UN: Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians cut off from emergency humanitarian aid

Hundreds of thousands of people in Ukraine remain cut off from access to emergency humanitarian aid due to the military siege of cities, according to a UN report today, urgently calling for safe passage.

Efforts are being made to open humanitarian corridors after two days of failed truces aimed at allowing civilians to flee. Such corridors are also critical to providing assistance such as water, food and medicine.

“Reliable and predictable, non-violent, and safe havens are urgently needed for the relocation of people whose lives are in danger and for the provision of life-saving humanitarian supplies,” the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a statement today. , based on information received until yesterday Sunday.

Russia today announced new corridors leading to Russia itself and its ally Belarus, a move that denounced Kyiv as an immoral ploy.

OCHA said UN agencies, humanitarian partners and the Ukrainian government were stepping up aid work inside the country, but could not reach some of those most in need.

In Kherson, in southern Ukraine, about 30 trucks equipped with aid could not enter due to the ongoing clashes, OCHA reported.

Elsewhere, supplies of water and basic medicines were running low, including a psychiatric hospital in Borodyanka, about 60 miles (60 km) from Kyiv, where hundreds of patients are being treated, some of whom need 24-hour assistance.

Oxygen reserves for patients with Covid-19 and others were also “desperately low” and the conflict has cut off gas supplies to hundreds of thousands of households, he said.

Source: Capital

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