Pregnant woman and baby die after Russia bombed Mariupol maternity ward
None of the rescuers or the doctors who desperately tried to save the mother ever knew her name, reports ITV News Europe Editor James Mates from Kyiv
A pregnant woman and her baby have died after Russia bombed the maternity hospital where she was meant to give birth.
Images of the woman being rushed to an ambulance on a stretcher from the destroyed Mariupol medical centre had circled the world, epitomising the horror of an attack on humanity’s most innocent. The photographs, shot on Wednesday by Associated Press journalists after the attack, show the woman stroking her bloodied lower abdomen as rescuers rushed her through the rubble in the besieged city of Mariupol. It was among the most brutal moments so far in Russia’s now 19-day-old war on Ukraine. The woman was rushed to another hospital, even closer to the frontline, where doctors laboured to keep her alive. Realising she was losing her baby, medics said, she cried out to them: "Kill me now!"
Surgeon Timur Marin found the woman's pelvis crushed and hip detached. Medics delivered the baby via caesarean section, but it showed “no signs of life,” the surgeon said. Then, they focused on the mother. “More than 30 minutes of resuscitation of the mother didn’t produce results,” Marin said Saturday.
“Both died.” In the chaos after Wednesday’s airstrike, medics didn’t have time to get the woman’s name before her husband and father came to take away her body.
At least someone came to retrieve her, they said - so she didn’t end up in the mass graves being dug for many of Mariupol’s growing number of dead.
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Accused of war crimes, Russian officials claimed the maternity hospital had been taken over by Ukrainian extremists to use as a base, and that no patients or medics were left inside.
Russia’s ambassador to the UN and the Russian Embassy in the UK called the images “fake news.”
Following the fatal attack, video and photos showed several bloodstained, pregnant mothers fleeing the blown-out maternity ward, medics shouting, children crying. The victims were eventually transferred to another hospital on the outskirts of Mariupol. In a city that's been without food supplies, water, power or heat for more than a week, electricity from emergency generators is reserved for operating rooms. As survivors described their ordeal, explosions outside shook the walls. The shelling and shooting in the area is sporadic but relentless. Emotions are running high, even as doctors and nurses concentrate on their work.
Blogger Mariana Vishegirskaya gave birth to a girl the day after the airstrike, and wrapped her arm around newborn Veronika as she recounted Wednesday’s bombing. After photos and video showed her navigating down debris-strewn stairs and clutching a blanket around her pregnant frame, Russian officials claimed she was an actor in a staged attack.
“It happened on March 9 in Hospital No. 3 in Mariupol. We were laying in wards when glasses, frames, windows and walls flew apart,” Ms Vishegirskaya, still wearing the same polka dot pyjamas as when she fled, said. “We don’t know how it happened. We were in our wards and some had time to cover themselves, some didn’t.” Her ordeal was one among many in Mariupol, which has become a symbol of resistance to Russia's President Vladimir Putin's drive to crush democratic Ukraine. The failure to subordinate Mariupol has pushed Russian forces to broaden their offensive elsewhere in Ukraine. Meanwhile, the Azov Sea port city of 430,000, key to creating a land bridge from Russia to Russian-annexed Crimea, is slowly starving. In the makeshift new maternity ward, each approaching childbirth brings new tension. “All birthing mothers have lived through so much,” said nurse Olga Vereshagina.