Search
00
GBAF Logo
trophy
Top StoriesInterviewsBusinessFinanceBankingTechnologyInvestingTradingVideosAwardsMagazinesHeadlinesTrends

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get the latest news and updates from our team.

Global Banking & Finance Review®

Global Banking & Finance Review® - Subscribe to our newsletter

Company

    GBAF Logo
    • About Us
    • Advertising and Sponsorship
    • Profile & Readership
    • Contact Us
    • Latest News
    • Privacy & Cookies Policies
    • Terms of Use
    • Advertising Terms
    • Issue 81
    • Issue 80
    • Issue 79
    • Issue 78
    • Issue 77
    • Issue 76
    • Issue 75
    • Issue 74
    • Issue 73
    • Issue 72
    • Issue 71
    • Issue 70
    • View All
    • About the Awards
    • Awards Timetable
    • Awards Winners
    • Submit Nominations
    • Testimonials
    • Media Room
    • FAQ
    • Asset Management Awards
    • Brand of the Year Awards
    • Business Awards
    • Cash Management Banking Awards
    • Banking Technology Awards
    • CEO Awards
    • Customer Service Awards
    • CSR Awards
    • Deal of the Year Awards
    • Corporate Governance Awards
    • Corporate Banking Awards
    • Digital Transformation Awards
    • Fintech Awards
    • Education & Training Awards
    • ESG & Sustainability Awards
    • ESG Awards
    • Forex Banking Awards
    • Innovation Awards
    • Insurance & Takaful Awards
    • Investment Banking Awards
    • Investor Relations Awards
    • Leadership Awards
    • Islamic Banking Awards
    • Real Estate Awards
    • Project Finance Awards
    • Process & Product Awards
    • Telecommunication Awards
    • HR & Recruitment Awards
    • Trade Finance Awards
    • The Next 100 Global Awards
    • Wealth Management Awards
    • Travel Awards
    • Years of Excellence Awards
    • Publishing Principles
    • Ownership & Funding
    • Corrections Policy
    • Editorial Code of Ethics
    • Diversity & Inclusion Policy
    • Fact Checking Policy
    Original content: Global Banking and Finance Review - https://www.globalbankingandfinance.com

    A global financial intelligence and recognition platform delivering authoritative insights, data-driven analysis, and institutional benchmarking across Banking, Capital Markets, Investment, Technology, and Financial Infrastructure.

    Copyright © 2010-2026 - All Rights Reserved. | Sitemap | Tags

    Editorial & Advertiser disclosure

    Global Banking & Finance Review® is an online platform offering news, analysis, and opinion on the latest trends, developments, and innovations in the banking and finance industry worldwide. The platform covers a diverse range of topics, including banking, insurance, investment, wealth management, fintech, and regulatory issues. The website publishes news, press releases, opinion and advertorials on various financial organizations, products and services which are commissioned from various Companies, Organizations, PR agencies, Bloggers etc. These commissioned articles are commercial in nature. This is not to be considered as financial advice and should be considered only for information purposes. It does not reflect the views or opinion of our website and is not to be considered an endorsement or a recommendation. We cannot guarantee the accuracy or applicability of any information provided with respect to your individual or personal circumstances. Please seek Professional advice from a qualified professional before making any financial decisions. We link to various third-party websites, affiliate sales networks, and to our advertising partners websites. When you view or click on certain links available on our articles, our partners may compensate us for displaying the content to you or make a purchase or fill a form. This will not incur any additional charges to you. To make things simpler for you to identity or distinguish advertised or sponsored articles or links, you may consider all articles or links hosted on our site as a commercial article placement. We will not be responsible for any loss you may suffer as a result of any omission or inaccuracy on the website.

    1. Home
    2. >Headlines
    3. >Ukrainians mourn missing homes and loved ones after four years of war
    Headlines

    Ukrainians Mourn Missing Homes and Loved Ones After Four Years of War

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on February 20, 2026

    4 min read

    Last updated: April 3, 2026

    Add as preferred source on Google
    Image illustrating K+S's Q2 financial report, showing a decline in revenue and sales volume due to logistical challenges. Relevant to banking and finance news.
    K+S revenue report highlights Q2 revenue miss and sales volume drop - Global Banking & Finance Review
    Why waste money on news and opinion when you can access them for free?

