Weekly Update #109
April 1, 2024

REFUGEE SITUATION

(as of 14 March 2024)

General Figures


Refugees from Ukraine recorded across Europe 

5,982,900

Last updated March 14 2024

Covers those granted refugee status, temporary asylum status, temporary protection, or statuses through similar national protection schemes, as well as those recorded in the country under other forms of stay 


Refugees from Ukraine recorded beyond Europe

503,100

Last updated February 27 2024

Covers those granted refugee status, temporary asylum status, temporary protection, or statuses through similar national protection schemes, as well as those recorded in the country under other forms of stay 


Refugees from Ukraine recorded globally

6,486,000

Last updated March 14 2024


Estimated number of internally displaced people (IDPs) in Ukraine

3,689,000

Last updated December 27 2023

Source: IOM

Source: UNHCR collation of statistics made available by the authorities




Internally displaced persons in top 12 oblasts

Source: UNHCR

THE HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE

UNICEF Ukraine Humanitarian Response (Feb 2024)


Situation in Numbers

2.9 million Children in need inside Ukraine (Humanitarian Needs Overview 2023)

752,000 Children targeted by UNICEF in Ukraine 2024 (UNICEF HAC 2024)


Children in Ukraine have now lived through two years of destruction and displacement, violence, separation from family members and friends, loss of loved ones and disrupted schooling, health care and social services. Children living along the frontline have spent between 3,000 and 5,000 hours – equivalent to four to seven months – in underground shelters. According to survey data, half of 13- to 15-year-olds have trouble sleeping, and 1 in 5 has intrusive thoughts and flashbacks. Threequarters of children and young people aged 14 to 34 recently reported needing emotional or psychological support.

Attacks continued along the frontline in February from Sumska Region in the north to Khersonska Region in the south. Communities in Kupiansk (Kharkivska), Robotyne (Zaporizka), Orlovka (Donetska) and Chasiv Yar (Donetska) were particularly affected. 


Response

In February, UNICEF and partners provided mental health and psychosocial support to 117,678 girls, boys and women, including 4,046 children with disabilities, for a total of 169,906 people reached this year. Support was provided through schools, community centres, mobile teams, over the phone and online, among other platforms.


So far this winter season, UNICEF has provided warm winter clothes to 74,862 children including 36,452 girls, as well as providing cash for winterization for 15,961 children from 5,218 households.


UNICEF delivered 1,395 refrigerators for vaccine storage to 1,020 health facilities in 23 regions. Meanwhile, 19,908 children and parents benefitted from consultations on vaccination, provided by the Ministry of Health-UNICEF National Hotline on Vaccination and Infant Feeding.


UNICEF and the Ministry of Education and Science distributed 53,590 large-print textbooks for children with visual impairments as well as audio support for English Language textbooks for 2,208 students with visual impairments. This includes 828 children in the eastern and southern regions of Ukraine, allowing them to continue their studies remotely.


In 2024, UNICEF has ensured continuous access to safe water and sanitation services for 691,496 people through repairs, and rehabilitation of WASH networks and the provision of supplies and equipment to water utilities. WASH supplies have been provided to 1,139,796 people.


While US$211.1 million has been made available in 2024, 46 per cent has been utilized to meet critical needs in the first two months of the year. These generous funds have provided critical lifesaving supplies and services for the most affected children in frontline areas such as Sumska, Dnipropetrovska, Donetska, Kharkivska, Khersonska, Mykolaivska and Zaporizka Regions affected by intensified strikes since start of the year. 


Funding is also being invested in the construction, supplies, capacity building and other programming required to meet the needs of children and their families, which will be converted to results throughout the year. Without continued support, UNICEF will not be able to maintain critical support to vulnerable children and their families in the coming year, nor respond to new needs arising from the changing conflict dynamics.


Source: UNICEF



Health Cluster partners’ responses


Ninety-one organizations are active partners in the Health Cluster.  They continue to provide health services to affected communities.

Responses during the winter season have included the following:

Corus International continued to support the work of the Mobile Medical Unit (MMU), operated by the PublicOrganization - Infection Control of Ukraine (ICU) and deployed in remote and conflict-affected areas. In February,

MMU operated in the Sumska Oblast, reaching 786 people with medical assistance, and more than 200 through the provision of psychological consultations. The MMU offers primary, gynecological and ophthalmological care and mental health support services, directly addressing the immediate health needs of the local population. MMU is also involved in public health interventions, such as health education, aiming to mitigate the spread of diseases and improve community health outcomes.

