CLWYD West MS Darren Millar showed his support for the people of Ukraine this week when he paid a visit to the cities of Kyiv, Lviv, Irpin and Bucha.
Mr Millar met with a delegation of Ukrainian MPs in Kyiv and presented them with a message of support from the Senedd's Presiding Officer for President Zelensky.
While in Kyiv, he also visited Saint Sophia Cathedral to pray for the nation, also visiting the site of a missile strike which killed civilians and injured a seven-year-old girl over the weekend.
Irpin and Bucha were temporarily occupied by Russian forces, with the city’s population suffering many casualties in the invasion.
Mr Millar saw damaged buildings, factories and infrastructure such as roads and rail bridges, also meeting with victims who lost their homes and loved ones and are now separated from their families (there are many men left alone while their spouses and children have taken refuge elsewhere in Europe).
He also met with faith and denominational leaders whose churches have been giving shelter, food and clothing to internally displaced people and refugees.
The Clwyd West MS said: “While in Irpin I visited the offices of Samaritan's Purse a humanitarian relief agency which has been responding to the crisis in Ukraine. I spoke with Sergiy Kachan, their Ukriane Director.
“Sergiy lives in hope that one day he will be reunited with his family and will live again in a peaceful country.”
“All of those I met during my visit very much appreciated the solidarity and cross support in the Senedd and from the Welsh Government and people.
“They also were very much encouraged by me taking the time to come and see them personally, saying that a visit means more than a thousand warm words from afar.
“There are a number of issues to follow up with both UK and Welsh Government Ministers and other organisations which I will do so in the coming days.”
Mr Kachan’s family were forced to flee their home at the outbreak of the war, and his wife, Zhenya, and children, Evelina and little Sergiy, are currently staying with relatives in Berlin.
Sergiy said: “War is unbelievably bad.
“It’s terrible to see people dying, to be surrounded by enemies and to see pictures of our hometown, part of which has already been destroyed.
“It’s not nice to fall asleep alone in someone else’s bed every night, not knowing if you’ll ever be in your own again.”
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