Russian Strikes Could Trigger Mass Displacements in Ukraine: UN

Fri Nov 15 2024
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GENEVA: The UN warned on Friday that renewed Russian targeting of Ukraine’s already devastated energy infrastructure this winter could cause severe hardship and spur new mass movements of people.

“If they were to target the energy sector again, this could be a tipping point,” warned Matthias Schmale, the United Nations’ resident humanitarian coordinator in Ukraine. “It could tip the scale,” he added, “for further mass movement, both inside the country and outside.”

With Russia’s full-scale invasion approaching the 1,000-day mark, 3.7 million people have already been displaced inside Ukraine, and around 6.7 million have fled as refugees, according to UN figures.

The war has killed more than 12,000 people and left nearly 40 percent of the population in need of humanitarian aid, UN data shows.

Ukraine is now bracing for its most difficult winter of the war yet.

In the first two winters of the war, millions of Ukrainians endured regular blackouts and periods of biting cold without heating.

Schmale told reporters in Geneva the situation is worse this year.

While temperatures this year are not expected to fall as low as last winter, “the main worry is the level of destruction,” he said.

-“Not Enough”-

The situation this year appears to be “far worse than last winter,” he added. “It’s a race against time.”

Schmale voiced concern about the impact that prolonged power cuts could have on the large number of people living in high-rise buildings.

“You cannot evidently deliver a tonne of solid fuel to high-rise buildings if the power grid fails,” he said.

There are shelters where people can go to have a warm meal and take a hot shower, but, he noted, “that of course is not enough.”

Schmale was in Geneva to appeal, among other things, for more funds for a $500-million winter response plan for Ukraine, which is currently only halfway funded.

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“We’ve so far reached about half of the 1.7 million people we intended to reach,” he said.

So far this year, the UN has provided 7.2 million people in Ukraine with at least one type of humanitarian aid, Schmale added.

It has received $1.8 billion of the more than $3.0 billion requested.

The funding “trend is clearly downwards” since the first year of the war, when more than $4.0 billion was received, Schmale said. AFP

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