Family Health International (FHI 360) continued to operate 11 mobile teams providing primary and specialized medical care and psychosocial support to communities in Dnipropetrovska, Zaporizka, Kharkivska, Mykolaivska, Odeska, Donetska, and Khersonska oblasts. 

In February, these mobile teams ,601 people with primary healthcare services and over 1009 people with additional consultations by specialist doctors. 2,886 people received individual and group psychological support through mobile teams and  primary healthcare centers.

FHI 360’s Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) counsellors in Kharkivska, Zaporizka, and Dnipropetrovska oblasts provided counseling support to 256 pregnant and postpartum women through individual lactation counseling sessions, and to 175 people through group counseling sessions covering topics such as of breastfeeding, timely introduction of complementary feeding, and proper use of breast milk substitutes. 

FHI 360 donated generators, diapers, medicines and medical supplies to eight health facilities in Dnipropetrovska, Mykolaivska, Donetska, and Khersonska oblasts.

In February 2024, Frida’s volunteer doctors provided 1,792 consultations, with a primary focus on providing specialized care in recently accessible regions within the Sumska, Donetska, and Kyivska oblasts. Among these consultations, 1,267 took place at a boarding school as part of the “Help for Children” initiative. Additionally, as part of the “Frida Academy” project, healthcare workers received four training sessions, further enhancing their ability to offer specialized care. Under the “Mobile Dentistry” project, 113 individuals received dental care, including 61 children.

International Medical Corps (IMC) operated nine medical mobile units supporting access to health care services, reaching 2,578 people in February 2024. 130,062 outpatient consultations were carried out in 84 IMC-supported primary healthcare facilities and 49,812 inpatient consultationwere supported in 27 health facilities in Kyiviska, Chernihivska Sumska, Kharkivska, Dnipropetrovska, Zaporizka, Donetska, Khersonska, and Mykolaivska oblasts.

In February 2024, eight PACT mobile health teams continued activities under the USAID-funded Community Action for HIV Control project in Kyivska, Chernihivska and Zhytomyrska regions. 839 people were provided with medical and psychosocial assistance during this time.

The USAID-funded Community Action for HIV Control project recently organized a Community of Practice (CoP) session for service providers. The focus of this session was to introduce and discuss the launch of a new initiative called the Health Ambassadors Program. As of February 2024, a total of 23 “health ambassadors” have already commenced their work within local communities. Their role involves promoting health awareness, providing education, and supporting community members in their efforts to prevent and manage HIV. The Health Ambassadors Program aims to strengthen community- based responses to HIV control and improve overall health outcomes.

Source: Health Cluster, WHO

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Direct Relief Donates More Than 2,000 Battery Systems to Ukrainian Hospitals Amid Energy Grid Attacks

 

Direct Relief, a humanitarian aid organization, active in more than 80 countries, with a mission to improve the health and lives of people affected by poverty or emergencies, is launching an expansive initiative to equip hospitals, emergency response hubs, and other key medical sites across Ukraine with backup electricity storage systems. The organization is purchasing and donating more than 2,000 battery systems, which are currently being installed across Ukraine to help ensure the continuation of crucial medical services and safeguard patient care against failures of the power grid.

 

Attacks on the power grid in the winter of 2022-23 destroyed 61% of Ukraine’s electricity generation capacity and left around 12 million people without power, according to the UNDP.


 The Ukraine Minister of Health announced that Ukrainian medical institutions are now provided with more than 10,000 generators for uninterrupted power supply. They have also begun to equip medical facilities with alternative and environmentally friendly sources of electricity, including solar panels. The initial 300 [electricity] storage systems received from Direct Relief will strengthen medical institutions in 20 regions of Ukraine.


The war has inflicted an estimated $7.5 billion of direct damage on the electrical power sector, and has cost the sector $32 billion in lost revenue, according to the World Bank’s newly published damage and needs assessment.


The World Bank estimates it will cost $40.4 billion to rebuild Ukraine’s power sector over 10 years, using “a build back better approach with policies that align its energy model with the EU energy policy and move toward a decarbonized economy.” Of the $40.4 billion, $1.75 billion has been received.

