- All but two feared dead after South Korea plane crashes with 181 aboard
- Croatia elects president as incumbent looks favourite
- Ruud wins but Norway crash to Czech Republic at United Cup
- Plane with 181 on board crashes in South Korea, killing 96
- Olympic table tennis champ says never 'officially informed' about fines
- Djokovic plans to keep playing for 'years to come'
- North Korea calls for 'toughest' US strategy at party meeting
- Djokovic calls for doping transparency after Sinner, Swiatek cases
- Bumrah rips out Australia middle order as India fight back in 4th Test
- Plane with 181 on board crashes in South Korea, killing 85
- Brunson's 55 points propel Knicks to overtime win over Wizards
- Drama, dreams: Japan's wildly popular school football breeds future stars
- Plane with 181 on board crashes in South Korea, killing 47
- Georgia set to inaugurate disputed president amid political crisis
- Japan's Wajima craftmakers see hope in disaster-hit region
- Five events to look out for in 2025
- Five sports stars to watch in 2025
- Plane with 181 on board crashes in South Korea, killing 29
- UNESCO-listed musical instrument stifled in Afghanistan
- Excited Osaka says 'deep love' of tennis keeps her going
- Baseball superstar Ohtani expecting first baby
- For German 'sick leave detective', business is booming
- Konstas, Khawaja fall as Australia extend lead to 158 over India
- Impressive Herbert leads Chargers into playoffs, Broncos denied
- One dead in Ecuador, Peru ports closed amid massive waves
- NBA hand out suspensions after fracas in Phoenix
- Atalanta snatch late draw at Lazio to hold Serie A lead
- Trump sides with Musk in right-wing row over worker visas
- Suriname rules out state funeral for ex-dictator Bouterse
- Israeli military says Gaza hospital chief held in raid
- Alisson tells title-chasing Liverpool to create own history
- Israel army says ends raid against 'Hamas centre' in north Gaza hospital
- French skier Sarrazin 'stable' after surgery for crash injuries: federation
- Jansen admits South Africa face challenge after losing three wickets
- Israeli military confirms north Gaza hospital chief held in raid
- Abbas, Shahzad rock South Africa at start of chase
- US deported record 61,680 Guatemalans in 2024: agency
- Double centurion Shah inspires Afghanistan fightback in Zimbabwe
- Diallo wants to make 'history' with struggling Man Utd
- Evergreen Brignone wins giant slalom to end Semmering drought
- Putin apologises to Azerbaijan without claiming responsibility in plane crash
- Guardiola won't quit troubled Man City
- Gaza child amputees get new limbs but can't shake war trauma
- Evergreen Brignone powers to Semmering giant slalom win
- Thousands in Georgia human chain as pro-EU protests enter 2nd month
- Turkey's pro-Kurd party meets jailed PKK leader
- WHO chief says narrowly escaped death in Israeli strikes on Yemen airport
- Swiss Monney takes maiden World Cup win in Bormio downhill
- De Minaur wins but Australia crash to Argentina at United Cup
- EU universal charger rules come into force
RBGPF | 100% | 59.84 | $ | |
SCS | 0.58% | 11.97 | $ | |
RELX | -0.61% | 45.58 | $ | |
BCC | -1.91% | 120.63 | $ | |
RIO | -0.41% | 59.01 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.14% | 7.27 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.85% | 23.46 | $ | |
NGG | 0.66% | 59.31 | $ | |
GSK | -0.12% | 34.08 | $ | |
BCE | -0.93% | 22.66 | $ | |
VOD | 0.12% | 8.43 | $ | |
BTI | -0.33% | 36.31 | $ | |
AZN | -0.39% | 66.26 | $ | |
BP | 0.38% | 28.96 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.67% | 23.32 | $ | |
JRI | -0.41% | 12.15 | $ |
Ukraine dentists brave frontline fire to treat troops
Oleksandr Kovalyov is groggy but happy to be rid of his toothache.
The Ukrainian soldier has just spent 90 minutes getting treated in a mobile dental clinic some 30 kilometres (19 miles) from the front line.
"The dentist removed nerves and made a new filling. Everything's going okay. I can still feel the anaesthetic," the 31-year-old soldier told AFP, emerging from a brand-new yellow mobile unit donated by Luxembourg which contains a fully equipped dental surgery.
Looking weary, he said he dozed off in the dentist's chair because he has not had enough sleep recently.
For soldiers like him, with little opportunity to see a dentist, toothache is a common problem. The mobile unit brings dental treatment to them through civilian volunteers willing to risk the dangers.
- 'Premium clinic' -
The yellow truck has set off from the city of Kramatorsk in east Ukraine and parked in a hamlet with a dozen inhabitants deep in the countryside.
Kovalyov and four other members from his mortar unit have arrived at the meeting point to get treatment.
Wearing a yellow gown, face mask and gloves and equipped with a magnifying device and a torch, 49-year-old dentist Laya Sarayeva is treating patients in a cramped space measuring around six square metres (65 square feet).
"Obviously we are used to working in a different way, to having more space," she said.
"But we are operating here at the level of a premium clinic. Not all city clinics have what we have here," she added.
Sarayeva and her colleague Igor Ryskin, a 46-year-old dental surgeon, are volunteers for a Ukrainian NGO called Life Saving Centre.
Since the start of the year, they have been driving out together in the mobile unit covering areas near the eastern frontlines.
"We started off doing it together and we were working all the time. Then Laya found some other dentists through social media who are (now also) treating our heroes," said Ryskin.
The pair now volunteer at weekends, taking time out from treating civilian patients in the large city of Kharkiv further north.
A second mobile unit, staffed by other volunteer dentists, stays on a fixed site in Kramatorsk.
- Long wait -
The other soldiers are sitting patiently in an SUV, sheltering from wind and rain.
They have driven over from the Lyman area, where they are fighting Russian forces.
The driver, a 41-year-old who only gave his first name Oleksiy, said he needs a checkup since he has not had one for more than a year.
Soldiers try to access dental clinics in nearby towns, he said but "there are long waiting lines... So it's not always possible to see a dentist."
Kovalyov said the mobile unit "is really necessary" since "there are places, isolated villages where we have neither the time nor the opportunity to make an appointment and get treated".
Yevgen Gorbunov, a 29-year-old military nurse based in the hamlet, said apart from combat injuries, "toothaches are probably the number one problem after back pain" for soldiers.
"Due to lack of vitamins, stress and nerves, teeth are the first thing to crumble."
"It is a great thing that these mobile dental clinics exist."
- 'Better to be happy' -
"It is difficult to work in such conditions, but for professionals it is an exciting experience," Sarayeva said.
The dentists say they try not to think about danger like the soldiers they treat.
"The guys aren't scared. And we have to show them that we're not scared either, we're in it together," dental surgeon Ryskin said.
"Sometimes you treat the boys, you shake hands, you hug, and a week later you find out that that person is no longer there. That's the hardest part for me."
Sarayeva said she refused to be scared.
"Fear doesn't change the situation. If a missile comes, whether you're afraid or not, you'll die either way, in joy or in tears. It's better to be happy," she said.
P.Costa--AMWN