In Ukraine, the population was estimated at 197 in 2012, down from 328 in 2007 and 612 in 1999 . During the past 25 years, there were more than 900 deaths and just one birth in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. The only known birth occurred on 25 August 1999, when 46-year-old Lydia Sovenko gave birth to a healthy girl. Both Lydia and her husband, Mikhailo Bedernikov had returned to Chernobyl a few months earlier. The child, Maria Sovenko lived in Chernobyl until 2006. She moved to a village outside the Exclusion Zone, where she attended boarding school. Maria returned to Chernobyl only on weekends, to meet her mother who still lived there. The average age of a
samosel was 63 in 2007. In 2012, the local administration unofficially granted permission to the elderly
samosel to live in the area, but ordered all the younger inhabitants to move out. The total population in 2009 was reported to be 271. By 2016, the total population had fallen to about 180, most of them women. A few families live in the city of Chernobyl illegally, after migrating from areas outside the Exclusion Zone to escape poverty. These people have ignored government orders to leave the area and are hostile to journalists. Local administration claims the squatters have occupied several houses in the city, without proper permission from the original owners. In April 2013, Minister of Social Policy of Ukraine
Natalia Korolevska said the settlers are getting full social support from the government, but she excluded the possibility of legalizing their settlements in the Zone, as it is still prohibited to live there. Korolevska confirmed the Social Policy of Ukraine does not register illegal settlers but estimates their number to be about 200–2,000 people in 2013. Following the outbreak of the
war in Donbas in 2014, refugees from that conflict settled in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone or nearby. ==References==