

CANADA WORST DRIVER ANGELINA NOW FULL
That way if anything else happened she would have a full tank of fuel. “Her car was parked in the basement and me and my uncle were thinking she could take shelter there, but then we suggested she get to the petrol station first. I had to think about how she was going to get out of there. “My mum lives in an apartment near the centre of Kyiv with our dog, Donut, and two cats, Toshka and Morgik. As the two spoke, Angelina realised pragmatism had to replace the constant tears and the distress if her mum was going to find safety.

It’s impossible.īut the reality dawned when she made a phone call from her Leicester flat to her mum, Iryna, living only a short distance from the front line. How could it happen? Why would it? It’s 2022. For the past week the word in Kyiv was that a Russian invasion would not happen, despite Putin’s convoys surrounding the eastern border of Ukraine and taking positions to the north in Belarus.

Mum Iryna, their dog Donut, and Angelina in Ukraine before Putin's invasionĪt first, she said, there was a sense of disbelief. I just wanted to say that I love you’.”Īt that moment Angelina Nevzerova, a 26-year-old Ukrainian studying for a PhD at De Montfort University Leicester (DMU), knew life for her, her family and friends would never be the same. “It was Thursday 24 February at 6am and my best friend sent me a message saying: ‘Today the war has started.
