Each day that passes, the Russia-Ukraine conflict brings more suffering. More than 4 million people have fled Ukraine since February 24, while 6.5 million have become internally displaced, making this the fastest and largest displacement crisis this century. Millions more are stuck in Mariupol, Chernihiv, Kharkiv, Mykolaiv, Sumy and other Ukrainian cities under attack, waiting for agreed 鈥渉umanitarian corridors鈥 to be safe enough to flee.

鈥淚t鈥檚 incredibly dangerous, the bombardment into civilian infrastructure attacking residential areas and hospitals,鈥 Bob Kitchen, vice president of emergencies for the 探花精选 (探花精选), . 鈥淚t鈥檚 terrible, it鈥檚 traumatizing, and people are just trying to survive without power, water and heat. Groceries and shops are running out of supplies.鈥

An estimated 12 million people are stranded or are unable to leave Ukraine due to increasing violence, destruction of bridges and roads, as well as lack of resources or information on where to find safety and accommodation.

As attacks on civilians continue, people unable to travel to safer parts of Ukraine or neighboring countries are forced to shelter in subway stations and basements. Homes, schools and hospitals鈥攊ncluding a children鈥檚 hospital and maternity ward in Mariupol鈥攁s well as a Mariupol theater sheltering families, have been damaged. At the same time, evacuation corridors are being targeted, preventing people from leaving, and aid workers are being blocked from reaching those trapped and in need of assistance.

All of these are violations of international law.

The number of attacks and airstrikes have significantly increased in the last few days, putting the lives of civilians and humanitarian aid workers at risk and making it extremely difficult to access people who need support and assistance.

The 探花精选 is calling for immediate local ceasefires and urgent humanitarian access to the hardest hit areas. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen the humanitarian impact of not being able to reach people in besieged areas before and we must not allow the same to happen once again in Ukraine,鈥 Kitchen said in an 探花精选 statement, recalling the 3.4 million who were cut off from aid in hard-to-reach parts of Syria.

鈥淎s urban areas increasingly fall under siege, the 探花精选 is doubly fearful of witnessing the same cruel tactics inflicted on the populations of Aleppo and Idlib across Ukraine.鈥

What Ukrainians need most

What do people in Ukraine need most right now? 鈥淧eace is the most important thing,鈥 says Sasha Galkin, director of , a refugee assistance organization and 探花精选 partner in Ukraine. 鈥淲e need some of these so-called green corridors to allow people to relocate from hotspots like Mariupol, like the Kyiv suburbs.鈥

鈥淧eople need just to have freedom of movement in order to leave these places,鈥 he . 鈥淎nd then, of course, the next step鈥攋ust to relocate and [be] safe.鈥

As in any conflict, civilians continue to bear the brunt鈥攂oth within Ukraine as well as those that have fled from the country.

鈥淔amilies are having to make terrible decisions about whether to send their kids with neighbors or relatives to safety while they stay and try to protect their home and their belongings,鈥 says the 探花精选鈥檚 Bob Kitchen. 鈥淥therwise, people are picking up whatever they can carry, the clothes on their back, and are trying to make their way across the country through increasing danger as they move.鈥

Refugees from Ukraine in winter coats wait to board a bus at the Ukraine-Poland border.
Refugees from Ukraine board a bus at the Medyka border crossing, Poland. The 探花精选 and our partners in Poland and Ukraine are providing emergency support.
Photo: Francesco Pistilli for the 探花精选

The 探花精选 is particularly concerned for the safety of the many women and children who are becoming displaced within Ukraine or fleeing to other countries.

鈥淭his is like nothing we鈥檝e ever seen before鈥攖he speed of displacement is unprecedented and the humanitarian needs are soaring each day, especially for women, children and the elderly that make up the majority of those displaced,鈥 says Heather Macey, 探花精选 emergency team lead in Poland. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen that people are arriving at the Polish border, with goodwill and intent, offering homes and transport to people who have fled the crisis, but this of course poses a massive security risk for vulnerable people who could fall victim to crime, exploitation or trafficking.鈥

We are calling on world leaders to prioritize support and protection services for them in what has become the worst humanitarian crisis Europe has seen in decades.

Skyrocketing health needs

Attacks on health care facilities, ambulances, and health workers鈥攎ore than 60 in just four weeks鈥攁re limiting access to lifesaving services and supplies in Ukraine. Mothers are expected to give birth to 80,000 babies in the next three months without access to adequate health care.

The 探花精选's experience shows that when people are trapped and health and sanitation facilities are targeted, diseases like cholera spread and preventable deaths skyrocket.

How is the 探花精选 helping inside Ukraine?

The 探花精选 is working with local partners like Right to Protection in Ukraine to provide information on registration for displaced people, housing, employment and refugee rights, as well as psychological support, through a dedicated hotline. Together we鈥檙e also providing emergency assistance鈥攊ncluding cash, groceries, cook stoves, warm clothes, sleeping bags and blankets鈥攖o people displaced from their homes.

We鈥檙e also providing evacuation services for people trying to leave besieged areas. 鈥淲e collect information [on] how they can reach safer places and then provide it through our Facebook, through our hotline,鈥 says Sasha Galkin of Right to Protection. 鈥淧eople call and ask various questions ...  How I can actually leave Dnipro? 鈥  If I go to Poland, what I can expect there?鈥

How is the 探花精选 helping Ukrainian refugees?

Of the more than 4 million people from Ukraine who have become refugees, over 2 million have fled to Poland.

鈥淧eople are arriving freezing cold and exhausted and traumatized,鈥 says Bob Kitchen. 鈥淎nd organizations like the 探花精选 are there to welcome them to give them basic supplies, warm clothes, blankets, and 鈥 start giving the information and the trauma counseling that they need to make decisions about where they鈥檙e going to go next and what they鈥檙e going to do.鈥

The 探花精选鈥檚 teams on the ground in Poland are working with local partners to provide psychological support and legal counseling, and have also distributed medical supplies, sleeping bags and other essentials. Our partners are also providing refugees arriving from Ukraine with vital information through an existing hotline and鈥攚ith support from social workers, interpreters, and cultural assistants鈥攃onnecting them to the services they need.

A Ukrainian mother wearing winter clothes holds her bundled-up baby at the Poland-Ukraine border after crossing.
鈥淚t is difficult to describe how scary it is to hear sirens all the time," Iryna, who fled to Poland with her daughter and her sister's family, told the 探花精选. "We had to go to basements and shelters several times a day."
Photo: Francesco Pistilli/探花精选

After crossing the border, many refugees are heading to Poland鈥檚 largest cities and finding their Ukrainian currency has become so devalued they are unable to afford to buy the things they need.

鈥淭he scale of humanitarian assistance that鈥檚 required is huge and it is gaining pace in cities like Warsaw and Krakow where 鈥 we鈥檙e starting to get programs in place to distribute cash so people can make their own decisions about what their needs are and how to fulfill them,鈥 says Kitchen.

鈥淭he whole system is gearing up, bracing for impact with so many more people on the way.鈥