Weekly Update #111
April 15, 2024
April 15, 2024
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
Humanitarian Situation
Over the last few days, attacks continued to impact populated centres in different parts of Ukraine – Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia notably – and communities in front-line areas, bringing new civilian deaths and injuries, including children, and damaging homes and civilian infrastructure. "Double tap" strikes also affected first responders who rushed to help, while aid facilities were impacted, further impeding access to vital assistance.
The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission to Ukraine verified 29 civilians killed, including a child, and 93 injured, including 3 children, in Dnipropetrovska, Donetska, Kharkivska, Khersonska, Odeska and Zaporizka oblasts in the period from 4 to 9 April. Donetska and Kharkivska oblasts, in the east, accounted for most of the verified casualties – 41 and 39, respectively.
Kharkiv – Ukraine's second largest city with over 1.3 million residents — has been under continuous attacks over the last few days. Dozens of civilians were killed or injured, including a health worker, in the city and across Kharkivska Oblast. Strikes in residential areas of the city damaged houses, energy facilities, schools and kindergartens. A dormitory used as a collective centre for displaced people and a government support centre where people can charge their electronic devices and receive other types of assistance were also damaged.
Several parts of the city and the oblast remain without electricity. At the same time, other critical services, including water supply, are frequently disrupted due to the impact of the latest and previous attacks.
Within the same reporting timeframe, attacks intensified in Donetska and Zaporizka oblasts, east and south-east of the country, with a growing humanitarian impact on civilians. A massive attack in Zaporizhzhia City on 5 April resulted in dozens of civilian casualties and damaged residential buildings.
An aid centre set up by the authorities and supported by humanitarian actors to help displaced people was damaged as well. On 6 April, a medical facility sustained damage in another attack in the city. Civilians were also killed and injured in front-line Huliaipole and Nikopol towns, inZaporizka and Dnipropetrovska oblasts. In Donetska Oblast, scores of civilians were injured and killed, includingchildren. Dozens of houses, health facilities and critical infrastructure sustained new damage.
During attacks in Kharkiv and in Zaporizhzhia on 4 and 5 April, rescuers who arrived at the site were killed or injured insubsequent repeated strikes, including medical and other first responders of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine. Humanitarian Coordinator for Ukraine, Denise Brown, condemned this apparent pattern of continued attacks,underlining that civilians, aid workers, and first responders helping war-affected civilians must be protected byinternational humanitarian law.
Around the same time, an office of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in Pokrovsk Town, the Ukraine-controlled part ofDonetska oblast, was heavily damaged by a blast from a strike on 5 April, injuring a security guard. MSF was forced to suspend all its humanitarian activities besides emergency care and ambulance referral services in the oblast. Thisfurther limits the provision of critical health-care support in areas where the health system has already sustainedcritical damage.
In 2024 alone, Health Cluster, through the WHO Surveillance System for attacks on health care, verified over 80 suchattacks across Ukraine, resulting in 6 deaths and 35 injuries of health-care workers and patients. This accounts for one-fourth of verified attacks on health globally. Health transport workers – ambulance and other personnel servicinghealth transport – are three times more at risk of injury and death than any other health-care workers, according to WHO.
Furthermore, civilians and civilian infrastructure continued to be impacted in the south of Ukraine, in Khersonska andOdeska oblasts, where, in the latter, port areas were reportedly hit, impacting civilians and port infrastructure. On 8 April, attacks and strikes damaged houses and injured and killed more civilians, including children, in Sumska andPoltavska oblasts, north-east and centre of Ukraine. In Sumska oblast, the security situation prompted the authoritiesto announce the mandatory evacuation of children with at least one parent or caretaker from two more hromadas
HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
Following several waves of massive attacks on 4, 5 and 6 April in Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia and other areas in the east andsouth of Ukraine, aid organizations mobilized emergency response, complementing the efforts of national rescue andmunicipal services.
Health Cluster partners mobilized first aid and psychosocial support to the affected civilians in the immediateaftermath of the strikes. For instance, in Zaporizhzhia City, a rapid response team of the Ukrainian Red Cross Society(URCS) provided first aid and facilitated hospitalization of injured people, and NGO Humanitarian Mission Proliskaoffered psychological support to those affected by the attacks on 6 and 8 April. In Kharkiv City, on 6 April, internationalNGO FHI360 and Humanitarian Mission Proliska conducted 40 on-site mental health and psychosocial supportconsultations.