The donations are also part of Direct Relief’s extensive humanitarian medical aid program to the people of Ukraine since the start of the war in February 2022, the largest aid response in the organization’s 75-year history. Direct Relief has donated and delivered more than 1,900 tons of medical aid, with a wholesale value of $1.1 billion, to support the efforts of health workers and community organizations.

 

The organization has also provided more than $42 million in financial assistance to groups offering essential health services, including rehabilitation services for war-injured people, psychosocial and mental health services, support of emergency, specialized, and primary care, and support for making health care mobile as people continue to move throughout the country.


Source: Direct Relief

STATUS OF THE CONFLICT

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky indicated that delays in American security assistance have forced Ukraine to cede the battlefield initiative and that these delays continue to threaten Ukraine’s defensive capabilities. The Washington Post published excerpts of an interview with Zelensky on March 29 in which Zelensky stated that Ukraine will not be able to defend its territory without American support, as Ukraine currently relies on air defense systems and missiles, electronic warfare jammers, and 155mm artillery shells from the United States.[1] Zelensky stated that continued materiel shortages will force the Ukrainian military to cede more Ukrainian territory and people “step by step” since a smaller but more stable frontline is preferable to a larger but unstable front that Russian forces could exploit to achieve a breakthrough. Zelensky stated that Ukrainian forces are “trying to find some way not to retreat” from unspecified frontline areas and noted that Ukrainian forces have stabilized the front near Avdiivka, Donetsk Oblast. Zelensky reiterated that the Ukrainian military’s planning ability to make decisions is contingent on US military assistance and that Ukraine cannot plan counteroffensive efforts without knowing whether Ukraine will receive US military assistance, and what future US military assistance will entail.


Zelensky also indicated that Ukraine is conducting rear-area strikes against Russian oil refineries to generate strategic effects as Ukraine cannot plan for or conduct counteroffensive operations without more information about US military assistance. Zelensky stated that Ukrainian strikes against Russian oil refineries and other strategic targets are in response to Russian strikes against Ukrainian energy infrastructure.


Source: ISW

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Explainer: Why is Russia changing its language about the war?


The Kremlin said on Friday that what it has described for more than two years as its "special military operation" in Ukraine had "become a war" because of the involvement of the West.


Here is a look at why Russia is changing its terminology.


IT WAS ALWAYS A WAR, SO WHY CALL IT A 'SPECIAL OPERATION'?

President Vladimir Putin coined the term "special military operation" - the Russian initials are SVO - on Feb. 24, 2022, the day he launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine. By using that euphemism, he created expectations for an action that would be limited in time and scale and wouldn't impinge on most Russians' normal lives. He also shut down criticism of the invasion and made it a crime to describe the war as a war by signing laws that set long prison terms for "discrediting" the armed forces or spread "false information" about them.


WHAT'S CHANGED IN RUSSIA'S LANGUAGE OVER TIME?

The notion that Russia is not fighting an actual war has become impossible to sustain, given the scale of casualties, the huge increase in defence spending and military production, and the frequency of Ukrainian strikes not only in border areas but deep into Russian territory. Putin has continued to refer to the SVO but has increasingly portrayed the conflict to Russians as an existential struggle akin to that waged by the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany in World War Two. He has accused the West of using Ukraine as a theatre to wage war against Russia by supplying it with weapons, money and intelligence.


SO WHAT IS THE KREMLIN SAYING NOW

Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said the SVO had become a war when the West joined on Ukraine's side. He said everyone needed to understand this for the sake of their "internal mobilisation" - a phrase that suggests the Kremlin is demanding a shift in the national mindset to rally the entire country behind the war effort.


WHY NOW, AND WHAT COMES NEXT?

The shift in language follows five days after Putin won a new six-year term in a presidential election from which two candidates who opposed the war were barred. Russia is also now speaking increasingly about the need to seize more Ukrainian land - Putin said this week it may need to create a buffer zone to protect its own territory from attack, and Peskov said Russia must fully "liberate" the four regions of Ukraine that it has claimed as its own but only partly controls. The shift in their language suggests that Putin, encouraged by Russian advances in the past few weeks and delays in the supply of new U.S. aid to Ukraine, has now turned the war into the defining mission of his rule. A key question in the coming months will be whether Putin decides, in addition to the "internal mobilisation" that Peskov called for, to stage an actual mobilisation like the one he ordered in 2022, when 300,000 extra reservists were called up to fight.


