Women and young teenage boy running from destroyed infrastructure including buildings and a bridge in Ukraine

Ukraine: Attacks on civilian infrastructure leaving millions of people in need must stop now!

Humanitarian organisations condemn continued attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine leaving people  without water, electricity and heating in freezing temperatures.

Humanitarian organisations condemn continued attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine leaving people without water, electricity and heating in freezing temperatures.

International and Ukrainian NGOs strongly condemn the latest round of air strikes across Ukraine by the Russian Armed Forces. News reports estimate that 10 civilians have died and at least 50 have been wounded. The targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure is in direct violation of international humanitarian law.

The repeated airstrikes hitting critical civilian infrastructure across the country are significantly impacting authorities’ ability to provide electricity, water and heating to millions. To date, more than half of the entire country’s energy infrastructure has been damaged.

With temperatures now below freezing and expected to plunge as low as -20 degrees Celsius in some parts of the country, the destruction of civilian infrastructure is threatening people’s lives and ability to meet basic needs. The capacity to rapidly repair damaged infrastructure is diminishing and, therefore outages are lasting longer. Yesterday’s attacks also caused power outages in neighbouring Moldova, which is hosting the largest number of refugees from Ukraine per capita.

Frequent air attacks are disrupting Ukraine’s healthcare system, harming people’s mental health and livelihoods, as well as preventing or interrupting children’s schooling. This will have lasting effects on children’s wellbeing and their resilience. The attacks on energy and infrastructure supply have also escalated the risk of gender-based violence and increased women’s and girl’s unpaid care and domestic workloads, negatively impacting their access to public services, health and livelihoods.

Ukraine also had to make an emergency shutdown of three nuclear power plants after the latest attacks. Without immediate respite, the entire country will become paralysed and people left in intolerable conditions, without access to life-saving services. Humanitarian organisations are increasingly worried that this will trigger new waves of forced displacement of people fleeing in search of safety.

The constant shelling is preventing humanitarian aid workers from providing vital aid to populations affected by the conflict, as they too need to take shelter from the danger. Humanitarian organisations are being forced to assess on a day-by-day basis how to continue delivering, currently a nearly impossible task, while ensuring the safety of their staff. NGOs are finding it increasingly difficult to maintain communications between their teams and local communities because of bad mobile connections and limited access to the internet. Operational work is mostly dependent on internet and electricity and they have for now no contact with their teams in several areas of the country. Aid organisations are now only able to provide limited assistance to many communities due to these significant access constraints. Some people living in areas of active hostilities and areas outside of Ukrainian Government’s control have had virtually no aid for months.

 

Humanitarian organisations call for:

  • An immediate cessation of attacks targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure, and strict distinction between civilian and military targets, particularly in urban and densely populated areas.
  • Safe and unhindered humanitarian access, including across conflict lines for humanitarian assistance to reach all those in need, particularly those in vulnerable situations, with respect to the independence of humanitarian actors and the protection of humanitarian personnel and volunteers.
  • To abide by international humanitarian law and to unconditionally protect civilians and provide security guarantees for relief workers to reach people in need of humanitarian assistance without any discrimination and anywhere in Ukraine.
  • United Nations Security Council members to uphold their mandate to ensure the protection of civilians and maintain international peace and security

 

Signatories:

ActionAid

Action Against Hunger/ Action contre la Faim

Arche noVa

Caritas Ukraine

Caritas Z

Christian Aid

Corus International

Finn Church Aid

HealthRight International

Help Ukraine. Donbass

NGO “Institute of psychosomatic and traumatherapy”

INTERSOS

IRC International Rescue Committee

Medicos del Mundo

NGO “Girls” (ГО ‘Дівчата’)

NGORC

Norwegian Refugee Council

Oxfam

Plan International

Première Urgence Internationale (PUI)

Solidarités International

War Child

 

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