Furthermore, following a referral from Camp Coordinator and Camp Management Cluster, health partner NGO Stellar Ukraine provided medical consultations to adults and children in the collective centre in Kharkiv, which was affected by a strike.
Partners from Food Security and Livelihoods and Shelter and Non-Food Items (NFIs) clusters distributed hot meals and emergency repair materials to people at the site of the strikes. In Kharkiv, several NGOs and UN agencies,including national NGOs "A Strong Family: Free Ukraine", Mission
Proliska, Right to Protection, "We Are Brothers: We Are Ukrainians", and international NGO FHI360, provided hot meals and distributed emergency repair materials to theaffected families. In Zaporizhzhia, national NGOs Artak, Beluga, Mission Proliska and PosmishkaUA deliveredconstruction materials to cover the damaged windows and other critical non-food supplies to the affected people.Shelter and NFI Cluster partners also coordinated with Health Cluster partners emergency repairs to a medical facilitydamaged by a blast wave in Zaporizhzhia City.
On 8 April, NGO Mission Proliska delivered materials for emergency repairs to the affected residents in Kherson City and Sumska Oblast, which suffered from attacks in Poltavska Oblast, ADRA, IOM, Mission Proliska and Right to Protection distributed emergency repair materials, essential household itemsand food parcels.
Additionally, people were reached with protection assistance, including psychosocial support, legal counselling, andbasic hygiene and sanitation supplies provided by the United Nations Population Fund and other partners.
The NGO Right to Protection registered families affected by recent strikes for cash assistance in Poltavska Oblast.
Emergency assistance complemented regular response activities, including aid delivery to heavily affected front-lineareas in Kharkivska and Khersonska oblasts through two inter-agency convoys on 5 April.
Humanitarians continue to assess the needs resulting from the latest attacks across Ukraine to provide further support.
NOTE: This Flash Update is prepared through collected public information and current response data from clusters and partners available at the time of publication and could be amended as the situation evolves.
Source: OCHA
In the Kamianka urban territorial community, the Cherkasy regional organization of the Ukrainian Red Cross actively supported the development and reconstruction of a shelter in the region. This house can accommodate approximately 60 people and is situated in a cozy location. It features 20 rooms for families, service areas, a kitchen unit, and sanitary facilities.
The Cherkasy regional organization of the Ukrainian Red Cross supports a project to prepare the shelter to accommodate people fleeing their homes to escape danger. The organization has already purchased and delivered 6 refrigerators, 8 microwave ovens, 4 electric cookers, 4 washing machines, 7 electric kettles, 13 dining tables, 52 dining chairs, and one powerful generator. During the spring, we plan to provide the place with additional necessary furniture, including wardrobes, bedside tables, single and bunk beds, mattresses, kitchen cabinets, etc.
The Cherkasy regional organization of the Ukrainian Red Cross directs its efforts and resources to help internally displaced families. Most IDPs are women and children whose homes were destroyed by the war. Thus, it is important not only to provide people with accommodation but also to prioritize coziness, seeking to recreate the comfort reminiscent of their homes as closely as possible.
This assistance is made possible with the support of the Canadian Red Cross.
Source: Ukrainian Red Cross Society
Due to the ongoing full-scale war in Ukraine, humanitarian market data is limited and incomplete, especially from conflict-affected areas. The Joint Market Monitoring Initiative (JMMI) seeks to fill this information gap by providing useful and timely data on price trends and market functionality indicators.
Marketplaces across Ukraine are assessed on a monthly basis. In each location, field teams record prices and other market indicators through retailer and customer key informants (KIs) interviews that characterize monthly changes in the local markets.
The goal of the JMMI is to track prices and availability of basic commodities in Ukraine markets on a monthly basis; assess the impact of the current humanitarian crisis on market systems in Ukraine; contribute to a broader understanding of the market environment in Ukraine for the benefit of humanitarian actors across all sectors.
KEY FINDINGS
The economy appears to have been recovering throughout 2023 due to the adaptability of businesses and the population to the war conditions. Markets demonstrated resilience, efficiently supporting basic needs on a national scale. Essential items, including food and hygiene items, remained consistently available in most parts of the country throughout the year. Good harvests contributed to a slowdown in inflation, logistical and trade restrictions on exports kept domestic agricultural product prices below global levels. Moreover, there was a notable decrease in the proportion of customer KIs reporting difficulty accessing shops, and in the proportion of retailer KIs reporting difficulties in maintaining operational and well-stocked stores.
