もっと詳しく

By Joseph Campbell LVIV, Ukraine (Reuters) – When bombs began to fall as Russian forces poured into Ukraine in late February, thousands of people fled for safety, leaving their homes and property behind. Those who could often took beloved pets with them. It wasn’t so easy for horse owners, though, who faced the agonising decision to leave their animals behind. For Mykhailo Parkhomchuk, head of the Ukrainian Equestrian Federation, he couldn’t just sit back and watch animals he had spent a lifetime caring for suffer. Parkhomchuk, who is based in Belgium, drove back to his homeland on day two of …