Bomb shelters and bedlam: How a company operating Ukraine factories during the war is trying to cope

At a factory in Ukraine owned by a German auto parts supplier, mothers are known to flee for the border with children in hand. Men leave their stations to fight on the front. And on a daily basis, the workers who remain dash back and forth to an air raid bunker for protection.

It’s rare for a CEO to speak publicly about the effect of the war on his workforce. Yet that's exactly what Aldo Kamper, chief of Leoni, did this week, explaining how operations at his two wiring harness plants in the somewhat safer western Ukraine continued amid the ongoing violence that has decimated cities like Kharkiv and Mariupol on the other side of the country.

“We've seen shelling and rockets impacting not far away, thank goodness neither of our sites have been directly affected,” Kamper told reporters on Wednesday. “And when missiles are launched—from Belarus, for example—no one in west Ukraine knows where they will land.”

To protect his workforce, the company hastily coordinated with local authorities to use of bomb shelters near the company's two factories in Stryi and Kolomyia. Before the war broke out, some 7,000 workers, mostly women, would come to work there every day.

“We furnished the shelters as best we could and practiced quickly evacuating when the alarm is sounded. Unfortunately, after so many weeks of fighting, this has now become routine,” Kamper explained. “Sticking it out there in these air raid bunkers in temperatures barely above freezing, not knowing how long it will last, only to then return to the job — it commands our greatest admiration and respect.”

Curfews and constant stress

Since the bombing doesn't end at dusk but rather continues at night when many of its workers are back home, Kamper says it's common for staff get little sleep. So output the following morning is cut to ensure people can recover somewhat from the constant stress of war.

In fact, showing up at all is entirely voluntary given the circumstances, according to the CEO.

“If they cannot or do not want to come to work, they get their wages anyway, but the willingness to do so is considerable,” Kamper explained. “They see it in a sense as their contribution to the country’s war effort, that by working whenever possible they show they’re a reliable link in the automotive supply chain, ensuring Ukraine has a future.”

At the start of the war a month ago, production had to cease entirely, in part because closed borders created long traffic jams that choked off the supply of raw materials imported from abroad. As of this week, however, his two plants are nominally back to two-shift operation and have been given permission to run in the evening despite curfews.