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Africans, Indians face racism in Ukraine and blocked from leaving the warzone

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'Shockingly racist': Foreign citizens fleeing Ukraine say they're being singled out at border
Giulia Carbonaro
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Almost half a million people have already fled Ukraine following Russia's invasion last Thursday. Among these were the many foreign citizens who until then were studying, working and living in the country now under attack.
But at the Polish border, where officials quickly mobilized to process over 300,000 of those fleeing, Indian and African students have reported being singled out over Ukrainians and being prevented from crossing into safety.



African residents in Ukraine wait at the platform inside Lviv railway station in west Ukraine. /AP Photo/Bernat Armangue

What's happening at the border?
The reports of unfair treatment and discriminatory behavior in the processing of Indian and African citizens at the Ukraine-Russian border have been many.
Several stranded students have shared videos and testimonies on social media showing how they were allegedly discriminated against at train stations and border posts, being prevented from boarding trains and buses and being held back while priority is given to Ukrainian nationals.
Nigerian authorities say that there have been cases of Nigerians being stopped at the border by Polish officials and refused entry to the country. South African foreign ministry spokesman Clayson Monyela tweeted that a group of South Africans, mostly students, was also stuck at the border.
More reports involved students from Kenya, Côte d'Ivoire, DR Congo, Ghana and India.
Some of the students who made it across the border, like Congolese student Prence Angale, said crossing the border was harder than the journey to get there.
"When we were leaving Ukraine, all was fine, but when we arrived at the (Polish) border, there was a bit of jostling, and we were being shoved back and all that, but things went well, we managed, thank God," said Angale talking to AFP.
"We had to stay outside, exposed to the cold that they have here, nobody tells us where we can find shelter, we are exposed to the cold," said another student.
India has already evacuated hundreds of students on special flights since the invasion started, but thousands remain stranded in Kyiv and Kharkiv.
They are now hoping their government will arrange to get them out of the country as soon as possible.
Several students who made it to the border with Poland tell of being harassed and brutalized by Ukrainian police.
Cases of racial injustice related to the wave of refugees from Ukraine are being shared through social media, with the hashtag #AfricansinUkraine being used on Twitter.


READ MORE:
Talks begin, Ukraine applies to join EU, Ruble crashes, Russia advances in the east
Kyiv kindness has shown 'how valuable life is'
Life in a temporary Kyiv air raid shelter


Is this a problem for students only?
The reports involve more than just students - but students account for a big part of Africans and Indians in Ukraine. There are about 76,000 foreign students studying in Ukraine, a quarter of whom are Indian, mainly enrolled in medical courses.
According to Ukraine's education ministry, Morocco, Nigeria, and Egypt are among the top 10 countries with foreign students in Ukraine. These three countries together send over 16,000 students to the Eastern European country, which is a cheaper alternative to universities in Western Europe or the U.S.


What are home countries doing about it?
African Union (AU) leaders have denounced the reports of mistreatment of Africans trying to flee Ukraine as "shockingly racist" and "in breach of international law."
AU chair and Senegalese President Macky Sall and AU Commission head Moussa Faki Mahamat urged "all countries to respect international law and show the same empathy and support to all people fleeing war notwithstanding their racial identity."
Several African countries are also mobilizing to help their citizens stranded in Eastern Europe.
Ghana's government said it would meet parents of students stuck in Ukraine on Tuesday and sent embassy officials to border points to help.
Kenya's authorities said 200 Kenyans already made it to safety, while a few are still stuck at the border.
DR Congo's Foreign Minister Christophe Lutundula said on Twitter that he would meet with the Polish ambassador to help 200 Congolese, mostly students, cross the border. Ivory Coast and Nigeria are making similar arrangements.
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Monday he plans to send four senior ministers to Ukraine's neighboring countries to help in the rescue of some 16,000 Indians still in the country, most of whom are students.


b2882abb910541a0b15c537774f5c805.jpeg


Refugees wait in a line to enter a bus after fleeing from Ukraine, near the border crossing in Medyka, Poland. /AP Photo/Markus Schreiber