Source: Reuters

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New military strategy targets Ukraine’s energy infrastructure


The Russian military likely expanded the target set for Russia’s strike campaign against Ukraine’s critical infrastructure to include hydroelectric power plants. The Ukrainian Air Force reported that Russian forces launched a series of missile and drone strikes at targets in Ukraine on the night of March 28 to 29, Ukrainian state electricity transmission operator Ukrenergo reported that Russian strikes on March 28-29 damaged thermal and hydroelectric power plants in central and western Ukraine, causing electricity shutdowns in Dnipropetrovsk and Kharkiv oblasts.[27] Russian strikes on March 22 significantly damaged Ukraine’s Dnipro Hydroelectric Power Plant (DHPP) in Zaporizhzhia City and the facility will likely remain offline for some time.


Russia’s newly emerging pattern of striking Ukrainian dams and hydroelectric power plans is a significant inflection and an escalation of Russia’s strike campaign against Ukraine. Russian forces did not previously conduct sustained missile strikes against Ukrainian dams and hydroelectric power plans. The US and European countries remain unwilling to provide Ukraine with materiel that could prove operationally or strategically significant and assist significant Ukrainian offensive efforts due to fears of Russian escalation or retaliation. Western states’ decisions to limit Ukraine’s defense capabilities in an effort to manage escalation have failed to prevent Russia from escalating its war against Ukraine, however.


Source: ISW

UPDATES ON INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT FOR UKRAINE

France will soon deliver 78 howitzers to Ukraine to meet Kyiv’s urgent needs, defense minister says

 

France will soon be able to deliver 78 Caesar howitzers to Ukraine and will boost its supply of shells to meet Kyiv’s urgent needs for ammunition to fight Russia’s full-scale invasion, the defense minister said Tuesday.


Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu said at a news conference that an agreement was reached among France, Ukraine and Denmark to finance the Caesar self-propelled 155 mm howitzers, which will enable France to “quickly deliver” them.


France has also set a goal to deliver 80,000 shells for 155 mm guns to Ukraine this year — up from 30,000 delivered since the beginning of the war on Feb. 24, 2022, he said.


In addition, Lecornu said, France is participating in an effort to identify available stocks of gunpowder and ammunition that could be bought from countries outside the European Union, a plan initiated by the Czech Republic to further support Kyiv.


Under the plan, the Czechs seek to obtain 800,000 artillery shells for Ukraine. Czech leaders previously said the first shells should be delivered to Ukraine no later than June. At least 18 countries have joined the initiative, according to officials in Prague.

 

Earlier this month, Germany, France and Poland vowed to procure more weapons for Kyiv and step up production of military equipment, promising that Ukraine can rely on the trio of European powers as it tries to overcome a shortage of military resources.


Lecornu argued that European countries should reduce their reliance on the U.S. to ensure the continent’s security. He said he expects the issue to be a campaign topic before the European Parliament election in June.


“We know that part of Europe’s security agenda should from now on fall on Europeans,” Lecornu said. “That’s an absolute necessity.”


Lecornu’s comments come as many in Europe have raised concerns that the potential return of Donald Trump to the White House would weaken the NATO alliance, after his remarks threatening not to come to the defense of allies in the event of an attack by Russia.

Even if U.S. President Joe Biden stays in office, EU leaders worry that the long, slow U.S. pivot to Asia to focus on an ever-more assertive China will pick up speed and increasingly leave Europe to take care of its own security. U.S. efforts to get new funds to arm Ukraine have stalled in Congress.


Source: AP News

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War in Ukraine: Macron's promise to help Kyiv is a budgetary and political headache


The French president had promised 'up to €3 billion' in military support. But with public accounts looking unhealthy, France's Finance Ministry has planned €10 billion in budget cuts.


Just over a month after France and Ukraine signed a defense agreement on February 16, providing Kyiv with military aid worth "up to €3 billion" in 2024, the funding for this support is still extremely unclear, given that the French government separately announced measures to cut spending by €10 billion for the current year. On Tuesday, March 26, Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu addressed these uncertainties at a press conference on the theme of "the war economy," although the budgetary issue appears to be very complicated for the government.

