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Visit to Ukraine turned into a 1-way trip for Quebec woman

A visit to Ukraine turned into a one-way trip for Virginia Dronova, a permanent Canadian resident living in Gatineau, Que., who wants Canada to provide more support to end the Russian invasion.

Virginia Dronova flew home to mourn mother's death, then stayed as Russia invaded

Virginia Dronova, seen here during her current visit to Ukraine, is calling for more support to help end the war against Russia. (Supplied by Virginia Dronova )

Virginia Dronova says the first few days back in Ukraine werea nightmare.

"We could see so many people dying and so many cities bombed and shelled with missiles," said Dronova, a permanent Canadian resident from Ukraine living in Gatineau, Que.

"We cried our eyes out during those days, mourning our friends, mourning our people all around the country."

Russia sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine in an invasion on Feb. 24. Ukrainian forces have mounted stiff resistance andWestern governmentshaveimposed sweeping sanctions on Russia in an effort to force it to withdraw its forces.

Dronova, who's lived in Canada for two years, flew back to Ukraine five days before the Russian invasion to mourn her mother who passed away due to COVID-19 complications.

But her visit has turned into a one-way trip.

As the war ramped up, she decided to stay behind to help her people. One of those ways is calling for more support to help end the war.

"As long as Ukraine is fighting, Canada and other countries should help as much as possible financially, militarily, politically, in all ways possible," said Dronova.

WATCH |Why Virginia Dronova is staying:

Gatineau resident in Ukraine says country is exhausted

3 years ago
Duration 2:11
Virginia Dronova, a permanent Canadian resident living in Gatineau, Que., says she returned to Ukraine for her mothers funeral just five days before Russia invaded. Now, she says shell stay to offer whatever help she can as the war continues.

Call for more ammunition

Dronova wants a no-fly zone over Ukraine, adding they need "more ammunition" and more "defence systems."

"We understand neither NATO nor other countries are ready to help us to cover the skies, so we have to do it by ourselves," she said.

Virginia Dronova visited Ukraine to mourn her mother's death, then Russia invaded the country. (Supplied by Virginia Dronova )

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky made a desperate plea to Canada's House of Commonslast week calling for the West to close the skies above Ukraine.

NATO has refused to impose a no-fly zone to prevent the war from escalating beyond Ukraine.

In response to Russia's attack on Ukraine, Canada has imposed measures that are meant to hobble Russia's economy.

The Canadian government has also announced it will acceptan "unlimited number of refugees."

Dronova is not naming the city she is currently staying in forsafety reasons, but she plans on being in Ukraine for as long as she can help.