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Needs Growing for Over 8 Million Internally Displaced in Ukraine

IOM staff and local authorities discuss the needs of internally displaced persons in front of a damaged school in Zhytomyr centre. Photo: IOM

Geneva – The number of people internally displaced by the war in Ukraine has surpassed the 8 million mark, according to the International Organization for Migration’s (IOM) latest report.

This represents a 24 per cent increase when compared to the first internal displacement figures published on 16 March.

Conducted between 17 April and 3 May, the survey highlights financial support as the overwhelming need among the internally displaced persons (IDPs): two-thirds of those surveyed identified cash assistance as one of their needs, compared to 49 per cent at the beginning of the war. Over 70 per cent expressed that they would utilize cash assistance to cover food and/or medical expenses.

Shelter was another key need identified. Nine per cent of all people surveyed in the latest report, including those not internally displaced, indicated that their homes were damaged or destroyed. Among the internally displaced alone, this figure rose to 27 per cent. Every one out of ten people surveyed said that they would need materials to fix damaged homes.

''The needs of those internally displaced and all affected by the war in Ukraine are growing by the hour," says IOM Director General António Vitorino. "Access to populations in need of aid remains a challenge amid active hostilities, but our teams are committed to continue delivering urgent assistance inside Ukraine and in neighbouring countries."

As the humanitarian crisis continues to worsen, more internally displaced Ukrainians (44 per cent) are considering further relocation – more than double the figure from 16 March (18 per cent).

Further highlighting the complexity of mobility within Ukraine, the report revealed that over 2.7 million people have returned home, 93 per cent of whom have returned from another area in their region or from another region within the country.

Since the beginning of the war, at least 320,000 people have received direct assistance from IOM in Ukraine, including food, non-food and hygiene items, cash, mental health and psychosocial support, or benefitted from information campaigns to help prevent human trafficking and sexual exploitation and abuse.

IOM appeals for continued support from states and partners to address the most pressing needs of those internally displaced, including through cash assistance and shelter rehabilitation programmes.

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For more information, please contact:

In Geneva:
Safa Msehli, smsehli@iom.int , +41794035526
Paul Dillon, pdillon@iom.int , +41796369874
 
In Ukraine:
Varvara Zhluktenko, vzhluktenko@iom.int , +38 067 447 97 92

 
In Vienna:
Joe Lowry, jlowry@iom.int , +43660 3776404

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