Returning student Butlhari Mtonga said sheâs happy to be safely home but sheâs still worried about those who remain in Ukraine.
âHow can South Africa help Ukraine at this moment of crisis? How do we help the people? Because people are being killed,â she said. âI know people who have been killed, people are targeted. It is a very serious situation. How can we help bring peace in that land?â
Mtonga said she didnât want to talk about her own experience. âI want to talk about helping South Africa help Ukrainians,â she said.
The South African students were on a repatriation flight organized by the South African government with assistance from the private company, Aspen Pharmacare.
One of the governmentâs first priorities will be to assist students who have been disturbed by their experience in Ukraine, International Relations spokesman Clayson Monyela said.
âIt has been a traumatic experience,â Monyela said. âThatâs why one of the issues and conversations we are currently having now is to attend to the mental health issues, working with partners and departments like social development.â
As relieved families welcomed the returning students, South Africaâs government said it deplores the violence in Ukraine, even though it abstained from voting on a U.N. General Assembly resolution condemning Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine.
âWe are against conflicts that lead to the loss of life, it is even more disturbing when it costs the lives of children,â South African minister in the presidency, Mondli Gungubele said in a press briefing Thursday. âWe are against the killing of people for whatever reason. We have always believed in negotiated and peaceful resolutions, so we cannot be comfortable about the bombing of children.â
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