    Take advantage of our newsletter subscription and stay informed on the go!

    Subscribe

    Tags:humanitarian aidemerging markets

    Quick Summary

    A displaced Ukrainian woman recounts four years of upheaval as the war enters year five. With 3.7M internally displaced and over 5M abroad, aid is waning and 70,000 are missing.

    After Four Years of War, Ukrainians Grieve Lost Homes and Loved Ones

    DZENZELIVKA, Ukraine, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Sixty-five-year-old Halyna Popriadukhina has fled her home three times as Russian troops have marched deeper into eastern Ukraine during four years of war. Tired of running, she hopes Ukraine can somehow hold them back.

    "I'm afraid there's nowhere else to escape," she said, the exhaustion apparent in her voice as she relates how one of her sons is missing in action, the other likely held by Russian forces.

    Four Years On: Displacement, Loss and Aid

    Popriadukhina is among nearly 4 million people displaced within Ukraine, on top of more than 5 million who fled to Europe, as the war grinds into its fifth year next week. Many of them fear they will not see their homes, or loved ones, again.

    Donbas at the Center of Peace Talks

    Control of her homeland of Donbas - comprised of Ukraine's industrialised eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk - is at the heart of U.S.-backed peace talks to end the war, Europe's biggest conflict since World War Two.

    Russia is demanding that Kyiv cede the remaining 20% of Donetsk that it has been unable to conquer - something Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has refused even though he said U.S. mediators had advised him behind closed doors it would be enough to secure peace.

    "We can't just withdraw," Zelenskiy said this week. "We have to understand that Donbas is a part of our independence ... It's not about the land. It's not only about territories: it's about people."

    Popriadukhina’s Flight and Return

    RUSSIA INVADED AS SHE WAS MILKING COWS

    Popriadukhina said she had been milking cows with a friend when missiles began flying on Feb. 24, 2022 as the Russian invasion began. She reluctantly agreed to flee on her son's urging, leaving behind her home and livestock that had been critical to her survival.

    "I tried to make it so that I had everything (in life)," said Popriadukhina, a former collective farmworker.

    "I didn't take anything from there. Everything was lost."

    After several months in western Ukraine, she returned to the Donetsk region in the summer of 2022 - only to leave again last March as Russian forces pressed forward. When they lurched further westward into the Dnipropetrovsk region, she moved again.

    From Vremivka to Central Ukraine

    She now lives in central Ukraine, hundreds of kilometres away from her hometown of Vremivka in the east, which is now occupied by Russian troops. Ukrainian authorities allocated her an abandoned, ramshackle house in the village of Dzenzelivka.

    Alley of Heroes daily tribute

    Life Amid Memorials and Ongoing Assaults

    Like countless other towns and villages across Ukraine, it features a so-called "Alley of Heroes" with portraits of fallen soldiers. Residents stop by every morning to honour them in a moment of silence.

    Popriadukhina's trajectory reflects Russia's grinding advances over the years. It occupies about one-fifth of the country after what Ukraine says have been deeply costly assaults across a battle-scarred steppe that have wiped entire settlements off the map.

    "I don't need their little Russia," she said, using a diminutive coined by Ukrainians to show derision for the territorial designs of their much larger neighbour.

    Aid Dwindles; Costs Rise

    While Kyiv's outmanned and outgunned troops have held back any potential breakthrough, the Norwegian Refugee Council has warned that internal refugees are finding it harder to survive as aid dwindles and their savings run out.

    Heating and Health Trade-offs

    "Many families are now forced to live in precarious conditions, often resorting to risky or unsustainable solutions to cope, including reducing their health or heating expenses," it said on Thursday.

    Popriadukhina said she had once been offered passage to Poland: "But I said I won't leave my country."

    Thousands Missing and Families in Limbo

    She is haunted by questions over the fate of her two sons.

    One was being treated at a hospital in the besieged city of Mariupol when Russian forces swept in. The other enlisted in his son's footsteps, then went missing in 2023.

    More than 70,000 Ukrainian soldiers and civilians remain missing in Vladimir Putin's war, Kyiv says, in addition to the tens of thousands of Ukrainian troops killed.

    A Mother’s Anger at Putin

    "Honestly, if I could, I would tear him apart with my own hands, that Putin," said Popriadukhina. "He brought suffering to so many people."

