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More than five million Ukrainians flee war: UN

More than five million Ukrainians have now fled their country following the Russian invasion, the United Nations said Wednesday, in Europe's fastest-growing refugee crisis since World War II.

Ukrainian evacuees arrive at a village of prefabricated houses for people displaced by the war in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv on April 19, 2022, during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. – Inside the country, some 200,000 people have found shelter in Lviv, a city with a pre-war population of around 700,000 that has remained relatively safe compared to the rest of the country, despite deadly missile strikes on April 18. Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki made a flash visit to the new settlement for the displaced in Lviv on Tuesday, saying it could welcome up to 350 people. (Photo by Yuriy Dyachyshyn / AFP)

More than five million Ukrainians have now fled their country following the Russian invasion, the United Nations said Wednesday, in Europe’s fastest-growing refugee crisis since World War II.

UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, said 5,034,439 Ukrainians had left since Russia invaded on February 24 — an increase of 53,850 over Tuesday’s total.

“Eight weeks into the conflict, we are at five million and counting, with five million unique stories of loss and trauma,” said deputy UNHCR chief Kelly T. Clements.

The UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) says more than 218,000 third-country nationals — largely students and migrant workers — have also escaped to neighbouring countries, meaning more than 5.25 million people in all have fled Ukraine since the war began.

Women and children account for 90 percent of those who fled, with men aged 18 to 60 eligible for military call-up and unable to leave.

Nearly two-thirds of all Ukrainian children have been forced from their homes, including those still inside the country.

“While the sheer scale and speed of displacement is immense, we must not lose sight of what these figures mean,” Clements told the UN Security Council from Hungary on Tuesday.

“Women, children, and the aged, have left their homes, their lives, their sons, their fathers and husbands.

“Each one of the millions of displaced are forced to make impossible, heartbreaking decisions and have left everything, almost everything, they hold dear.”

– Nearly 1 mn flee in April –
More than 2.8 million Ukrainian refugees have fled to Poland. Three-quarters of a million have reached Romania.

Clements paid tribute to the humanity shown towards refugees in host countries, with communities and individuals rallying to provide food, shelter, medicine and transportation.

“This inspiring response is surpassed only by the strength and composure of refugees themselves, who continue to exude both courage and resilience,” she said.

UNHCR figures show nearly 645,000 Ukrainians fled in February, with nearly 3.4 million doing so in March and just shy of a million leaving so far this month.

Beyond the refugees, the IOM estimates 7.1 million people are displaced within in Ukraine.

Before the invasion, Ukraine had a population of 37 million in the regions under government control, excluding Russia-annexed Crimea and the pro-Russian separatist-controlled regions in the east.

IOM chief Antonio Vitorino warned that more people were expected to flee their homes as the war carries on.

“We remain deeply concerned about the continued deterioration of the humanitarian situation in Ukraine as we anticipate an increase in displacements, internal as well as external,” he told the Security Council.

Vitorino said that in mass displacement situations, up to 30 percent of the population could be expected to experience some form of negative psychological impact and mental health problems.

“However, as the war continues and intensifies, psychosocial needs will undoubtedly further increase,” he said.

“We remain particularly concerned about the situation of women and children who have fled Ukraine or who are internally displaced,” Vitorino added.

“Trafficking in persons was, unfortunately, a known phenomenon in the region, and as observed in past crises, large-scale displacement, family separation, and disruption of civil protection and community networks render populations vulnerable to violence, exploitation, and abuse.”

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