Olympic medallist who fled Belarus forced into exile again as Ukraine attacked
Story by Reuters
Updated 1735 GMT (0135 HKT) March 17, 2022
Aliaksandra Herasimenia is pictured in Vilnius, Lithuania, October 17, 2020.(Reuters)After bolting to Ukraine to escape political persecution in her native Belarus, Olympic swimmer Aliaksandra Herasimenia never thought she would again be forced to flee, this time to save her family from Russian attack.
Herasimenia, a three-time Olympic medallist, found herself among thousands of Ukrainians massing at the border with Poland as Russian troops advanced on Kyiv.On the second day of the Russian invasion last month, Herasimenia and her husband, Olympic swimmer Yauhen Tsurkin, scrambled to pack some belongings and set off on a 12-hour car ride to the Polish border with their young daughter and Herasimenia's mother.With explosions resounding in the background as they inched along congested roads, Herasimenia reassured her three-and-a-half-year-old daughter, telling her it was only thunder.These are the sports that Russia has been suspended from«Of course I had to make something up because how do you explain to a child that war has started?» Herasimenia, who is now in Warsaw with her family, told Reuters.Read MoreHerasimenia was among the elite athletes who fled Belarus in the wake of a crackdown against those who protested what they said was the fraudulent re-election of Alexander Lukashenko in August 2020.Lukashenko, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, has denied any wrongdoing.Russia has used Belarusian territory to launch a multi-pronged invasion of Ukraine, where many Belarusians settled after escaping persecution at home. Moscow says it is conducting a «special military operation» to disarm and «denazify» Ukraine.«We've been running for a long time,»