What's Poland saying?
Poland ambassador to Nigeria Joanna Tarnawska dismissed the claim of unfair treatment of African citizens at the border, telling local media that "everybody receives equal treatment," and she had reports that "some Nigerian nationals have crossed the border into Poland."
She added that African citizens were being allowed entry even with invalid passports and that they are allowed to remain in the country for 15 days.
But even the African students who made it across the Polish borders say that they were made to wait while priority was given to Ukrainian women and children.
The Nigerian embassy in Bucharest, Romania, said it had received 130 Nigerians from Ukraine, with more being processed having reached Warsaw or Budapest.
The Polish government has condemned the reports as "fake news."
 
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Our white worshipping Indians would be mad because Whites clubbed them with Blacks.
 
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I find it ironic that they are refusing them to leave and keeping them inside the country inside the meat-grinder that is just plain and simple wicked
 
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Clever strategy by the Ukrainians. By having citizens of non-White neutral countries get caught up in the war and killed, they expect the native countries of the victims to condemn the Russians, piling up global pressure on the Russian government to end the war.
 
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Our white worshipping Indians would be mad because Whites clubbed them with Blacks.

lol so true, Indians have a serious inferiority complex, they want to be seen in a positive light by whitey so bad, it's about as low as you can get for an Indian to be compared with an African. Even their Gandhi, seen as a champion of the oppressed, felt insulted when he was treated like a black when he was in South Africa.
 
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Fleeing African and Indian students face racism at Ukraine border​


 
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This isn't about his skin color. But his prejudiced mindset.
Grow up skin colour and prejudice go hand in hand and don't be silly. Further defending is only going to look like a prat talking.
 
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God works in mysterious ways, no doubt.
Indians wanted to push muslims for " ghar wapsi ',
Lo and behold, the indians are barred from ghar wapsi.
They stopped Muslim girls from colleges and schools. And they have their students stranded.
The black wanna-be-nazis , being humiliated by neo nazis.
Turns out it is easy to find a stick to beat the dog and " also easy to find the dogs too.


'Shockingly racist': Foreign citizens fleeing Ukraine say they're being singled out at border
Giulia Carbonaro
Share
mail@3x.png



Almost half a million people have already fled Ukraine following Russia's invasion last Thursday. Among these were the many foreign citizens who until then were studying, working and living in the country now under attack.
But at the Polish border, where officials quickly mobilized to process over 300,000 of those fleeing, Indian and African students have reported being singled out over Ukrainians and being prevented from crossing into safety.



African residents in Ukraine wait at the platform inside Lviv railway station in west Ukraine. /AP Photo/Bernat Armangue

What's happening at the border?
The reports of unfair treatment and discriminatory behavior in the processing of Indian and African citizens at the Ukraine-Russian border have been many.
Several stranded students have shared videos and testimonies on social media showing how they were allegedly discriminated against at train stations and border posts, being prevented from boarding trains and buses and being held back while priority is given to Ukrainian nationals.
Nigerian authorities say that there have been cases of Nigerians being stopped at the border by Polish officials and refused entry to the country. South African foreign ministry spokesman Clayson Monyela tweeted that a group of South Africans, mostly students, was also stuck at the border.
More reports involved students from Kenya, Côte d'Ivoire, DR Congo, Ghana and India.
Some of the students who made it across the border, like Congolese student Prence Angale, said crossing the border was harder than the journey to get there.
"When we were leaving Ukraine, all was fine, but when we arrived at the (Polish) border, there was a bit of jostling, and we were being shoved back and all that, but things went well, we managed, thank God," said Angale talking to AFP.
"We had to stay outside, exposed to the cold that they have here, nobody tells us where we can find shelter, we are exposed to the cold," said another student.
India has already evacuated hundreds of students on special flights since the invasion started, but thousands remain stranded in Kyiv and Kharkiv.
They are now hoping their government will arrange to get them out of the country as soon as possible.
Several students who made it to the border with Poland tell of being harassed and brutalized by Ukrainian police.
Cases of racial injustice related to the wave of refugees from Ukraine are being shared through social media, with the hashtag #AfricansinUkraine being used on Twitter.