 

Many of the governing coalition's lawmakers say they are regularly questioned by voters in their constituencies who say they don't understand why the government is giving "€3 billion to Ukraine" at a time when the screws are about to be tightened on the budget, and the possibility of tax hikes has begun to be mentioned.

 

Limited room for maneuver

From a strictly budgetary point of view, the government's room for maneuver is also limited. In principle, support for Kyiv has been taken out of the 2024-2030 military expenditure planning law (LPM), passed in July 2023, in order to preserve the reinforcement of the French armed forces. Protecting this law was even considered a "red line" by Lecornu's staff, as the minister has stressed in recent months.


Source: Le Monde

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Why Ukraine’s refugees aren’t going to France

 

A look at the data shows the gaps in Europe’s support for those displaced by Russia’s war.

 

When it comes to taking in refugees from Ukraine, France is lagging far behind the rest of the European Union.


An estimated 4.3 million Ukrainian refugees have made the bloc their temporary home since Russia’s full-scale invasion.


With the help of the EU’s “temporary protection” status, giving hundreds of thousands fleeing the war the right to work, live and study within its borders, Ukrainians moved to countries across Europe; from Poland and Finland to Spain and Ireland. 

 

But in January, France was reporting just 64,720 refugees from Ukraine under temporary protection.

In contrast, Germany has taken in more than 1.2 million refugees while Poland has taken in nearly 1 million, according to Eurostat data. France’s number is well below that of Ireland, which is hosting more than 100,000 Ukrainians among its 5 million residents. 


The data are even more remarkable when compared with countries’ populations: Poland, the Baltics, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Bulgaria are hosting more than 25 refugees per 1,000 citizens.

France, by contrast, is hosting fewer than 1 per 1,000 citizens. 


Part of the explanation lies in the age breakdown of the refugees European countries are hosting: Out of the nearly 65,000 people France was offering temporary protection to at the end of January, Eurostat data listed just 25 people younger than 18.


Minors can typically stay in France without a permit, so they’re rarely included in temporary protection stats, Eurostat noted.

 

Gerard Sadik of NGO La Cimade said an estimated 30,000 Ukrainian refugees aren’t covered in the French tally.

Language also plays a role: Slavic-speaking countries have drawn high numbers of Ukraine refugees. But as well as language, what might account for part of France’s stark disparity, analysts say, are factors such as geographical proximity to Ukraine, financial support for refugees, and a pre-established community network.


“As far as I understand, France just doesn’t match any of these three requirements,” said Evgeniya Blyznyuk, CEO and founder of research company Gradus, which has surveyed Ukraine refugees’ experiences abroad. 


France is “quite far away,” its financial support is “significantly lower” than that Germany is providing, and there was no major Ukrainian community in the country to begin with, she argued.

Human rights groups also point to language hurdles and France’s famed red tape and bureaucracy.

People fleeing Ukraine have had trouble accessing information on the procedure to apply for temporary protection, social benefits and housing programs, as well as education and employment opportunities in France, said Ksenia Gedz, advocacy coordinator for Ukraine human rights organization Right to Protection. Requirements to renew their temporary protection permit had added a “new impediment,” she said.


“France is the country of paperwork,” Khomenko acknowledged, but added that she hadn’t had any trouble renewing her protection status, which needs to be done every six months.


To navigate bureaucratic hurdles, Khomenko said refugees can lean on a vast network of Facebook groups and associations offering information and help with their move.


Whereas in other countries, such as Germany, support is primarily organized at state-level, in France, associations and locals have been involved in welcoming Ukrainians.


There were “many public-private initiatives, and a lot [of help] coming from citizens, like French people who opened up their homes,” Khomenko said.


The UNHCR, too, has praised France’s state-sponsored citizen accommodation program, which housed some 17,000 refugees with 7,000 citizen hosts in early 2022. 

 

Not just a France problem

Perhaps the key word in the EU’s Temporary Protection Directive is “temporary.” 

“One of the things we find time and again … is the temporariness really affects the decision-making of families,” said Daniel Gorevan, senior advocacy adviser at NGO Save the Children.

 

Eurostat data confirm that not everyone has made a stable home in their host country: While the number of refugees has steadily grown in most EU countries, it has tapered off in some — including France, the Czech Republic, Sweden and Estonia.


