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Two years on from the launch of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russian forces continues to attack the livelihoods and the freedom of Ukrainian people.

As we enter the third year of operations in Ukraine, the need for humanitarian aid is as important as ever. Christian Aid is working with partners to help support all those in need.

  • In Ukraine, the continuing invasion is destroying homes, livelihoods and the rights of people to lead their own lives. 

  • Ukraine is still facing the devastating impact of the dam explosion that took place on 6 June 2023, leaving at least 37 towns and villages flooded.

  • The wider impact of this war on food and fuel prices is also affecting the world’s most vulnerable people as they face crisis on crisis.  

Help us provide humanitarian relief

Through our local partners, we're able to respond to affected people's needs immediately to supply food, water and shelter.  

On 24 February 2022, Russia launched a military offensive against Ukraine.

The invasion by Russian forces is destroying the homes and the freedom of Ukrainian people to lead their own lives. An estimated 15.7 million Ukrainians need humanitarian assistance. This includes 7.1 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) living in private homes with host communities and in collective centres.

Millions of Ukrainians are living in damaged homes or in buildings which are inappropriate for their needs and which will not provide sufficient protection.

Christian Aid is working with partners to provide hope and to ensure people survive and rebuild.  

Every prayer, every gift, every action brings hope to the people of Ukraine. By joining us, you can give hope to our brothers and sisters in Ukraine

Our response

We’re working with partner organisations including:

  • Hungarian Interchurch Aid (HIA) in Ukraine and Hungary

HIA has carried out significant humanitarian and development work directly assisting over 578,000 people. HIA have provided shelter and distributed lorryloads of food into Ukraine as well as life-saving medical equipment and hygiene kits for those forced to flee their homes. In Hungary they are providing refugees with temporary rest and support them with job seeking, legal advice and interpretation services.

  • Crown Agents in Ukraine

The Crown Agents have provided life-saving medical supplies and equipment in Ukraine including 34 baby incubators, 1,000 lifesaving drugs for babies born with respiratory issues, 100 oxygen concentrators and 125 patient monitors, 9,100 thermal blankets and 9,000 trauma kits.

  • Alliance for Public Health (APH) in Ukraine

APH have partners working in every Oblast in Ukraine including occupied territories. Apart from their core HIV/AIDS work, they also provide drugs for Hepatitis and TB. They have used their 23 mobile health units to deliver vital drugs and conduct health consultations along with providing relief items to the frontlines. The same small vans were also used to safely evacuate people. They have set-up 11 safe spaces for families to receive psychological support and 53,359 people were provided with cash assistance.

  • Blythswood in Ukraine and Romania

Blythswood is a Scottish charity that’s been operational in Ukraine since the Kosovo war. They work through small church groups who are responding in different ways. In both Ukraine and Romania, they have provided 6 tonnes of relief items to hardest-hit communities every 2 weeks. They also provide support to displaced families by providing temporary shelter and organising protection support activities for the elderly, women and orphans.

  • Swiss Church Aid (HEKS) in Ukraine, Hungary and Romania

Since the start of the fighting, HEKS has been implementing a range of emergency aid measures in Transcarpathia region. They have provided hot meals, toiletries and drinking water to over 116,000 people in high risk, hard to reach areas in Ukraine. In addition, they have set up a cash support system to 4,000 people across Khersonska, Mykolaivska, and Zaporizhka Oblasts. HEKS is also on the ground in neighbouring countries of Hungary and Romania welcoming refugees, providing them with the most essential items, with psychological help, and is organizing accommodation for those wishing to stay in the region. So far, 76,653 people received support through 27 information points to help them adjust to their new life in the host country. They received advice on how to find permanent housing, job seeking or medical needs, and legal matters.

Image credits and information i
Natalia, and her two children, are the first family to stay in a shelter supported by HIA in Lviv, western Ukraine Credit: Finn Church Aid/Antti Yrjonen
Picture of a woman holding a baby, with her son sitting next to her in a church shelter in Ukraine

Our response

Natalia, and her two children, Igor, 9, and baby girl Nastia, 2 months, are the first family to stay in a shelter supported by our partner Hungarian Interchurch Aid in Lviv, western Ukraine. Nastia is also the youngest internally displaced person there.

The shelter is in a church building and was established at the very beginning of the war. A priest runs it and says they shelter 150 refugees daily. Some refugees rest for a short time there and some stay longer. Women and children are prioritised so that they don’t need to sleep at overcrowded railway stations

Natalia and her children arrived to Lviv by bus. The family comes from the Kyiv region. Natalia’s husband is in the army.

'Our village was destroyed. There was bombing every day. I feared for my family. I’m afraid for my husband.'

Natalia says she wants peace for her children. She says she wants to stay in Lviv until the end of the war, because the bombings in her home village were incredibly stressful.

'When there was bombing at night, I did not know where to go. We feared that our building would be destroyed. In this shelter, I feel peaceful.'

Pray for Ukraine

Join us as we pray for the people of Ukraine.