READ MORE:
Talks begin, Ukraine applies to join EU, Ruble crashes, Russia advances in the east
Kyiv kindness has shown 'how valuable life is'
Life in a temporary Kyiv air raid shelter


Is this a problem for students only?
The reports involve more than just students - but students account for a big part of Africans and Indians in Ukraine. There are about 76,000 foreign students studying in Ukraine, a quarter of whom are Indian, mainly enrolled in medical courses.
According to Ukraine's education ministry, Morocco, Nigeria, and Egypt are among the top 10 countries with foreign students in Ukraine. These three countries together send over 16,000 students to the Eastern European country, which is a cheaper alternative to universities in Western Europe or the U.S.


What are home countries doing about it?
African Union (AU) leaders have denounced the reports of mistreatment of Africans trying to flee Ukraine as "shockingly racist" and "in breach of international law."
AU chair and Senegalese President Macky Sall and AU Commission head Moussa Faki Mahamat urged "all countries to respect international law and show the same empathy and support to all people fleeing war notwithstanding their racial identity."
Several African countries are also mobilizing to help their citizens stranded in Eastern Europe.
Ghana's government said it would meet parents of students stuck in Ukraine on Tuesday and sent embassy officials to border points to help.
Kenya's authorities said 200 Kenyans already made it to safety, while a few are still stuck at the border.
DR Congo's Foreign Minister Christophe Lutundula said on Twitter that he would meet with the Polish ambassador to help 200 Congolese, mostly students, cross the border. Ivory Coast and Nigeria are making similar arrangements.
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Monday he plans to send four senior ministers to Ukraine's neighboring countries to help in the rescue of some 16,000 Indians still in the country, most of whom are students.


b2882abb910541a0b15c537774f5c805.jpeg


Refugees wait in a line to enter a bus after fleeing from Ukraine, near the border crossing in Medyka, Poland. /AP Photo/Markus Schreiber


What's Poland saying?
Poland ambassador to Nigeria Joanna Tarnawska dismissed the claim of unfair treatment of African citizens at the border, telling local media that "everybody receives equal treatment," and she had reports that "some Nigerian nationals have crossed the border into Poland."
She added that African citizens were being allowed entry even with invalid passports and that they are allowed to remain in the country for 15 days.
But even the African students who made it across the Polish borders say that they were made to wait while priority was given to Ukrainian women and children.
The Nigerian embassy in Bucharest, Romania, said it had received 130 Nigerians from Ukraine, with more being processed having reached Warsaw or Budapest.
The Polish government has condemned the reports as "fake news."

God works in mysterious ways, no doubt.
Indians wanted to push muslims for " ghar wapsi ',
Lo and behold, the indians are barred from ghar wapsi.
They stopped Muslim girls from colleges and schools. And they have their students stranded.
The black wanna-be-nazis , being humiliated by neo nazis.
Turns out it is easy to find a stick to beat the dog and " also easy to find the dogs too.


'Shockingly racist': Foreign citizens fleeing Ukraine say they're being singled out at border
Giulia Carbonaro
Share
mail@3x.png



Almost half a million people have already fled Ukraine following Russia's invasion last Thursday. Among these were the many foreign citizens who until then were studying, working and living in the country now under attack.
But at the Polish border, where officials quickly mobilized to process over 300,000 of those fleeing, Indian and African students have reported being singled out over Ukrainians and being prevented from crossing into safety.