“If they don’t know what’s going to happen in the future, this informs whether they’re going to enroll children in school … or if they take the steps which are necessary to learn a language,” Gorevan argued.

As a result, some refugees have moved to the EU but not settled in. 


Blyznyuk’s Gradus has reported refugee concerns ranging from their struggle to find a job while grappling to learn the local language to administrative burdens and access to medical care and education.

About two-thirds of refugee children in Poland, Romania and Moldova are not in school, with many taking online classes using the Ukrainian curriculum, according to Save the Children’s numbers.

Like other long-term life decisions, “that obviously has knock-on effects in terms of their integration with host communities, their sense of belonging and their wellbeing,” said Gonevan.

Khomenko said many Ukrainians are afraid about what will happen when the temporary protection expires in March 2025. 


Source: Politico

Europe’s Biggest Defense Spenders


Legend

Source: NATO

_______________________________________________________

There's a clear trend in NATO members' defense budgets: the closer to Russia, the higher the spending

While several EU countries still fail to meet the NATO target — some spectacularly so — every country bordering Russia or Ukraine (except for Norway) does meet it, according to NATO data. The U.S. and Greece also surpass that 2 percent threshold.

Poland, a front-line state bordering Russia, Ukraine and Russian ally Belarus, has seen the biggest spending leap, jumping from 1.9 percent of GDP in 2014 to 3.9 percent last year. That makes it the top spender per GDP among the 31 countries in NATO.

Source: Politico

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The Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk, says Europe is entering a “prewar” era, cautioning that the continent is not ready and urging European countries to step up defence investment. Tusk’s comments came days after a Russian missile briefly breached Polish airspace during a major attack on Ukraine, prompting Warsaw to put its forces on heightened readiness.

Tusk has been using his platform to try to add a sense of urgency to Europe’s debates about defence and aid to Ukraine, amid fears about the future of American assistance and concerns about defence industrial capacity.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo said on Saturday Russian and Belarusian athletes “were not welcome” at the Olympics being staged in the French capital this year, according to Agence France-Presse. “I want to tell Russian and Belarusian athletes that they are not welcome in Paris and to tell Ukrainian athletes and all the Ukrainian people that we support them very strongly,” Hidalgo said in a video posted by Ukrainian YouTube channel, United News. Russian athletes can compete in the Paris Olympics, which run from 26 July until 11 August but only as neutrals.

Source: The Guardian

HOLY FATHER ON UKRAINE

General Audience - March 27, 2024

Brothers and sisters, let us pray for peace. May the Lord grant us peace in tormented Ukraine, which is suffering greatly from the bombings, as well as in Israel and Palestine. May there be peace in the Holy Land. May the Lord grant us all peace, as a gift of his Easter.

Fratelli e sorelle, preghiamo per la pace. Che il Signore ci dia la pace nella martoriata Ucraina, che sta soffrendo tanto sotto i bombardamenti; anche in Israele e Palestina, che ci sia la pace nella Terra Santa. Che il Signore dia la pace a tutti, come dono della sua Pasqua!

Links to the full text in ENGLISH and  ITALIAN

Live From Ukraine: Hospital Sisters Mission Outreach, Catholic Health Association and International Catholic Migration Commission

Friday, April 5 - 11 am US Eastern / 5 pm Central European 

ZOOM LINK: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87826769742 

Join Erica Smith from Hospital Sisters Mission Outreach, Bruce Compton from the Catholic Health Association and Msgr. Robert Vitillo from the International Catholic Migration Commission live from Ukraine on the last day of their two-week visit to Ukraine, which started on Palm Sunday.

During this webinar, they will discuss efforts in Ukraine over the past two years of the war, focusing on providing psychosocial support and medical donations. They will also share insights from their collaborations with other partners of the Catholic Response for Ukraine (CR4U), a network of Catholic-inspired organizations supporting the Ukrainian people, including those displaced within the country and those seeking refuge elsewhere in Europe or around the world.

The panelists will offer firsthand observations on:

MEMBER PHOTOS

This project, The Creative Center Kharkiv, in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, offers 800 children and an additional 200 parents from socially precarious and economically disadvantaged backgrounds help and support, in coping with everyday life every year and now more important than ever. (courtesy of Caritas Ukraine)