UNICEF’s response is evolving to meet the needs of children. (Photo: medcom.id)
UNICEF’s response is evolving to meet the needs of children. (Photo: medcom.id)

UNICEF Warns of Devastating Impact of War on Ukrainian Children

Wahyu Dwi Anggoro • 12 April 2022 10:58
New York: UNICEF Emergency Programmes Director Manuel Fontaine on Monday briefed the Security Council on the devastating impact of the war in Ukraine on the country’s children.
 
"Over the course of 10 days, I visited Lviv in the west, as well as Vinnystria in central Ukraine, and Dnipro and Zaporizhzhia in the south-east – all to gauge the evolving humanitarian conditions on the ground so that we can adapt UNICEF’s response to meet the growing needs of children and their families," Fountaine told a press briefing on Monday.
 
According to him, the war continues to be a nightmare for Ukraine’s children – both for those who have fled and for those who remain inside the country. 

Six weeks on and now, nearly 3 million children in Ukraine need humanitarian assistance.
 
"More than 4.5 million people, over 90 per cent of whom are women and children, have crossed into neighbouring countries as refugees and IOM estimates that 7.1 million people are now internally displaced and more than 50 per cent of displaced households include children," he said.
 
"Children are being killed and injured because of the violence around them. The UN has so far verified the deaths of 142 children, with nearly 230 injured. The true figures are most certainly much higher given the scale of attacks. And they have been hurt in the very places where they should be safest – their homes, emergency shelters, even hospitals," he stated.
 
The reports of grave violations and other serious rights violations against children are devastating. 
 
Children should never be the victims of conflict and must be protected by all parties in accordance with applicable international law.
 
And across the country, children are facing severely curtailed access to essential services like health care, protection, water, sanitation and education. The scale and scope of the need for services will only grow as the war drags on and fighting intensifies in other areas.
 
"UNICEF’s response is evolving to meet the needs of children wherever they may be. We are pre-positioning more supplies in areas across the east where we fear the conflict could worsen. 'Spilno Centers' are being established at strategic hubs to support children and families on the move inside Ukraine," he said.
 
"These integrated services include a space for children to play, staff who can provide some emotional support and other services such as where to get care for existing medical conditions We are also getting cash to 52,000 households to ease some of the impacts of lost livelihoods and setting up life in a new place. Across the country, we have reached nearly 600,000 people with life-saving medical supplies through hospitals and maternity homes in Dnipro, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Lviv, Mykolaiv, Odessa, Vinnytsia and Zhytomyr. And we’ve provided almost 240,000 people with drinking water and hygiene supplies in Donetsk, Luhansk, Kharkiv, Dnipro, Kyiv and Lviv," he explained.
 
UNICEF’s US$276M appeal for urgent programmes inside Ukraine and US$73.1M for critical programmes in neighbouring countries are being revised significantly upwards to reflect the rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation. 
 
As of 6 April, there was a funding gap of nearly US$53M for UNICEF’s response inside Ukraine and a US$6.3M funding gap for UNICEF’s response in refugee-hosting countries.
 
"But humanitarian partners can only do so much. Ultimately, the children of Ukraine urgently need and deserve a peaceful resolution," he said.

 
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(WAH)

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