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Former Miss Ukraine recounts escape from Kyiv with 7-year-old son: ‘There was no place where bombs would not explode’

‘There was no place where sirens would not sound, where rockets and bombs would not explode,’ Veronika Didusenko says

Bevan Hurley
Wednesday 09 March 2022 12:16 EST
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Ukraine military band performs ‘Don’t Worry, Be Happy’ in Odessa

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A former Miss Ukraine has described her harrowing escape from Kyiv with her seven-year-old son when the initial Russian attack began.

Veronika Didusenko, 26, and her son Alexander fled the Ukrainian capitol after on the morning of 25 February after being woken by air raid sirens and explosions.

Follow live updates on the war in Ukraine

At a press conference in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Ms Didusenko said she grabbed a few possessions and joined thousands of other women and children heading to neighbouring countries.

The 400kms (250 miles) journey to the border with Moldova had been fraught with danger, she said.

“There was no place where sirens would not sound, where rockets and bombs would not explode.”

Ms Didusenko, who won the Miss Ukraine pageant in 2018, travelled through several central European countries before reaching Geneva, Switzerland, 2100kms (1300 miles) away.

She then travelled to the United States, after making the “heartbreaking” decision to leave her son with family in Europe.

At a press conference with her friend, the high-profile lawyer Gloria Allred, Ms Didusenko said she wanted to highlight the humanitarian disaster unfolding to women in Ukraine on International Women’s Day.

“Right now, millions of Ukrainian children and their mothers are trembling at every sound in the subway stations and bomb shelters. Even more heartbreaking that women are giving birth in such conditions in these shelters,” Ms Didusenko said.

She called on the international community to provide more help for her countrymen and women.

“Ukrainians absolutely have the courage to defend their land and homes, but in order to stop the endless attack from the east and north, they are in desperate need of weapons and ammunition. We will fight for our freedom and yours.”

Four days after being crowned Miss Ukraine, Ms Didusenko was stripped of her title after organisers learned she was divorced and had a son.

In 2019 she sued the Miss World organisation claiming the entry requirements banning married women and mothers were discriminatory.

Associated Press contributed to this report

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