Markets’ supplying capacities have strengthened in most parts of Ukraine as the availability of and physical access to goods is no longer a major concern nationally. However, the situation seemed to be different in areas close to the frontline, especially in Khersonska oblast, which still faced concerns regarding the availability of warm clothes, medications, and vehicle fuel.
However, affordability remained a critical nationwide issue, increasing slightly towards the end of the year. The proportion of consumer KIs considering that increased item prices restricted their access to commodities rose to 61% by the end of the year, indicating the rising cost of living, as well as the depletion of coping capacity.
Financial services remained accessible to the Financial services remained accessible to the majority of customers throughout the year. Nevertheless, residents of the South, particularly in Khersonska and Zaporizka oblasts, encountered challenges, including a scarcity of bank branches and ATMs, insufficient cash in ATMs, and interruptions due to power outages.
From an item availability and market functionality perspective, multi-purpose cash (MPC) remained an appropriate modality for assistance in large parts of the country. However, continued monitoring, in particular in areas with heightened insecurity and barriers to access to financial services remained essential to determine the most effective form of humanitarian assistance.
According to the data from the State Statistic Service of Ukraine (SSSU) inflation slowed to 5.1% at the end of 2023 after experiencing a substantial increase to 26.6% at the end of 2022
The decline in food prices in December 2023 compared to December 2022 was primarily driven by lower prices for specific vegetables, including a notable drop in the prices for carrots (by 52%), onions (by 52%), and cabbage (by 21%), as well as lower prices for buckwheat (by 61%). At the same time, potato prices saw a substantial increase, rising by 59%.
Following difficulties at the beginning of the full-scale war, the availability of goods witnessed a significant improvement across most government controlled areas, maintaining consistently high levels throughout 2023. The recovery of market functionality played a crucial role. By the end of 2023, despite some improvement, the availability of medications in Khersonska oblast remained a point of concern.
Source: REACH
The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC), an umbrella of UK charities focusing on coordinating humanitarian responses to crises in different parts of the world. launched the Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal in March 2022 to support people affected by the conflict.
£426 MILLION raised by the UK public including £25 million matched by the UK Government
6.9 MILLION people estimated to have been helped using funds raised by the DEC
This includes people who stayed in the areas where they live, those displaced elsewhere in Ukraine and refugees who travelled to neighbouring countries. There are 13 DEC member charities involved in this response. They are working with local partners on 37 projects in five countries: Ukraine, Poland, Romania, Moldova and Hungary.
Two years on, and the situation in Ukraine remains volatile. The capital of Ukraine, Kyiv, continues to come under aerial threat and the number of civilian deaths continues to rise. The continued movement of displaced people within Ukraine and refugees moving to neighbouring countries and back to Ukraine can make it difficult to target support to those in need. People are still struggling to access shelter, food, essential healthcare and financial support.
The organization’s report looks at the 12-month period from September 2022 to August 2023 and gives examples of how member charities and local partners used DEC funding to respond to the conflict during this time.
Thanks to the generosity of the UK public, the DEC had raised £421.9 million for the Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal by the end of August 2023. This money is being used to fund the work of 13 member charities and their local partners on the ground.
Together, they are helping affected people in Ukraine and refugees and host communities in Poland, Romania, Moldova and Hungary. This includes providing food to families and helping refugee children overcome traumatic experiences.
Despite challenging conditions amid ongoing hostilities and attacks, DEC member charities and local partners have continued to provide essential assistance to people who need support. During the period covered in this report, 12 DEC member charities have been working in partnership with 35 local organisations on the ground in Ukraine.
Funds have been used to deliver essential aid to the most vulnerable people. This includes food, clothes, access to clean water and sanitation, and somewhere to live. Flexible cash payments have allowed people to choose what they need to buy.
As shelling and rocket attacks persisted, casualties have continued to fill hospitals already under pressure. DEC funds have paid for trauma kits for people to treat injuries, incubators for neonatal units, and mobile units to visit communities to diagnose and treat health conditions. DEC member charities and their partners also helped to register people arriving in new areas, referring them for further support, and provided protection services, such as counselling and legal support.
