Mother spared jail so she can save daughter from war in Ukraine

Olga Khomenko, 37, has been spared jail so she can travel to Ukraine to rescue her daughter. (PA)
Olga Khomenko, 37, has been spared jail so she can travel to Ukraine to rescue her daughter. (PA)

A mother who admitted taking her daughter to Ukraine against a court order has been spared jail so she can travel back to rescue her from the war.

A judge said “simple humanity” led him to the decision not to send Olga Khomenko, 37, to immediate custody so she could retrieve her daughter from the war-torn Kyiv region following the Russian invasion.

The court heard the girl is currently living in the Ukrainian capital with her grandmother and “can hear the bombs raining down”.

The judge was told the pair tried to escape the city by train but their attempt failed when the railway station was bombed and Ukrainian soldiers turned them back.

On Friday at St Albans Crown Court, Khomenko entered a plea of guilty to abducting a child and faced as many as five years behind bars. She was given a two-year suspended sentence.

Watch: Kyiv awakes to echo of gunfire and explosions

KHARKIV, UKRAINE - MARCH 10: Bombed buildings in the residential neighborhood near Kharkiv Metro Station in Kharkiv, Ukraine on March 10, 2022 as Russian attacks continue. (Photo by Andrea Carrubba/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Bombed buildings in the residential neighbourhood near Kharkiv Metro Station. (Getty)
Anti-tank constructions are seen in central Kyiv, Ukraine March 7, 2022. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich
Anti-tank constructions are seen in central Kyiv, Ukraine. (Reuters)

Khomenko took the girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, to Ukraine in 2017 following the breakdown of her marriage to a man who she alleges was violent and abusive, the court heard.

She was last week granted 72 hours bail by the court to travel to Ukraine but only made it as far as the Polish border before having to turn back to adhere to the time limit.

She was desperate to be sentenced quickly in the hope of getting back her passport to make another attempt.

Judge Michael Kay said “I wish her every success” after handing down the sentence.

He said: “This court is in an impossible situation. I cannot begin to understand what the situation is on the ground in the Kyiv region. I imagine the system has broken down in terms of authority and the enforcement of the rule of law. It is a desperate situation, only truly desperate measures can be taken.”

Read more:

Johnson rules out no-fly zone despite Russian hospital strike

Putin calls in reinforcements: 16,000 Middle Eastern fighters to join Russian invasion of Ukraine

British public will be asked to take Ukrainian refugees into their homes

“I have never known a sentencing exercise in which the issue of saving a child in a foreign country has been a factor. It’s a decision that I would be amazed if any crown court has made before. These are extraordinary times,” he added.

“The criminal justice system has to have humanity.”

He said he was aware of the arguments put forward by the prosecution, adding “but simple humanity informs me that the only appropriate sentence is one of two years imprisonment which will be suspended for two years”.

Khomenko, who stood in the dock, cried as the sentence was passed.

Judge Kay ordered the immediate release of her passport, which is currently being held by authorities at Gatwick Airport, so she can travel overseas.

Oleksey Beregoviy, a musician of the Kyiv-Classic Symphony Orchestra, performs for journalists and people after an open-air concert named
Oleksey Beregoviy, a musician of the Kyiv-Classic Symphony Orchestra. (Reuters)
A police officer says goodbye to his son as his family flees from advancing Russian troops as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues in the town of Irpin outside Kyiv, Ukraine, March 8, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
A police officer says goodbye to his family as they flee from advancing Russian troops in the town of Irpin outside Kyiv. (Reuters)

Khomenko left the court with a suitcase and the intention of going straight to the Polish border to attempt to retrieve her daughter.

The court heard how she divorced her husband in 2015 after an allegedly abusive marriage which led her to stay in women’s shelters on several occasions.

After settling in Ukraine with her daughter, she was eventually extradited to the UK in 2020 after being arrested the previous year in Paris under a European arrest warrant and has been awaiting trial since, the court heard

Ahead of the sentencing, Stephen Vello QC, defending, pleaded with the judge to pass the suspended sentence.

He added: “In short, this defendant is [the daughter’s] best chance of escaping the warzone and if she fails to escape the warzone, I hope it isn’t in any way over exaggerating that, [the daughter’s] life may or may not continue to exist for the months hence. It really is that important.”