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Ukraine: UN okays $1.7b flash appeal to help refugee exodus

The UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres has made an appeal for $1.7 billion dollars to provide urgently needed assistance to help refugee exodus from Ukraine.

The secretary general, on Tuesday, at the inauguration of the flash appeal said rockets had been “raining down” on Ukraine’s cities and hundreds of people had been killed or injured since the Russian military offensive began.

Guterres comments came as latest UN data indicated that 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since February 24.

“United Nations agencies and our partners are now working 24/7 to assess humanitarian needs and scale up aid, particularly to women, children, older people and those with disabilities.’’

Guterres however, thanked Member States that have kept their borders open to people fleeing the violence.

“We must help Ukrainians help each other through this terrible time,” the UN chief insisted, adding that electricity and water supplies had been disrupted, roads had been “damaged or destroyed by bombs” and food and medicine were in short supply in some areas.

In Geneva, UN emergency relief chief, Martin Griffiths, explained that the purpose of the call for immediate humanitarian funding was to help people inside Ukraine – including those internally displaced – as well as those seeking shelter beyond its borders.

An estimated $1.1 billion dollars is needed for the response inside Ukraine for three months, to help six million of the most vulnerable in Ukraine, as the escalating conflict had triggered an immediate and steep rise in demand for lifesaving aid.

But essential supplies and services are being disrupted, as civilians flee for their lives.

At the end of the launch event in Geneva,  Griffiths announced that $1.5 billion dollars had been pledged for the humanitarian appeals.

The UN Spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric, welcomed the “outpouring of support” speaking to journalists in New York.

“This is among the fastest and most generous responses a humanitarian flash appeal has ever received,” he said.

Also briefing journalists, High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, appealed for $550 million dollars for the refugee agency and 12 partner agencies.

He noted that 520,000 people were estimated to have been displaced by the Ukraine crisis just last night.

Grandi said that this had already risen sharply, in the space of just a few hours.

“677,000 refugees have now fled Ukraine to neighboring countries in the past six days,” he said. “That is 150,000 more, in less than 24 hours.”

The UN estimates that 12 million people inside Ukraine will need relief and protection, while more than four million refugees may need protection and assistance in neighboring countries in the coming months.

Reacting to reports that third-country refugees have been ill-treated at border crossings and inside Ukraine as they try to seek shelter, the UN refugee chief insisted that “there should be absolutely no discrimination between Ukrainians and non-Ukrainians.

“Europeans and non-Europeans. Everybody is fleeing from the same risks.”

While the European Union is discussing the possibility of giving temporary protection status to refugees from Ukraine, the tragedy is “likely to introduce a new dimension to the many years of debate on asylum status, responsibility sharing and so forth,” Grandi said.

The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, has already received more than 40 million dollars in private contributions from individuals or companies, an “unprecedented” feat, he added.

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