This helped to prevent large-scale exploitation of vulnerable groups such as women and girls, people with disabilities and people from LGBTQIA+ communities.
The conflict has had an enormous impact on people’s mental health. DEC member charities and partners helped people to access psychologists and take part in support group sessions where they could talk about their experiences.
As time has gone on, many refugees have started to settle in their host countries as children have started schools and some people have found work.
DEC charities now are looking at people’s longer-term needs. For example in Poland, DEC funds have been used to support a Ukrainian language school, where children are able to continue learning the Ukrainian curriculum at school, as well as helped to integrate into their new host country.
DEC funds are also being used to set up specialist centres, where refugees can access various kinds of support, including mental health services, language courses and childcare. In the year to September 2023, across Ukraine and neighbouring countries DEC charities and their local partners have provided 84,900 children with education support including language courses and educational trips.
The conflict has been especially hard on children, who may have experienced airstrikes, hidden in bomb shelters, been forced to leave their homes, been separated from a parent.
For example, in Poland, DEC charity Plan International provided helpline counselling to over 4,200 children, and in Moldova, three mobile teams visited refugee accommodation centres in local host communities to offer mental health and psychosocial support to over 2,500 children and their caregivers. This includes activities like art therapy and games, which give children the chance to express themselves and process what they’ve experienced.
Source: DEC Appeal, DEC
The Russian military command likely assesses that Ukrainian forces will be unable to defend against current and future Russian offensive operations due to delays in or the permanent end of US military assistance. Russian forces have recently periodically shifted their focus among offensive operations in the Lyman, Chasiv Yar, and Pokrovsk directions; Russian forces first prioritized the capture of Avdiivka in early 2024, alongside simultaneous but less intense operations along the Kupyansk-Svatove-Kreminna line, then leaned into the Lyman direction while slightly decreasing the tempo near Avdiivka, and now are intensifying efforts to seize Chasiv Yar in March-April 2024. Though Russian forces likely lack the ability to conduct more than one simultaneous effective large-scale operational effort as they have throughout the war, Russian forces are now able to use multiple alternating offensive efforts to stretch Ukrainian defensive capabilities amid Ukrainian artillery and air defense shortages.
The offensive effort to seize Chasiv Yar offers Russian forces the most immediate prospects for operationally significant advances as the seizure of the town would likely allow Russian forces to launch subsequent offensive operations against the cities that form in effect a significant Ukrainian defensive belt in Donetsk Oblast. Russian forces have long aimed to capture a group of major cities in Donetsk Oblast that include Slovyansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka, and Kostyantynivka, and the Russian military initially attempted and failed to conduct a wide operational encirclement of Ukrainian forces in eastern Donetsk Oblast by driving on Slovyansk in spring 2022.
The Russian seizure of Chasiv Yar would allow Russian forces to begin attacking the southern “fortress” cities in the Ukrainian defensive belt directly. Chasiv Yar is roughly seven kilometers from Kostyantynivka (the southernmost “fortress” city) and roughly 20 kilometers from Druzhkivka.
Russian threats to Druzhkivka and Kostyantynivka are very operationally significant since these “fortress” cities help form the backbone of the Ukrainian defense in Donetsk Oblast and of eastern Ukraine in general. The isolation of Kostyantynivka or the outright seizure of the settlement would likely significantly degrade Ukraine’s ability to hold the frontline further south in Donetsk Oblast as it would sever a major ground line of communication along the H-20 (Kostyantynivka-Donetsk City) highway.
Ukrainian defences are 'at risk of collapse' as officials fear major Russian advance - and all-out assault to seize second city. Western officials have been raising concerns in recent media reports that Ukraine's defences may be at risk of collapse in the face of a new Russian assault. Ukraine is facing shortages of both manpower and ammunition, and increasingly appears outmanned and outgunned on the battlefield. The country is now at its "most fragile moment" since the war began, Western officials with knowledge of the situation told Bloomberg.
They warned Russia could be given an opening to make a major advance for the first time since near the beginning of the war. It follows reports Ukraine's second-largest city could be among the possible targets for a renewed Russian assault - with many analysts suggesting Vladimir Putin is likely to launch an all-out offensive at some point over the coming months.
