Ukraine receives aid from PCPM and CARE

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Recently, 6,000 people received cash aid from the Polish Center for International Aid and CARE, and 11 transports with supplies were made to IDPs from the country’s eastern region, a press release from ReliefWeb reports.

The organizations were able to finance the next round of aid, which will enable Ukraine to make it through the forthcoming winter, all of which was made possible because of the distribution of economic resources.

The strategic infrastructure of Ukraine is slowly being harmed by the fighting. Russian attacks on energy facilities have risen over the past month, and ongoing destruction of this type of infrastructure might put the delivery of such services in doubt.

The heating systems connected to the heating plant in Kyiv’s homes are anticipated to be restricted. A multi-segmented aid program financed by CARE will start on Monday, October 17th, 2022, with extra assistance from the PCPM and the CARE organization.

There are tens of thousands of internally displaced persons (IDPs) from the Russian-occupied territories (or war-zone territory) living in the Kyiv, Darnytskyi, and Dnipro regions.

The measures in Kiev are part of a larger program that provides additional help. Financial aid is the first and most important component in helping the most needy families get “back on their feet.” They were chosen in accordance with the parameters established by the UN-led Ukrainian Cash Working Group. These include huge, financially strapped families, single mothers raising children on their own, seniors over 65, or households with members who have impairments or long-term diseases.

Each aid package lasts for several months, and we dispersed them during the first stage of implementation from June to July 2022. More than 2,900 families and 6,500 people have already received this help.

Material aid to those compelled to leave their houses, concentrated on food and sanitary goods, is a crucial part of the effort. We managed 11 shipments altogether, the last of which was sent to Lutsk in western Ukraine, about which we blogged HERE. We planned a summer camp for displaced children in Krasnobrod from September 16 to 26 in addition to collecting donations.

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