Anjali Sharma
GG News Bureau
UNITED NATIONS, 16th Jan. UN relief chief Martin Griffiths on Monday issued an urgent appeal together with the UNHCR for $4.2 billion. Nearly two years since Russian forces launched a “full-blown war and occupation” of Ukraine,
The appeal stated that some 14.6 million people in Ukraine need humanitarian assistance or 40 per cent of the population and 6.3 million have fled beyond its borders as refugees.
“We must stay the course” with the people of Ukraine, Mr. Griffiths told journalists in Geneva, adding that “no place” had been untouched by the war “and the wave of attacks that began just before the new year”.
Mr. Griffiths highlighted the devastating civilian cost of the war in the Donetsk and Kharkiv regions, where families shelter in damaged houses with no piped water, gas or electricity after constant bombardment” along the front line with Russia and in Ukrainian cities in recent weeks.
He noted the people in the most exposed villages have now exhausted “their own meagre resources” and rely on aid deliveries to survive, in close coordination with the Ukrainian government’s own efforts.
OCHA reported drone and missile strikes have also forced people and particularly the elderly to spend their days in basements. Children cannot play outside, let alone attend school.
To ensure the UN and hundreds of aid partners inside Ukraine can reach 8.5 million of the most vulnerable individuals a total of $3.1 billion will be required this year.
OCHA said in 2023, aid workers reached nearly 11 million people in Ukraine, with the support of the international donor community and despite “extreme access challenges” especially to areas occupied by the Russian Federation.
UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said that Ukrainian refugees in 11 neighboring countries need increased and sustained support.
He appealed for an additional $1.1 from donors in 2024 to help 2.3 million people displaced by the conflict, along with host communities.
“Most likely what we have seen in the last month I would say is one of the worst periods of the war in terms of impact on civilians,” Mr. Grandi said.
He insisted that “the priority” remained helping people in Ukraine.
Grandi stressed that together with the six million who fled the country in the first few months of the conflict, some 10 million are now “not in their homes”, making this still the largest displacement crisis in the world, the UNHCR chief insisted.
He cited UN migration agency data, and said that 900,000 people initially uprooted by the war are estimated to have returned to Ukraine.
Grandi explained that some are still displaced and require assistance since they are unable to return to their homes that have been either destroyed or are on the frontline and too dangerous to live in.
Mr. Grandi said the fact that the UNHCR 2024 appeal is lower than last year’s $1.7 billion ask reflected “diminishing” needs and “exemplary” support from governments in the European Union where the bulk of Ukraine’s displaced have found shelter.
He added that needs remain high in Moldova – a non-EU country – where refugees need to work and require sustained access to education and health services.
“Despite efforts for inclusion, only half of school-age refugee children are enrolled in schools in host countries, while a quarter of refugees in need struggle to access healthcare,” UNHCR said.
“Only 40 to 60 per cent are employed, often below their qualifications, and many remain vulnerable with no means to support themselves.”
OHCHR latest data indicates 27,449 confirmed civilian casualties in Ukraine, comprising: 9,701 killed and 17,748 injured. The actual figures are likely considerably higher.
It cited delays linked to intense hostilities and corroboration in places including Mariupol (in the Donetsk region), Lysychansk, Popasna and Sievierodonetsk (Luhansk region).