The city of Kharkiv has faced intense bombardment from Russia in recent months, coming under fire from S-300 ballistic missiles and glide bombs. Vladimir Putin previously spoke about creating a "buffer zone" on Ukraine's border to stem the attacks on Russia. Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who inspected Ukrainian defensive fortifications in the Kharkiv region on Tuesday, has said Russia may be preparing a big offensive in late May or in June.
However, it's thought that seizing Kharkiv would be difficult for Moscow - not least because it failed spectacularly at doing so in 2022.
The Eastern front has 'deteriorated significantly,' Ukraine says.
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Oleksandr Syrskyi warned on Saturday that the situation on the eastern front had "deteriorated significantly" in recent days.
The comments come after Russia began to make inroads in Ukraine's eastern region of Donetsk this year as Kyiv's forces are dogged by manpower and ammunition shortages, amid delays in Western aid.
"The enemy is actively attacking our positions in the Lyman and Bakhmut sectors with assault groups supported by armored vehicles. In the Pokrovsk sector, they are trying to break through our defense using dozens of tanks and armored personnel carriers," the commander-in-chief said.
Ukraine has said the situation around the eastern frontline city of Chasiv Yar is "difficult and tense" with the area under "constant fire." Chasiv Yar lies 20 kilometers (12 miles) west of Bakhmut, which was flattened by months of artillery fire before being seized by Moscow's forces last May.
Sources: ISW
Details of China's indirect involvement in Russia's war on Ukraine are revealed by US officials. Two Biden administration officials have revealed the extent of China's involvement in Russia's war on Ukraine. The officials spoke to Reuters news agency and said China has massively increased its sales to Russia of machine tools, microelectronics and other technology to Moscow.
These items are important because Russia is using them to make tanks, aircraft, missiles and other weapons for the war. They also said:
About 90% of Russia's microelectronics came from China
Nearly 70% of Russia's approximately $900m in machine tool imports in the last quarter of last year came from China
Chinese and Russian entities have been working together to make drones in Russia
China is helping Russia improve its satellite and other space-based capabilities for use in the war. This could increase the threat Russia poses across Europe.
US officials said that China provided more than 70% of the $900m (£723m) in machine tools – probably used to build ballistic missiles – imported in the last quarter of 2023 by Russia.
They also said that 90% of Russia’s microelectronics imports – used to produce missiles, tanks and aircraft – came from China last year.
The US has repeatedly warned China against supporting Russia and both Chinese and US officials say Beijing has stopped short of directly providing weapons to Russia, which has turned to heavily sanctioned North Korea and Iran to replenish its arms supply.
US officials believe that China, anxious after its Russian allies’ early setbacks on the battlefield, has instead focused on sending material that ostensibly has non-military uses.
Russia, increasingly isolated economically and diplomatically, has become more reliant on China in recent months. One official said Chinese materials are helping Moscow undertake its “most ambitious defence expansion since the Soviet era and on a faster timeline than we believed possible early on in this conflict”.
Sources: The Guardian
The former commander of the UK's Joint Forces Command has warned that Ukraine could face defeat by Russia in 2024. General Sir Richard Barrons has told the BBC there is "a serious risk" of Ukraine losing the war this year.
The reason, he says, is "because Ukraine may come to feel it can't win".
"And when it gets to that point, why will people want to fight and die any longer, just to defend the indefensible?"
Ukraine is not yet at that point.
But its forces are running critically low on ammunition, troops and air defences. Its much-heralded counter-offensive last year failed to dislodge the Russians from ground they had seized and now Moscow is gearing up for a summer offensive.
So what will that look like and what are its likely strategic objectives?
"At some point this summer," says Gen Barrons, "we expect to see a major Russian offensive, with the intent of doing more than smash forward with small gains to perhaps try and break through the Ukrainian lines.
"And if that happens we would run the risk of Russian forces breaking through and then exploiting into areas of Ukraine where the Ukrainian armed forces cannot stop them."
But where?
"One of the challenges the Ukrainians have," says Dr Jack Watling, senior research fellow in land warfare at the Whitehall thinktank the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), "is that the Russians can choose where they commit their forces.
"It's a very long front line and the Ukrainians need to be able to defend all of it."
Kharkiv
As Ukraine's second city, situated perilously close to the Russian border, Kharkiv is a tempting goal for Moscow.
It is currently being pummelled daily with Russian missile strikes, with Ukraine unable to field sufficient air defences to ward off the lethal mix of drones, cruise and ballistic missiles aimed in its direction.
