NSUI demands safe evacuation of Indian students from Ukraine
NSUI, Congress student wing staged a protest outside Shastri Bhavan demanding safe and early evacuation of Indian students stranded in Ukraine
Press Trust of India | March 2, 2022 | 02:08 PM IST
NEW DELHI: Congress student wing NSUI staged a protest outside Shastri Bhavan here on Wednesday demanding the safe and early evacuation of Indian students stranded in war-ravaged Ukraine. The protesters also demanded an apology from Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the death of an Indian student in Ukraine.
In the first Indian casualty in the war in Ukraine, a medical student from Karnataka's Haveri district was killed in intense shelling in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Tuesday. Leading the protest, Delhi unit president of the National Students Union of India, Kunal Sehrawat said the Modi government was paying more attention towards "grabbing headlines" instead of focusing on the safe evacuation of students.
Some of the protesters who tried to reach Shastri Bhawan, which houses the Union Education Ministry, by jumping over barricades, were detained by the police and taken to the Mandir Marg police station, said NSUI media cell chairman Harshad Sharma.
Also read | Ukraine Russia News: Students from India march in groups in Kharkiv risking their lives
600 Indian students stuck at a university in Ukraine's Sumy city await evacuation
More than 600 Indian students are currently stranded in a university located in Sumy, a city in north-eastern Ukraine, hoping that they will soon be evacuated as "continuous firing and bombing" by the Russian forces has left them completely terrified, one of the students said. Not a single Indian student from Sumy State University, located close to the Russian border has been evacuated so far, Viraj Walde, who hails from Nagpur in Maharashtra and who is currently studying in the fourth year medical course in that university, told PTI over phone on Wednesday.
"More than 600 Indian students are stuck here in Sumy university. The embassy has neither evacuated us nor given any assurance to that effect. Since the last five days, there has been continuous firing, shelling and bombing in the city," he said. Their final exams were about to start from March 15, he said. "Before Russia's invasion of Ukratine, temporary advisories were given to the students and the university informed us that those having exams can wait. Hence, we waited for the exams to start," Walde added. "But now, the students are terrified and their mental state is deteriorating. Food and drinking water supplies are depleting. Even the banks and ATMs are running out of cash," he said.
Also read | Ukraine War: 2,500 students from Gujarat, 2,320 from Kerala among thousands of Indians stranded in Ukraine
The embassy has sent advisories to students, telling them to use only the western border of Ukraine and reach the neighbouring countries of Poland, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Moldova. But since Sumy city is located in the north-eastern part of Ukraine, it is impossible for them to travel all the way to the western part in the prevailing situation, he said. "The border in Ukraine's western part is located almost 1,500 kms away from Sumy, whereas the Russian border is just 50 kms away. The railway station in Sumy has also been closed due to bombing, and traveling via road is like committing suicide since Russian and Ukrainian forces are fighting against each other at such places," he added.
Also read | High MBBS fees forced student to choose Ukraine, reached campus minutes before war began
The military administration has told the students not to venture out because there is artillery shelling in the city, he said. "On behalf of all the students stuck in Sumy, I request the Indian government to evacuate us before anything unfortunate happens to us," he said. In the first Indian casualty in the war in Ukraine, a medical student from Karnataka's Haveri district was killed in intense shelling in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Tuesday.
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