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Sick Ukrainian mother blocked from UK due to ‘bureaucratic nightmare’ dies before reuniting with son

Rodion Liashko spent two months trying to get help from UK authorities to transfer his bedbound mother to Britain, but she passed away before action was taken

May Bulman
Social Affairs Correspondent
Tuesday 21 June 2022 05:49 EDT
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Tetiana Liashko, 60, passed away on 2 June in hospital in Romania, months after her son, Rodion, started trying to arrange her transfer to the UK
Tetiana Liashko, 60, passed away on 2 June in hospital in Romania, months after her son, Rodion, started trying to arrange her transfer to the UK (Rodion Lyaksho)

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A sick Ukrainian woman unable to reunite with her son in the UK due to a “bureaucratic nightmare” has died.

Tetiana Liashko, 60, passed away on 2 June after weeks of feeling “very distressed” about not being able to come to Britain, according to her 37-year-old son Rodion Lyaksho.

Mr Liashko had been trying to arrange for her and his father to join him in Peterborough, eastern England, for two months.

His mother had severe lung cancer, which meant she required constant oxygen supply and was bedbound. She and her husband, Oleksandr, 62, were granted visas under the Ukraine Family Scheme at the end of February.

Her son tried to arrange for them to be flown to the UK with access to a ventilator and for his mother to be taken to a local hospital on arrival.

Mr Liashko (left) described the UK authorities’ response to his mother’s (middle) situation as ‘too slow, too blind’
Mr Liashko (left) described the UK authorities’ response to his mother’s (middle) situation as ‘too slow, too blind’ (Rodion Lyaksho)

But on contacting his local NHS services he said he was constantly referred to other agencies, and claims none appeared able or willing to help.

As the Russian invasion advanced, his parents fled their home in the southern Ukrainian city of Odesa at the end of April, paying for a private ambulance to travel to the city of Iasi in Romania.

They had hoped to travel on to the UK shortly after, but Mr Lyaksho said he faced a “bureaucratic nightmare” as he tried to arrange her transfer from Romania to a UK hospital.

He added: “It’s like this blind bureaucratic machine, and in our case it was too slow, too blind. The system just ignores you because you don’t fall into a specific procedure.”

The North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust, supported by the local Clinical Commissioning Group, agreed to receive Ms Liashko just over a month ago.

But without help from the UK health service to arrange the transfer, the only option was to pay £20,000 for specialised medical transport, which Mr Lyaksho said they “simply don’t have”.

He set up a GoFundMe page in May in a bid to raise the money, but his mother passed away on 2 June after falling into a coma.

“She didn’t suffer, she didn’t feel pain, but she never saw me being there with her. This is what is also very sad to me. I was telling her you’re going to see me soon, but she didn’t,” he said.

“It’s been hell for us [...] A perfect storm: war in Ukraine, the fact that they had to leave their own country for my mum had to die in a foreign country, when another place where she has family couldn’t accept her.

“It’s been dreadful – I don’t have the words. She wanted to come here. I was sending her pictures of our home, she was making plans – up until the end.”

The family fled war torn Ukraine
The family fled war torn Ukraine (Supplied)

All Ukrainians arriving under the scheme have access to NHS healthcare free of charge, but it is not clear how they can be brought to the UK if a refugee is bedbound.

The government has been approached for comment.

A spokesperson said previously on being contacted about Ms Lyaksho’s situation: “The UK government has stood shoulder to shoulder with Ukraine and provided them with the lifesaving medical supplies and equipment they need.

“Every arrival is reviewed on a case by case basis.”

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