Skip to main content
Two women and one man smile as they participate in a psychosocial support session in UkraineTwo women and one man smile as they participate in a psychosocial support session in UkraineTwo women and one man smile as they participate in a psychosocial support session in Ukraine

Ukraine

Ukraine

Why are we in Ukraine? More than two years into the conflict, approximately 10 million Ukrainians have been displaced by fighting, with an estimated 4 million people internally displaced and living under makeshift circumstances around the country. Concern is supporting the humanitarian needs of internally-displaced people in a variety of settings.

How the conflict has created a humanitarian crisis

After more than two years, the fighting in Ukraine has continued unabated, with ongoing attacks compromising local infrastructure and services and air raid alerts disrupting everyday life. In the winter, this creates especially harsh conditions with electricity supplies often limited and fuel prices at a premium. Year-round, conflict-driven inflation and disrupted livelihoods have led to millions of Ukrainians unable to meet basic needs such as food and healthcare, especially in rural areas of the country. 

Many Ukrainians displaced by the violence are living in collective centres. These provide shelter for those who have lost their homes to war, but they are not equipped to be long-term housing. In addition to the physical needs, we are also witnessing a mental health crisis as the result of the conflict, with related trauma affecting everyone from young children to pensioners.

» Learn more about the crisis in Ukraine

Latest achievements

One

Cash assistance

From paying rent to buying medicine, cash is a critical resource for those displaced by conflict. Cash transfers give people the autonomy to choose what they purchase while continuing to strengthen and support local markets. Concern has reached over 106,000 people with cash assistance in Ukraine.

Two

Psychosocial support

Three

Winterisation

Hontarivka village, Kharkiv Oblast. (Photo: Simona Supino / Concern Worldwide)
Hontarivka village, Kharkiv Oblast. (Photo: Simona Supino / Concern Worldwide)
Valeriy* (60) does not want to be pitied. He is not afraid of any cold and winter, it is not the first time he has experienced it. But he is grateful for the stove. "We are Ukrainians, we will cope with everything." Hontarivka village, Kharkiv Oblast’. (Photo: Simona Supino/Concern Worldwide)
Valeriy* (60) does not want to be pitied. He is not afraid of any cold and winter, it is not the first time he has experienced it. But he is grateful for the stove. "We are Ukrainians, we will cope with everything." Hontarivka village, Kharkiv Oblast’. (Photo: Simona Supino/Concern Worldwide)
Volunteers in Ukraine
Volunteers with Concern's partner We are Brothers are preparing to install stoves and insulation in households in Hontarivka village, Ukraine. Photo: Simona Supino/Concern Worldwide
Humanitarian staff from Concern meet with a displaced Ukrainian family from Donbas living in a dormitory in the west.
Concern Program Manager Charlie Acland meets with a family displaced by war from their home in the Donbas. They are living in a college dormitory in the rural west of the country. (Photo: Kieran McConville / Concern Worldwide)
JERU staff inspect supplies that have arrived in Khemelnytskyi, Ukraine
JERU staff inspect supplies that have arrived in Khemelnytskyi, Ukraine. (Photo: Simona Supino / Concern Worldwide)
Ukrainian children wait in their school's bomb shelter for an air raid to end. Dark and damp, the basement still needs renovation
Ukrainian children wait in their school's bomb shelter for an air raid to end. Dark and damp, the basement still needs renovation. (Photo: Mykhaylo Palinchak / Concern Worldwide)
Lesya's three-year-old son inside the relative's house they have moved to after fleeing their home close to the Russian border
Lesya's three-year-old son inside the relative's house they have moved to after fleeing their home close to the Russian border. Photo: Mykhaylo Palinchak/Concern Worldwide
Food and hygiene items being loaded in Poltava, Ukraine, for distribution to those left homeless by the recent dam collapse.
Food and hygiene items being loaded in Poltava, Ukraine, for distribution to those left homeless by the recent dam collapse. Photo: Concern Worldwide

How we're helping Ukraine

We're working hard to respond to the growing needs in Ukraine through emergency programming and early economic recovery.

Emergency response
Early economic recovery
Alafia

Christmas Survival Appeal

  • Families fleeing devastating conflict in Sudan

  • Over 10 million people forced from their homes

  • Urgent support needed for Sudanese refugees in Chad

Donate now
Share your concern
Share