African residents in Ukraine wait at the platform inside Lviv railway station in west Ukraine. /AP Photo/Bernat Armangue

What's happening at the border?
The reports of unfair treatment and discriminatory behavior in the processing of Indian and African citizens at the Ukraine-Russian border have been many.
Several stranded students have shared videos and testimonies on social media showing how they were allegedly discriminated against at train stations and border posts, being prevented from boarding trains and buses and being held back while priority is given to Ukrainian nationals.
Nigerian authorities say that there have been cases of Nigerians being stopped at the border by Polish officials and refused entry to the country. South African foreign ministry spokesman Clayson Monyela tweeted that a group of South Africans, mostly students, was also stuck at the border.
More reports involved students from Kenya, Côte d'Ivoire, DR Congo, Ghana and India.
Some of the students who made it across the border, like Congolese student Prence Angale, said crossing the border was harder than the journey to get there.
"When we were leaving Ukraine, all was fine, but when we arrived at the (Polish) border, there was a bit of jostling, and we were being shoved back and all that, but things went well, we managed, thank God," said Angale talking to AFP.
"We had to stay outside, exposed to the cold that they have here, nobody tells us where we can find shelter, we are exposed to the cold," said another student.
India has already evacuated hundreds of students on special flights since the invasion started, but thousands remain stranded in Kyiv and Kharkiv.
They are now hoping their government will arrange to get them out of the country as soon as possible.
Several students who made it to the border with Poland tell of being harassed and brutalized by Ukrainian police.
Cases of racial injustice related to the wave of refugees from Ukraine are being shared through social media, with the hashtag #AfricansinUkraine being used on Twitter.


READ MORE:
Talks begin, Ukraine applies to join EU, Ruble crashes, Russia advances in the east
Kyiv kindness has shown 'how valuable life is'
Life in a temporary Kyiv air raid shelter


Is this a problem for students only?
The reports involve more than just students - but students account for a big part of Africans and Indians in Ukraine. There are about 76,000 foreign students studying in Ukraine, a quarter of whom are Indian, mainly enrolled in medical courses.
According to Ukraine's education ministry, Morocco, Nigeria, and Egypt are among the top 10 countries with foreign students in Ukraine. These three countries together send over 16,000 students to the Eastern European country, which is a cheaper alternative to universities in Western Europe or the U.S.


What are home countries doing about it?
African Union (AU) leaders have denounced the reports of mistreatment of Africans trying to flee Ukraine as "shockingly racist" and "in breach of international law."
AU chair and Senegalese President Macky Sall and AU Commission head Moussa Faki Mahamat urged "all countries to respect international law and show the same empathy and support to all people fleeing war notwithstanding their racial identity."
Several African countries are also mobilizing to help their citizens stranded in Eastern Europe.
Ghana's government said it would meet parents of students stuck in Ukraine on Tuesday and sent embassy officials to border points to help.
Kenya's authorities said 200 Kenyans already made it to safety, while a few are still stuck at the border.
DR Congo's Foreign Minister Christophe Lutundula said on Twitter that he would meet with the Polish ambassador to help 200 Congolese, mostly students, cross the border. Ivory Coast and Nigeria are making similar arrangements.
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Monday he plans to send four senior ministers to Ukraine's neighboring countries to help in the rescue of some 16,000 Indians still in the country, most of whom are students.


b2882abb910541a0b15c537774f5c805.jpeg


Refugees wait in a line to enter a bus after fleeing from Ukraine, near the border crossing in Medyka, Poland. /AP Photo/Markus Schreiber


What's Poland saying?
Poland ambassador to Nigeria Joanna Tarnawska dismissed the claim of unfair treatment of African citizens at the border, telling local media that "everybody receives equal treatment," and she had reports that "some Nigerian nationals have crossed the border into Poland."
She added that African citizens were being allowed entry even with invalid passports and that they are allowed to remain in the country for 15 days.
But even the African students who made it across the Polish borders say that they were made to wait while priority was given to Ukrainian women and children.
The Nigerian embassy in Bucharest, Romania, said it had received 130 Nigerians from Ukraine, with more being processed having reached Warsaw or Budapest.
The Polish government has condemned the reports as "fake news."
 
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All foriegn students are being discriminated against at border crossing not just Indian.
 
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