A NORTH EAST man whose wife is still in Ukraine has described a feeling of fear he has "never experienced" as Russia launches its invasion into Ukraine.

Gary Smith, who lives in Newcastle, has shared his fears as wife, Helen, who has lived in the crisis-hit country for more than 30 years feels she cannot leave.

It comes as the Prime Minister today (February 24) vowed that Britain "cannot and will not just look away" as Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion on Ukraine. 

Read more: Ukraine crisis LIVE: Updates as Russia invades country

Mr Smith, who is 53, said he had been left unable to sleep all night as the situation deeply worsened on Thursday (February 24).

The Northern Echo: Picture: PAPicture: PA

Explaining how he had been impacted here in the North East, he said: “I’m not working today… I rang my boss this morning and I cried, I’ll be honest with you.

“She’s all I’ve got, I’ve got no family here. She’s my family.

“It’s a feeling of fear I’ve never experienced – being in this situation.”

Despite the ongoing crisis, his wife will not leave Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine, just 25 miles from Russia’s border, in order to be near her father in the Russian city of Belgorod.

Read more: What Newcastle father who’s son was victim of MH17 disaster said about Russia

Mr Smith, who works in payment solutions, has asked Helen to head west for the Ukrainian city of Lviv, around 40 miles from the Polish border.

He said: “I said, ‘go to Lviv if it kicks off,’ and she said ‘no, I’m staying here because I’ve got my dad, I’m worried about my dad.'

“She heard the explosions last night, she said ‘it’s not the Russians bombing,’ – that it’s a third party.

The Northern Echo: The Prime Minister Boris Johnson Picture: PAThe Prime Minister Boris Johnson Picture: PA

“I said ‘Helen, it’s not. It’s the Russian military’.”

Read more: Met Office issue warning as snow to hit parts of North East and North Yorkshire

Mr Smith met the 55-year-old university lecturer in 2012 and the pair were married in Ukraine in 2019.

The two have never lived in the same country, but have regularly visited each other in both the UK and Ukraine over the last 10 years.

The couple were next scheduled to see each other in Newcastle for Mr Smith’s birthday in May, though he fears the ongoing crisis will disrupt their plans.

And while deciding not to leave Kharkiv imminently, Mr Smith’s wife has voiced concerns for her safety.

“She said, ‘I don’t want to die, I want to buy a house with a garden’,” Mr Smith said.

“She’s bought some duct tape for the windows.”

Mr Smith added he worries about what it might take for his wife to leave.

“I honestly don’t know, possibly seeing a dead body, or civilians on the ground, unfortunately dead,” he said.

“Innocent civilians possibly, and I hope that never happens.

“(But) she’s lived there for 30 odd years and that is her home.”

Mr Smith is holding onto hope that she might fly to Bali to be with her daughter, and has warned her of the possibilities ahead.

“There will be a battle, and I’ve said that to Helen, ‘there will be a battle,'” he said.

“Maybe today, or tomorrow or whenever.

“(Putin) is an evil, evil man… Evil, nasty, a vindictive man, a liar, he has lied to the world.”

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