    Sitting in her living room, she recalls a moment earlier in the war when she found a young man outside her home in Vremivka who had been killed by shrapnel. As a mother, it hit her particularly hard.

    "Please tell me," she said. "How can you forgive this?"

    (Additional reporting and writing by Dan Peleschuk; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Philippa Fletcher)

    References

    • Ukrainians mourn missing homes and loved ones after four years of war – Reuters (published Feb 20, 2026)
    • Ukrainians mourn lost homes and displaced families as Kyiv rejects territorial concessions for peace – UNIAN (Feb 21, 2026)

    Table of Contents

    • Four Years On: Displacement, Loss and Aid

    Key Takeaways

    • •Personal account highlights the toll of ongoing displacement and separation from loved ones.
    • •Roughly 3.7 million people remain internally displaced across Ukraine.
    • •More than 5 million Ukrainians have sought refuge across Europe.
    • •Over 70,000 people are still listed as missing due to the war.
    • •Aid is shrinking as the conflict endures, deepening hardship for vulnerable families.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Ukrainians mourn missing homes and loved ones after four years of war

    1What is the main topic?

    The story focuses on Ukraine war displacement, following a woman forced to flee multiple times as the conflict enters its fifth year, and highlighting widespread loss of homes and missing loved ones.

    2How many Ukrainians are displaced or refugees?

    About 3.7 million people are internally displaced, and more than 5 million have moved to European countries for safety. Many fear they may never return home.

    3
  • Donbas at the Center of Peace Talks
  • Popriadukhina’s Flight and Return
  • From Vremivka to Central Ukraine
  • Alley of Heroes daily tribute
  • Life Amid Memorials and Ongoing Assaults
  • Aid Dwindles; Costs Rise
  • Heating and Health Trade-offs
  • Thousands Missing and Families in Limbo
  • A Mother’s Anger at Putin
  • Why is this relevant to finance and markets?

    Prolonged conflict and mass displacement strain public finances, aid budgets, labor markets, and reconstruction funding—factors that shape sovereign risk, growth prospects, and investor sentiment.

    More from Headlines

    Explore more articles in the Headlines category

    Image for At least 30 dead in stampede at Haiti’s historic Laferriere Citadel
    At Least 30 Dead in Stampede at Haiti’s Historic Laferriere Citadel
    Image for Hungarians vote in landmark election closely watched by EU, Russia, US
    Hungarians Vote in Landmark Election Closely Watched by Eu, Russia, US
    Image for Soccer-Stuttering Arsenal given title jolt, Liverpool end losing run
    Soccer-Stuttering Arsenal Given Title Jolt, Liverpool End Losing Run
    Image for London police arrest 212 people at protest over Palestine Action ban
    London Police Arrest 212 People at Protest Over Palestine Action Ban
    Image for Pope Leo urges end to 'madness of war' as US, Iran start talks
    Pope Leo Urges End to 'madness of War' as Us, Iran Start Talks
    Image for Russian listed by Memorial as political prisoner goes on hunger strike
    Russian Listed by Memorial as Political Prisoner Goes on Hunger Strike
    Image for Three injured in Ukrainian drone attack in Russia's Kursk region, governor says
    Three Injured in Ukrainian Drone Attack in Russia's Kursk Region, Governor Says
    Image for Trump says US forces are 'clearing' Strait of Hormuz
    Trump Says US Forces Are 'clearing' Strait of Hormuz
    Image for Soccer-Bournemouth stun Arsenal to open door in title race
    Soccer-Bournemouth Stun Arsenal to Open Door in Title Race
    Image for Horse racing-Second fatality at Grand National meeting
    Horse racing-Second Fatality at Grand National Meeting
    Image for Pakistani five-star hotel becomes unlikely site for US-Iran talks
    Pakistani Five-Star Hotel Becomes Unlikely Site for US-Iran Talks
    Image for UK crime agency charges Sudanese man after four die in Channel boat crossing
    UK Crime Agency Charges Sudanese Man After Four Die in Channel Boat Crossing
    View All Headlines Posts
    Previous Headlines PostAston Martin to Sell F1 Branding Rights as It Warns of Bigger Loss
    Next Headlines PostAnalysis-Rising UK Youth Unemployment Tests Government Over Wage Pledge