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For Chinese in Ukraine, it’s a long, anxious wait for a flight out to safety

  • The Chinese embassy in Kyiv says it will arrange chartered services for its citizens but no schedule has been released
  • People are advised to stay home and observe the curfew

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Citizens walk on a street after buying daily necessities in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. On Friday, Russian troops entered Kyiv and air strikes and fierce fighting bombarded the capital and other major cities. Photo: Xinhua
When Chinese medical student Jinjin received an update on her smartphone on Wednesday about a state of emergency in Ukraine, she joked with her classmates, doubting that Russia would really attack.
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By Wednesday night, however, her classmates started fleeing the city. Some packed up and left for Turkey, others fled by car and just a few stayed in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv.

The 22-year-old student also fled to the countryside that night with her father, a businessman in the city, she told the South China Morning Post.

“All the cars on the road were heading out [of the city],” she said.

03:51

Russian forces capture Chernobyl, as death toll rises from Ukraine conflict

Russian forces capture Chernobyl, as death toll rises from Ukraine conflict

On Thursday, she and her father went to a supermarket to stock up on food and water and by 7am, there were already long queues at ATMs and petrol stations.

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