"I think the offensive this year will have breaking out of the Donbas as its first objective," adds Gen Barrons, "and their eye will be on Kharkiv which is 29km [18 miles] or so from the Russian border, a major prize."
Could Ukraine still function as a viable entity if Kharkiv were to fall? Yes, say analysts, but it would be a catastrophic blow to both its morale and its economy.
The Donbas
The area of eastern Ukraine known collectively as the Donbas has been at war since 2014, when Moscow-backed separatists declared themselves "people's republics".
In 2022 Russia illegally annexed the two Donbas oblasts, or provinces, of Donetsk and Luhansk. This is where most of the fighting on land has been taking place over the past 18 months.
Ukraine has, controversially, expended enormous efforts, in both manpower and resources, in trying to hold on to first the town of Bakhmut, and then Avdiivka.
It has lost both, as well as some of its best fighting troops, in the attempt.
Kyiv has countered that its resistance has inflicted disproportionately high casualties on the Russians. That is true, with the battlefield in these places being dubbed "the meat grinder".
But Moscow has plenty more troops to throw into the fight - and Ukraine does not.
Mass matters. The Russian army's tactics, leadership and equipment may be inferior to Ukraine's, but it has such superiority in numbers, especially artillery, that if it does nothing else this year, its default option will be to keep pushing Ukraine's forces back in a westward direction, taking village after village.
Zaporizhzhia
This, too, is a tempting prize for Moscow.
The southern Ukrainian city of more than 700,000 (in peacetime) sits dangerously close to the Russian front lines. It is also something of a thorn in Russia's side given that it is the capital of an oblast of the same name that Russia has illegally annexed, and yet the city is still living freely in Ukrainian hands.
But the formidable defences that Russia built south of Zaporizhzhia last year, in the correct expectation of a Ukrainian attack, would now complicate a Russian advance from there.
The so-called Surovikin Line, consisting of triple layers of defences, is laced with the largest, most densely packed minefield in the world. Russia could partially dismantle this but its preparations would probably be detected.
Russia's strategic objective this year may not even be territorial. It could simply be to crush Ukraine's fighting spirit and convince its Western backers that this war is a lost cause.
One thing is certain: Russia's President Vladimir Putin has no intention of giving up on his assault on Ukraine.
He is like a poker player gambling all his chips on a win. He is counting on the West failing to supply Ukraine with the sufficient means to defend itself.
Despite all the NATO summits, all the conferences and all the stirring speeches, there is a chance he may be right.
Source: BBC
Germany will send an additional Patriot air defense system to Ukraine, the German Federal Ministry of Defense said Saturday.
"Due to the increase in Russian airstrikes against Ukraine, the German government has decided to further strengthen Ukrainian air defense," a statement from the ministry said.
Ukraine has received several air defense systems during the first two years of war, including the US-made Patriot system to help defend against Russian drone and cruise missile attacks.
Kyiv says it needs 25 Patriot units total to cover the country — and at least seven urgently, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Source: DW
The Swiss government will host a two-day high-level conference in June aimed at achieving peace in Ukraine, although Russia has made clear it will not take part in the initiative.
Switzerland said in January it would host a peace summit at the request of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and has since held talks with the EU, G7 member states and countries such as China and India to garner their support.
The Federal Council said in a statement:There is currently sufficient international support for a high-level conference to launch the peace process.
The conference will be held June 15-16 at the Bürgenstock resort in the canton of Nidwalden outside the city of Lucerne. It will aim to create a framework favourable to a comprehensive and lasting peace in Ukraine as well as “a concrete roadmap for Russia’s participation in the peace process.
While Moscow has said it is not against negotiations to end the war, Russian officials have said they will not take part in talks in Switzerland, a country they consider to have relinquished its neutrality with regard to the conflict.
Eight Nordic and Baltic nations are pushing for more support for Ukraine. Swedish foreign minister Tobias Billstrom on He said the country supported “an increased role for NATO in providing security related assistance to Ukraine”.
He added that the eight Nordic and Baltic nations had agreed to assemble a group of experts that will help support Ukraine’s efforts to join the European Union.
Ukraine and Britain signed a framework agreement to cooperate in the defence and arms production sector, officials said in Kyiv, part of a wartime effort to build up Ukraine’s domestic weapons industry by working with allies.
