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  • Help War Victims

    Help War Victims COUNTRIES REACED WHAT WE DO FUNDING BUDGET MISSION ABOUT US HOW YOU CAN HELP DONATE Donations save lives and limbs. DONATE Fund Raiser For War Victims Ukraine is facing an unprecedented, full-scale war. According to national authorities, more than 500,000 people have fled the country across international borders since the Putin-led invasion of Ukraine. This is the potential beginning of another major refugee crisis. Terror is an understatement to describe what one feels when one must flee their home. The Ukrainian refugees, the women, and children especially have endured this terror. Yet, they are hopeful. In spite of all, they have been through they are resilient and determined. Your generosity will empower them and empower the fight for peace. We stand with people in and fleeing Ukraine during this devastating moment in history. With your donations, we`ll be supporting projects and organizations that are providing vital aid and services to those fleeing the country, including food, shelter, clothes, medical help, and mental health support. It is easy to feel helpless in moments like this, but we ask you to respond with love in the face of such calculated and cruel aggression. Please donate what you can to this urgent appeal, and please also share this fundraiser as widely as you can. Some of the donations will be judiciously distributed to some of our partner organizations that meet our criteria: Malnourished and hungry children Send Help The United Nations' children's agency says war in Ukraine, one of the world's largest grain suppliers, is threatening to plunge the world into a "spiraling" food crisis, exacerbating the problem of severe hunger among a growing number of children. UNICEF said in a report released on May 17 that the cost of life-saving treatment for the most severely malnourished children is set to jump by as much as 16 percent due to Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, which comes on top of strains on the food system created by the coronavirus pandemic and climate change. Displaced mother and children Send Help More than half of Ukraine's 7.5 million children have been displaced by the war. While some have fled with their mothers, others have been separated from their families or sent away on their own in the hope they will reach safety. Separated siblings Send Help As the war in Ukraine continues, humanitarian conditions for children in Ukraine keep deteriorating. Around two-thirds of children are now displaced either within Ukraine or in neighbouring countries. Children continue to be killed, injured and deeply traumatized by the devastating violence around them. They are terrified, in shock, and desperate for safety, stability, protection and psychosocial care. Large-scale refugee movements have taken place into neighbouring countries, including Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, the Republic of Moldova, Romania and Slovakia. Over crowded shelters Send Help In Kyiv, the sounds of sirens and explosions ring out all through the day and night. With no end in sight to Russia’s war on Ukraine, many in the Ukrainian capital are still seeking shelter in what seems to be the safest place: underground. Subway stations, underground car parks and basements of buildings are brimming with people trying to take cover from the bombs and missiles threatening their lives since last week. They have all reason to be fearful as, according to Ukrainian authorities, over 2,000 civilians have been killed since Russia launched its war on Ukraine on Feb. 24. Securing the elderly to safety Send Help The ongoing conflict in eastern Ukraine between the Government and armed groups is disproportionately harming older people, especially older women and older people with disabilities, according to a new UN report. An estimated 30% of people (more than one million) affected by the conflict since 2014 are older people, many of whom have been driven from their homes by the violence along the contact line that divides Government and non-government-controlled areas in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Stuck in hideout Send Help Cooped up in World War II bunkers and hostel basements without power and water and surviving on subsistence ration over the past week in Sumy, about 60km from the Russian border, over 700 Indian students hoped to be rescued from the embattled city when Moscow called a ceasefire to open a corridor for refugees in Mariupol and Volnovakha in the southeast. But that hope soon faded as Russian forces started shelling those areas again. Subscribe to our mailing list to get news letter and requests in joining us bring help, support and hope to those affected by war, and disasters especially women, children and the elderly. Join Us First Name Last Name Email Write a message Submit Thanks for joining us DONATE Contact Our Team About Us Success Stories Copyright Privacy Policy Rights © 2022 Help War Victims Help War Victims

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