The Economist April 30th 2022 Europe 29
clare success by May 9th,whenRussiacel
ebrates Victory Day, marking theSoviet
Union’s defeat of NaziGermany.
It may want to go further.RustamMin
nekayev, deputy commander ofRussia’s
central military district,recentlysaidthe
aim is to take controlofallofsouthernUk
raine. If so, Russia stillintendstoseizea
western land corridortolinkCrimeatothe
enclave of Transnistria,a Russianbacked
separatist region of Moldova,onUkraine’s
western border. Thisseemsa muchtaller
order, requiring Russiato takeMykolaiv
and Odessa, where Ukrainian defences
have been strengthened.
That said, mysterious bombings in
Transnistria, held bysome1,500Russian
soldiers, have causedjitters.Localauthori
ties said two antennaebroadcastingRus
sian radio were blownuponApril26th,a
day after an attack ontheregion’sstatese
curity ministry. The proeuMoldovangov
ernment suspects thesearefalseflaginci
dents staged by Russiatodestabiliseit.In
southern Russia, meanwhile,Ukrainehas
made little effort todisguise itsrole in
“payback” attacks againstfuelandweap
onsstorage facilities—amoveendorsedby
a British junior defenceminister.
For all the talk ofwinning,theWest’s
aims are unclear. Ms Trussspeaksof“going
further and faster to pushRussiaoutofthe
whole of Ukraine”. MrBlinkenismorecau
tious. He has spoken oftheneed for a
ceasefire, and has saidthat“theendstate
should be determinedbytheUkrainiansas
a sovereign, independentcountry.”
The unSecretaryGeneral,AntónioGu
terres, visiting Kyiv aftergoingtoMoscow
on April 25th, tweeted:“The soonerthis
war ends, the better—forthesakeofUk
raine, Russia, and theworld.”Hisspokes
man said Russia had agreedinprincipleto
let the unhelp evacuateciviliansfromMa
riupol. But his effortshaveangered Uk
raine, which says he shouldhavegonefirst
to Kyiv to see evidenceofRussia’satroc
ities. For its part, Russiaistryingtodivide
the European allies througha combination
of threats, such as warningof thedangerof
a nuclear exchange, andapplyingeconom
ic pressure by cuttingoffgassuppliesto
Poland and Bulgaria onApril27th.
Many experts nowseeparallelswiththe
“winter war” of 193940, when Finland
fought off the Soviet Unionformonthsbut
was ultimately forcedtocedeterritoryand
for decades afterwardshadtomaintaina
precarious neutrality.“Iusedtothinkthe
winter war was the bestthatUkrainecould
achieve. I now think it’sthebestRussiacan
achieve,” says Dan Friedof theAtlantic
Council, a thinktankinWashington.“An
other scenario is possible:thedefeatofIm
perial Russia by theJapanesein1905.”If
there is a partition, heargues,it isunlikely
to be a stable peace but,moreprobably,a
dangerous armed truce.n
UkrainianrefugeesinPoland
The wreckage
within
Y
ulia malinovskalooks fromawin
dowina Warsawofficebuildingwhere
400 Ukrainianwomenandchildrenarebe
ingputup.Asa planecrossestheskyshe
huddlesoverhereightmontholddaugh
ter.Hereyes,fixedonthedistance,turnto
tears. “Every planescares menow,” she
sobs.Sheissafe,afterescapingfroma dis
trictofKyivthatwashitbyRussianplanes,
buthermindisstillinturmoil.“Themo
mentyouacceptyourowndeath,some
thinginyouchanges.”
Morethan5mpeoplehavefledtheRus
sianinvasion,andmanyhavecarriedwith
themtraumaandloss.Thathasbeencom
poundedbytheeconomicstressofliving
abroad,andbyfamilyseparation—Ukrai
nianmenaged1860muststayandhelp
defendtheircountry.TheWorldHealthOr
ganisation(who) estimatedinMarchthat
atleasthalfa millionrefugeesweresuffer
ingfrommentalhealthissues.That has
overwhelmedthealreadyinadequatemen
talhealthinfrastructureoftheir eastern
Europeanhosts.
AgnieszkaSiwinska,whoheadsa clinic
inWarsaw,saysthatshehasseenaninflux
of 150 new patients, roughly a 25%in
crease.Sheenlistedpsychologystudents
whospeakUkrainianorRussianto help
putthenewcomersatease.Shehasalso
distributeddozensof“sensorybackpacks”
withtoysforshellshockedchildren.The
next challenge is to find specialists for
longtermtreatment.Psychologicaltrau
ma specialists are so rare in Poland that
one flew in from Britain to help out.
The problems are a result of a long
standing neglect of mental health in east
ern Europe. Poland, the main destination
for refugees and home to more than half of
them, had a third the number of psychia
trists per person as Germany at the time of
a comparison in 2016. The country spends
only 3.4% of its health budget on mental
health, the lowest level in the euapart
from Bulgaria. It takes on average three
months to get a psychiatric appointment
in nextdoor Slovakia.
To plug the gaps, the euhas suggested
that countries recognise the qualifications
of Ukrainian professionals to allow them
to work with local services. It has also
pledged €9m ($9.5m) in funding for ngos
that provide psychological relief. Gabriella
Brent of Amna, a humanitarian group, says
that much of “psychological first aid”
comes down to harm reduction, and can be
provided by trained volunteers. Under
standing the patients’ language and con
text can render them more effective as ini
tial responders than foreign professionals.
If the acute phase of the conflict sub
sides and people start to return home, the
need for psychiatric support in Ukraine is
likely to grow substantially. As other con
flicts have shown, a drawnout war of attri
tion could pile on mental casualties. Syria
Relief, a charity, estimated last year that
threequarters of Syrian refugees in Turkey
and Lebanon may have had serious men
talhealth symptoms. Ukraine already had
the world’s highest prevalence of depres
sion, at 6.3% of the population, according
to a 2017 whostudy.
Since that report, Ukraine has made im
provements. Just as it has trained its mili
tary muscles by fighting Russianbacked
separatists in its east since 2014, it has de
veloped its mentalhealth response, by ca
tering to the needs of combatants and vet
erans. Marta Pyvovarenko is one of 40 psy
chologists and psychiatrists in the who’s
Mental Health Gap Action Programme who
since 2019 have trained more than 3,000
doctors in Ukraine to offer emergency
mentalhealth aid in conditions of war.
Attitudes are changing. A tradition of
tightlipped stoicism is easing, as people
learn to talk more openly about their pro
blems. Suspicion of psychiatry, under
standable given the old Soviet habit of de
claring dissidents mentally ill and locking
them up, is easing too. Charities campaign
to reduce suicide, which is worryingly
common. The government wants to shift
from an archaic system of providing care
in closed facilities towards looking after
people at home and trying to reintegrate
them into society. All this will help Uk
raine cope with the mental scars ofwar,
says Ms Pyvovarenko. As support increas
es, she says, “the stigma is decreasing.”n
WARSAW
Traumatised refugees need care that
their hosts are ill-equipped to provide
Safe only physically