The document was signed at a military industry conference in Kyiv that was attended by about 30 British defence companies who visited to discuss potential joint ventures with Ukrainian weapons and defence producers.
Greg Hands, UK minister for trade policy, said he hoped the agreement would bring gains for Ukraine on the battlefield and also benefit its battered economy in the longer term.
British defence company BAE Systems, one of the first Western producers to set up a local entity in Ukraine, signed an agreement with Britain’s Defence Ministry to conduct maintenance, repair and overhaul of light guns on the ground in Ukraine.
Officials also said they hoped for more projects this year in the drone production sector. Many of the companies attending the conference were drone producers.
Ukraine aims to produce about 1 million first-person view (FPV) drones this year and is increasing its production of longer-range attack drones to conduct strikes deep inside Russia.
EU finance ministers will discuss in Luxemburg this week reform plans and an investment agenda submitted by Ukraine in a bid by Kyiv to secure funding, sources in the German finance ministry have said.
Reuters reports:
The ministry sources said they welcomed that Ukraine was “so ambitious” in its approach.
Ukraine has identified 15 key areas and 69 reform plans, according to the sources, who did not go into further detail.
The European Union’s Ukraine Facility has a total budget of 50 billion euros ($54.29 billion) for the period from 2024 to 2027.
Financial support in the form of grants, which make up one third of the facility, and loans, the remaining two thirds, are to be provided based on the implementation of reforms in Ukraine.
Source: The Guardian
I affectionately greet the children from various parts of the world, who have come to remind us from 25 to 26 May the Church will hold its first World Children’s Day. Thank you! I invite everyone to accompany the journey towards this event – the first Children’s Day – with prayer, and I thank those who are working to prepare for it. And to you, boys and girls, I say: I am waiting for you! All of you! We need your joy and your wish for a better world, a world at peace. Let us pray, brothers and sisters, for the children who suffer because of the wars – there are many of them! – in Ukraine, Palestine, Israel, and in other parts of the world, in Myanmar. Let us pray for them, and for peace.
Saluto con affetto i bambini di varie parti del mondo, venuti a ricordare che il 25-26 maggio la Chiesa vivrà la prima Giornata Mondiale dei Bambini. Grazie! Invito tutti ad accompagnare con la preghiera il cammino verso questo evento – la Prima Giornata dei Bambini – e ringrazio quanti stanno lavorando per prepararlo. E a voi, bambine e bambini, dico: vi aspetto! Tutti voi! Abbiamo bisogno della vostra gioia e del vostro desiderio di un mondo migliore, un mondo in pace. Preghiamo, fratelli e sorelle, per i bambini che soffrono per le guerre – sono tanti! – in Ucraina, in Palestina, in Israele, in altre parti del mondo, nel Myanmar. Preghiamo per loro e per la pace.
Links to the full text in ENGLISH and ITALIANMy thoughts turn to tormented Ukraine, and to Palestine and Israel. May the Lord give us peace! War is everywhere! Let us not forget Myanmar. But let us ask the Lord for peace, and may we not forget these brothers and sisters of ours who suffer greatly in these war-torn places. Let us pray together and always for peace. Thank you.
E il mio pensiero va alla martoriata Ucraina e alla Palestina e Israele. Che il Signore ci dia la pace! La guerra è dappertutto – non dimentichiamo il Myanmar – ma chiediamo al Signore la pace e non dimentichiamo questi nostri fratelli e sorelle che soffrono tanto in questi posti di guerra. Preghiamo insieme e sempre per la pace. Grazie.
Links to the full text in ENGLISH and ITALIANThe head of the UGCC met with the delegation of the Episcopal Conference of Germany (Google translate)
Ukraine, the first three hospital chapels opened in the exarchate of Odessa (Google translate / Italian original)
Father Oleg Ladniuk: learning to accompany those who are grieving (Google translate)
HELP FOR UKRAINIANS IN POLAND
In total, over the past year, we have provided in-kind and financial assistance in Poland worth 337 million PLN (75 million USD). In the 32 Migrant and Refugee Assistance Centres that have been opened by diocesan Caritas across the country, 180,000 people have received support in finding employment, housing or contacting authorities. 6,500 refugees are learning Polish thanks to the support of Caritas. Caritas Poland and local diocesan Caritas have provided refugees in Poland with 3.9 million food packages. (Courtesy of https://caritas.pl/ukraine/)