The twelfth day of russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. We have reformatted the work and continue to focus our efforts on ensuring that Ukrainians throughout our country can receive the assistance they now need most
We share a brief summary of the work of our programmes for the week
– What worked out? We:
organised warehouses for humanitarian aid (in Lviv and abroad);
accepted 15 humanitarian vehicles;
delivered humanitarian aid to Pokrovsk, Kamianske, Kryvyi Rih, two points of Zaporizhzhia, Tokmak, Zhytomyr, Shpola, Myronivka, Bilohiria;
sent more than 35 tons of humanitarian aid and medicines to Zaporizhzhia–Mariupol, Okhtyrka, Kyiv, Odesa, Kramatorsk, Mykolaiv, Kharkiv, and Sloviansk; vehicles with fuel to Kharkiv and Kyiv;
handed over cars with fuel to Kharkiv and Kyiv, as well as two minibuses to evacuate people from Kharkiv;
financially supported communities that needed funds because the delivery of goods to them is difficult, or they themselves become safety islands for dozens of temporarily displaced persons, kind of assistance centres.Among them are Kramatorsk, Melitopol, Poltava, Lubny, Zhytomyr, Vinnytsia, Vatutine, Mykolaiv, Burshtyn, Chernihiv, Bilohiria, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, Tokmak, Pokrovsk, Kremenchuk, Vilshanyk, and Brody;
helped two family-type orphanages, children who came from institutions in the East and about 20 families with children;
helped to provide everything necessary for families hosting internally displaced persons, as well as large families who came to western Ukraine;
equipped children’s corners in the waiting rooms of the Main Railway Station and at the Pidzamche station in Lviv, provided humanitarian assistance and psychological support to evacuated shelters, reception centres that welcome people;
created a brochure with the most important information on Lviv for internally displaced persons – https://clc.to/uephelplviv