2023-24 Trócaire Annual ROI Annual Report
Download HereTrócaire through Caritas has provided humanitarian assistance to more than 5.3 million people
On February 24th last year, when Russia invaded Ukraine, Iryna Pysarenko (31), a nurse from the Donetsk region in Ukraine, knew she had to make an urgent and challenging decision to leave her home.
Iryna, who was six months pregnant, and her daughter Elyzaveta (6) gathered some clothes and important documents and left the basement of their family home to reach safety at the border with Romania.
“It was very challenging because I had to leave my husband behind and I was pregnant with our second child,” Iryna said.
On April 4, Iryna reached Romania with her daughter, sister-in-law and two nieces. They were met by Caritas with food, accommodation and information on what to do next. Caritas found a doctor for the family and accompanied Iryna to a maternity unit for a check-up. Elyzaveta (6) was registered in school and in activities run by the local Caritas centre.
Iryna said she is very grateful for Caritas support, but she stills misses her family in Ukraine and is eager for her husband to be with his daughters.
“We express our deep gratitude to the Caritas centre. I gave birth to a child here. The centre’s staff helped me with picking up the documents and drawing up the medical documentation. Thank you for the opportunity to go to school with a full program. My eldest daughter attends first grade and goes to school as she would in Ukraine,” Iryna said.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine last year on February 24, Trócaire with funding from Irish Aid, provided humanitarian assistance through the Caritas network to more than 5.3 million people impacted by violence and unrest in the eastern European region.
A recent Humanitarian Needs Overview report by UNOCHA estimates that as many as 17.6 million people in Ukraine currently require vital assistance. That includes 6.3 million people displaced within the country, 4.4 million people who have returned home to Ukraine after having fled temporarily to another country, and 6.9 million people who have remained in their homes throughout the conflict.
“This past year has been a difficult one. It was a year that was filled with suffering and challenges, with pain and loss, with difficult situations. At the same time, it was also filled with a great solidarity, with a great expression of hope, of faith, of love and assistance to one another,” says President of Caritas Ukraine Tetiana Stawnychy.
Within Ukraine, over 3 million beneficiaries have received humanitarian support from Caritas. Around 3.7 million food and non-food items (NFIs) were provided; 637,000 shelters were offered; 192,000 services of health and psychosocial support were provided; 377,000 protection services were granted; over 1.5 million water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) items were distributed; and 107,600 received cash assistance.
Trócaire and the Caritas network is calling on further solidarity from the international community as 365 days of relentless conflict have brought devastating consequences on the lives of millions of people.
Continued support is still necessary for those displaced within Ukraine and those in neighbouring countries who are trying to rebuild their lives following the destruction of their own homes and cities.