Ukraine war: Boy of 11 flees to safety in Slovakia by himself

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Hassan was given food and drink by volunteers and his relatives were then contacted in BratislavaImage source, Slovak interior ministry
Image caption,
Hassan was given food and drink by volunteers and his relatives were then contacted in Bratislava

A boy has arrived safely in Slovakia after travelling some 1,200km (750 miles) from eastern Ukraine with no more than two small bags, a passport and his relatives' phone number.

Hassan, 11, left his home in Zaporizhzhia because his mother could not leave her elderly mother.

She put him on a train and when he finally got to the border he was helped across by customs officers.

Officials said he was a true hero and had won over everyone with his smile.

The boy arrived at the border carrying a plastic bag, a small red backpack and his passport. He was taken in by volunteers who gave him food and a drink while border officials got in touch with relatives in the Slovak capital Bratislava.

His mother, in a video posted by Slovak police, thanked everyone for taking care of her son and explained why he had travelled across the country when it was in the grip of a Russian invasion.

"Next to my town is a power plant that the Russians are shelling. I couldn't leave my mum - she can't move by herself - so I sent my son to Slovakia," said Julia Pisecka, who is a widow.

The nuclear power station at Zaporizhzhia is the biggest in Europe. It was seized by Russia's military over the weekend after an attack that President Volodymyr Zelensky warned could have caused destruction on a scale far bigger than the Chernobyl disaster in 1986.

Hassan is one of more than two million people who have fled Russia's war in Ukraine. More than 1.2 million have arrived in Poland, while 140,745 have reached Slovakia, according to the latest UN figures.

Image source, Julia Pisecka
Image caption,
Julia Pisecka thanked everyone who had looked after her son

On the verge of tears, his mother pleaded for Ukraine's children to be given a safe haven.

A Slovak interior ministry official said Hassan had won over everyone at the border with his smile, fearlessness and determination.

The official said he had used a phone number written on the boy's hand, as well as a piece of paper he had in his pocket, to contact relatives in the Slovak capital who came to pick him up.

Interior Minister Roman Mikulec met Hassan on Monday and said he and his siblings had already asked for temporary protection in Slovakia.

Slovak officials urged people who were keen on helping the boy's mother and grandmother to donate to Slovak Christian youth association ZKSM.

Image source, Slovak interior ministry
Image caption,
Hassan had his relative's phone number in Slovakia written on the back of his hand

War in Ukraine: More coverage

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Watch: Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant appears on fire after shelling (3 March 22)