-
Scandic Trust Group strengthens sales network with First Idea Consultant
-
Stocks slip as investors weigh earnings, tariffs
-
Police say 19 held after raid at Swedish start-up Stegra to be deported
-
Kante returns as France seek to clinch World Cup berth
-
Marcus Smith starts at full-back as England ring changes for Fiji
-
Kolisi 100th Test 'no distraction' for Erasmus' South Africa
-
Teetering Belgian government given more time to agree budget
-
Merz backs EU plan to protect steel sector from Chinese imports
-
New Zealand make Scotland changes after Barrett brothers' injuries
-
'Roy of the Rovers story' -- Farrell handed Ireland debut for Japan Test
-
Stones backs Man City team-mate Foden to pose England dilemma for Tuchel
-
Djokovic to face Alcaraz in ATP Finals groups
-
Facing climate 'overshoot', world heads into risky territory
-
Springbok skipper Kolisi to play 100th Test against France
-
Bank of England leaves rate unchanged before UK budget
-
Germany recall Sane, hand El Mala debut for World Cup qualifers
-
India thump Australia to take 2-1 lead in T20 series
-
Cameroon's Biya, world's oldest president, sworn in for 8th term
-
Flick holding firm on Barca high line despite defensive woes
-
Battered US businesses eye improved China trade at Shanghai expo
-
France opt for Le Garrec as Dupont replacement for 'best team ever' South Africa
-
Drugmaker AstraZeneca profit jumps as US business grows
-
'Vibe coding' named word of the year by Collins dictionary
-
Vietnam evacuates thousands from coast ahead of Typhoon Kalmaegi
-
European stocks fall after gains in Asia, US
-
MotoGP legend Agostini admires Marc Marquez's 'desire to win'
-
Nepal searches for avalanche victims
-
Hezbollah rejects any negotiations between Lebanon and Israel
-
Chapman blitz leads Black Caps to tight T20 victory over West Indies
-
France urges EU to sanction Shein platform
-
France opt for Le Garrec as Dupont replacement for South Africa Test
-
Turmoil in tiaras at Miss Universe pageant in Thailand
-
Probe into Thales defence group looking at Indonesian contract
-
US to cancel flights as longest govt shutdown drags on
-
Home in Nigeria, ex-refugees find themselves in a war zone
-
Doncic's Lakers hold off Wembanyama's Spurs, Blazers silence Thunder
-
For Turkey's LGBTQ community, draft law sparks existential alarm
-
Musk's $1 trillion pay package to face Tesla shareholder vote
-
Tonga rugby league star out of intensive care after seizure
-
Argentine ex-president Kirchner goes on trial in new corruption case
-
Dams, housing, pensions: Franco disinformation flourishes online
-
Endo returns as Japan look to build on Brazil win
-
Franco captivates young Spaniards 50 years after death
-
German steel industry girds for uncertain future
-
IPL champions Bengaluru could be sold for 'as much as $2 billion'
-
Budget impasse threatens Belgium's ruling coalition
-
New Zealand ex-top cop admits to having material showing child abuse, bestiality
-
BoE set for finely balanced pre-budget rate call
-
Australian kingpin obtains shorter sentence over drug charge
-
Weatherald's unenviable Ashes task: fill giant hole at top left by Warner
Scar tissue: Treating war's marks on Ukrainians
A laser beam moved slowly over Sergiy Pryshchepa's chest and stomach, treating numerous scars from burns he suffered when his car ran over an anti-tank mine close to Kyiv.
The 34-year-old comes regularly to this private clinic in the Ukrainian capital for a programme offering free treatment for civilians and military personnel with severe burns and scarring received in the war.
Soon after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Pryshchepa left Kyiv with his wife and 10-year-old son and went to a village 100 kilometers (60 miles) to the north.
But the area came under attack and on March 14, the family decided to flee again. On the way, their car was blown up by an anti-tank mine.
"The explosion was on my wife's side, and she took the blow on herself. Our son was in the back, he was covered by the seat and was not wounded," but he "suffers from psychological trauma", said the commercial director of a company that makes lifts.
"The first thing I asked at the hospital was 'How did I not lose my head?'," he said, showing a picture of his car, which was completely charred and torn apart.
Sixteen months later, he had skin grafts from his legs and several operations on his jaw and one hand.
Now he attends the Shupeniuk clinic in Kyiv, which is one of 19 across the country offering the free treatment.
"Before giving laser treatment, we use certain medications that soften the rough scar tissue... First injections, then laser resurfacing, and thanks to this (scars) become less thick, lighter, less rough", said Kateryna Bezvershenko, the dermatologist treating Pryshchepa.
"Half of our patients are civilians, and not only from the Kyiv region... There is a man who has just been hit by a drone in his apartment. His mother died. He survived but he is badly burned," she added.
- 'Hands were burning' -
The dermatologist was also treating 35-year-old Feliks Rasko, a volunteer who joined the military at the start of the conflict.
His hands were seriously burnt in October in the eastern war zone, when the building where he slept was struck by Russians.
He said he realised his hands were "burning".
"I woke up from a strong blow and everything around was burning, the walls were on fire," he recounted.
He has also had operations and skin grafts from a leg.
After the latest laser session on his scars, streams of blood run down his fingers.
"If you compare this to the treatments I had at the beginning... it's now like a mosquito bite," he said. His hands, however, "constantly itch".
- 'Lucky to be treated' -
"I have been very lucky, starting from the moment when those missiles flew at us and lucky that I am treated like this. Not everyone is treated like this," he said.
"Even for the ointments they give me, I don't pay anything. Everything is free and it really helps me," he added, expressing gratitude as a single laser treatment session usually costs hundreds of dollars.
The project was conceived at the start of the Russian invasion and launched last summer.
It is financed by private donations in partnership with the Ukrainian health ministry and has treated around 150 people.
Bezvershenko has already treated around a dozen war victims since joining the project, saying she is helping them "with great joy".
"It's very important to me because I am a medical doctor and I do not take part in military operations. I have felt a great need to help our military and people who have been affected by the war," she said.
"I don't get anything out of this except inner satisfaction and the joy of being able to help people because I see such stories."
O.Bulka--BTB