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At a makeshift basement bomb shelter in Ukraine’s capital, at least 20 babies born to surrogate mothers are waiting for their foreign parents to be able to travel to the war-torn country and take them home.Some just a few days old, the infants are well cared for, but even below ground the blasts of occasional shelling can be heard clearly.UKRAINIAN REFUGEES FACE FOOD SHORTAGES AMID RUSSIA CONFLICTMany of the surrogacy center’s nurses are also stranded in the shelter because it’s too dangerous to travel to and from their homes. Ukrainian troops have been resisting Russian forces in Kyiv’s suburbs as they attempt to encircle the city.”Now we are staying here to preserve our and the babies’ lives,” said Lyudmilia Yashchenko, a 51-year-old nurse. “We are hiding here from the bombing and this horrible misery.”RUSSIA INVADES UKRAINE: LIVE UPDATES
Nanny Svitlana Stetsiuk plays with one of the babies in the nursery in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday, March 19, 2022. Nineteen surrogate babies were born to surrogate mothers, with their biological parents still outside the country due to the war against Russia.
(AP)Yashchenko said they leave briefly during the day to get some fresh air but don’t dare stay out too long. She worries about her own children, too — both her sons, ages 22 and 30, are fighting to defend their country.Exhaustion is constant.US AMBASSADOR ‘CAN’T IMAGINE’ BIDEN WILL VISIT UKRAINE DURING EUROPE TRIP: ‘THIS IS A COUNTRY AT WAR’”We are almost not sleeping at all,” Yashchenko said. “We are working round the clock.”Ukraine has a thriving surrogate industry and is one of the few countries that allow the service for foreigners. These babies’ parents live in Europe, Latin America and China.
Nannies take care of newborn babies in a basement converted into a nursery in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday, March 19, 2022.
(AP)Yashchenko would not say how many parents have come to get their children, how many infants are still waiting or how many more surrogate mothers are expected to deliver soon.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP While there’s plenty of food and baby supplies to care for their young charges, the nurses are left to hope and wait for the newborns to be picked up — just as they wait for the war to end.
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