We were tense, felt relaxed now: Say students after reaching Delhi from Ukraine

We were tense, felt relaxed now: Say students after reaching Delhi from Ukraine
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Highlights

Kirtan Kalathiya, a medical university student in Ukraine, was seen chatting in Gujarati and laughing with four of his friends from his native state soon after they reached Delhi airport following a long journey from Kyiv.

New Delhi: Kirtan Kalathiya, a medical university student in Ukraine, was seen chatting in Gujarati and laughing with four of his friends from his native state soon after they reached Delhi airport following a long journey from Kyiv.

Even as they were shooting the breeze close to midnight on Tuesday, standing near a taxi bay, one of them kept looking at the Instagram page of Kyiv Post on his mobile phone to get the latest update on the situation in Ukraine amid escalating tensions between Russia and the eastern European country.

From Kharkiv to Chernivtsi, Indians students and professionals, living in different parts of Ukraine, started arriving in different flights at the Delhi international airport from 11 pm onwards on Tuesday.

Soon after their arrival, most of the students said they had followed the advisory issued by the Indian Embassy in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv.

TV media camerapersons and reporters, virtually swooped on them, the moment they walked out of the terminal exit gates, as the inquisitive journalists wanted to know the situation in Ukraine first hand.

Kalathiya, 19, and his friends, Nirav Patel and Vineet Patel from Bhavnagar district too, and Krish Raj and Priyansh Hudda from Surendranagar district near Ahmedabad, are first year MBBS students at the Bukovinian State Medical University (BSMU) in Chernivtsi, a town in western Ukraine known for its grand architectural buildings.

"We were a bit tense, when we boarded our flight from Kyiv, but felt relaxed after reaching India," Hudda said.

Kalathiya, wearing a blue down jacket, joked among his friends to keep the anxiety at bay. "We came safely from Ukraine, but at airport, we got surrounded by mediapersons soon as we came out of the exit gate. That added to our anxiety," he said in a lighter vein, as they all shared a laugh, on a windy night in Delhi.

BSMU is an over 75 years old medical institution, and was established during the World War II. But, war is something, the Indians enrolled in universities in Ukraine, don't want to have on their mind.

In recent weeks, tensions have been escalating between Ukraine and Russia, and on Monday, Russia recognised the independence of two separatist regions in eastern Ukraine.

On Tuesday, Indian embassy in Kyiv again asked Indian students to temporarily leave the country amid the rising tensions.

Indian students, largely those studying medicine, soon after arrival at Delhi airport, said they were happy to be back in their home country. While those from Delhi-NCR were home, many others waited to take domestic flights to reach their hometowns, or the Gujarati batch of friends from BSMU, who will take a train on Wednesday evening to Ahmedabad, and from there on to their respective cities.

Apoorva Bhushan from Ranchi and Hardik Dogra from Rajkot study at Bogomolets National Medical University in Kyiv. They arrived in Delhi via an Air India flight around 11:40 pm on Tuesday. Bhushan said he would take a flight to Bengaluru, while Dogra flew to Rajkot from Delhi in the early hours on Wednesday.

Bhushan said, "We had received the Indian embassy advisory on our official WhatsApp group. It said students should leave the country temporarily given the current situation in Ukraine, so, we followed the advisory and left." He also showed a copy of the advisory circulated in the official WhatsApp group. Anil Rapriya, 22, a fourth-year MBBS student at the Kharkiv National Medical University (KNMU) in Kharkiv city, just after landing at Delhi airport, said, "I am feeling happy to be back in my country." "There is nothing to panic there. I have just moved to India as the Indian Embassy asked us to leave the country temporarily given the evolving situation in Ukraine," he said.

His family lives in Nangloi in Delhi.

Anil's brother, Manish Rapriya, and family members of several other students had waited anxiously at the T3 terminal's arrival lounge, until they arrived home late Tuesday night.

Gurgaon-based Ratan Singh waited for the arrival of his son Shivam Chaudhury, 20, at Delhi airport with a special garland in his hand. "My son is a second-year MBBS student in Chernobyl. This garland is especially to welcome my dear son, who, I am glad is safely coming back, amid the tense situation in Ukraine," he said.

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