

The journey to the Slovakian border was crowded, and Maria said it moved "very slowly, with closed blinds, turned off phones, it was totally dark because we were hoping that no one will see us and bomb us".
She managed to get to the border before leaving with friends who drove her to the airport so she could get a flight to the UK.
Maria was allowed to enter the UK as she has documents to back up her arrival, having a visitor visa she had applied for ahead of the Russian invasion as she planned to visit her mother in April regardless.
Maria is now trying to apply for the government's Ukraine Family Scheme which would allow her to remain and work there as her visa is only valid for two months.
The UK Home Office guidance states that "Ukrainian nationals on an existing visitor visa can apply under the family route for further leave without meeting the immigration status requirement, provided they meet the requirements for leave based on exceptional circumstances".
Speaking to her grandmother several times a day by phone, it is difficult to get her to the UK as she doesn't have an international passport and the process of doing so was incomplete before Maria left.
Maria is now appealing to the UK government to simplify the route for others in the same position as she recalled the airport in Slovakia never even taking note of what type of passport she held.
"We are just trying to escape the war. We are just trying to make a future for our families," she said.Explore more on these topics: