrainians are going to get on the bus," according to Orakpo. "That's very bad. What about us?" the medical student asked. The woman shrugged.

Requests for comment to Ukraine's State Border Guard Service were not immediately returned.

"I don't know what is happening on the Ukrainian side of the border, but we let everyone in regardless of nationality," a spokesperson for the Polish border guards said to France24.

Stories similar to Orakpo's have been reported in news media and shared on Twitter and Instagram as people desperately try to flee Ukraine.

Barlaney Mufaro Gurure, a Zimbabwean space engineering student, said she was pushed by a border guard who was giving priority to Ukrainians at the Krakovets border crossing, Al Jazeera reported. The New York Times reported that Chineye Mbagwu, a 24-year-old Nigerian doctor, spent more than two days stranded in the town of Medyka by the Poland-Ukraine border crossing, as guards were allowing Ukrainians to cross but not foreigners. Saakshi Ijantkar, a 22-year old medical student from India, told CNN that Indians also faced instances of racism when going through one of the checkpoints near the Polish border.

The U.N. high commissioner for refugees, Filippo Grandi, said some people were receiving "different treatments" compared with others.

"You have seen reports in the media that there are different treatments - with Ukrainians and non-Ukrainians," Grandi said at a news conference Tuesday. "Now our observations - and we possibly cannot observe every single post yet - but our observations is that these are not state policies, but there are instances which it has happened."

"There should be absolutely no discrimination between Ukrainians and non-Ukrainians, Europeans and non-Europeans. Everyone is fleeing from the same risks," he added.

Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita told The Post on Tuesday that there were "isolated cases" of African citizens being mistreated at the border. "I don't think it's something done systematically," he said.

The African Union released a statement condemning the treatment of African citizens at Ukrainian border crossings. "Reports that Africans are singled out for unacceptable dissimilar treatment would be shockingly racist and in breach of international law."

Nigerian Foreign Minister Geoffrey Onyeama said that he was aware of these incidents and that he had a call Tuesday with his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba.

"He said that the instructions they had at the border was that everybody, everyone, irrespective of nationality or race, could leave and that the only ones that couldn't leave were [male] Ukrainians from the age of 18 to 60," he told The Post. Kuleba attributed those incidents to a chaotic situation at the border, Onyeama said.

Onyeama added that a number of Nigerian citizens in Ukraine have fled to Romania, Poland, Hungary and Slovakia, and that the government is trying to relocate them back to Nigeria. He is also trying to evacuate about 300 Nigerian students stranded at Sumy State University, in Eastern Ukraine, near the Russian border. "We're trying as best as we can to see if we can have a safe corridor to cross through Russia," he said.

He called reports on social media of the experiences some Nigerians have received at the border by Ukrainian officials "harrowing" and "deplorable." "The question is, how do you know whether these were sort of just rogue officials or whether there was any kind of state sanction to what they were doing?" He reiterated that the Ukrainian minister insisted there had been a directive to let everybody leave.

Kuleba, the Ukrainian foreign minister, announced on Wednesday an emergency hotline for foreign students trying to leave the country. At least one international student, a medical student from India who was lining up for food in the city of Kharkiv, has died as a result of the invasion, prompting the Indian Embassy to issue an alert asking all Indian students to leave the country immediately.

According to a study released by the Ukrainian government in late 2020, tens of thousands of students from abroad attend school in Ukraine each year, mostly from India. Ten percent come from Morocco, while others come from countries including Nigeria, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan.

Unable to board a bus to the Polish border, Orakpo went back to her city and managed to board a train to Hungary. She is now living with a friend in Debrecen, she says. She doesn't know what to do next. "I don't have any money. I don't have any clothes. I have nothing," she said.

She was a few months away from graduating before the conflict started; her graduation was scheduled for June 23. She is limping from all the walking and has blood clots in both her legs, she says. Her plan was to move to the United States after graduating, maybe to Baltimore, to do her residency.

"Now I don't know. I don't know what's going to happen. Medicine was the only thing I had going on for me," she said.

The Washington Post