The conflict in eastern Ukraine has entered its seventh year and continues generating humanitarian needs and impacting those most vulnerable. According to the United Nation’s Humanitarian Needs Overview 2020, over 55,000 residential buildings have been damaged during the conflict on both sides of the contact line that today separates east Ukraine. During 2019, 738 homes were hit by shelling. Up to this day, humanitarian organizations have repaired more than 60 per cent of this damage.
During 2018-2019, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) conducted damage assessments in both Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, specifically in the communities along the government-controlled side of the contact line. The results of the assessment identified a baseline of 3,189 damaged properties across the two oblasts.
Therefore, shelter needs remain significant in many places in eastern Ukraine, especially in areas hard to reach with high insecurity and limited physical access near the contact line. To compound the problem, Ukraine has long and harsh winter periods during which weather conditions affect the timing for repair works. Another challenge faced by the local populations are the complex and bureaucratic procedures to access shelter assistance provided by the Ukrainian State. Moreover, there remains a challenge in non-government-controlled area (NGCA) and the grey zone to get relevant and verifiable data on damage to residential properties. Due to the lack of sustained humanitarian access, the Shelter/Non-Food Items Cluster partners have been unable to conduct a systematic assessment of damage in NGCA.
Since the beginning of the conflict in eastern Ukraine, international donors have provided significant financial support to NRC’s shelter interventions investing over USD 3.7 million in the region to assist people in rebuilding their lives. The donors of NRC included UNHCR, the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the European Union Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid (ECHO), the “Pope for Ukraine initiative”, the Government of Japan and the United States of America (Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration) as well as the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency.
Volodymyr Bosak (58), a resident of Marinka recounts his experience. “Our residential house was damaged by shelling five years ago. We were not able to repair it due to lack of money. I am the only one who receives a pension. My wife is unemployed and is not yet entitled to a pension. All this time we have lived in the small and ill-equipped garden house, which is very cold in winter. We are extremely grateful for helping us having a home again!”
Shelter assistance in Ukraine provides durable solutions for displaced people and returnees, while at the same time addresses new emergency needs in areas along the contact line. Working with different international and national partners, UNHCR supported over 21,000 repairs since the beginning of the conflict in eastern Ukraine.
“The shelter project shows how effective and swift international humanitarian assistance can be during a complex emergency that might overwhelm the local authorities and civil society who might not be able to respond as quickly as needed. We strongly believe in the resilience of Ukrainians and we are sure that national efforts of the Government of Ukraine to support the shelter needs is the right way forward,” said Pablo Mateu, UNHCR Representative in Ukraine.
As the NRC’s shelter programme comes to a close, the detailed damage assessment report for the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts will be handed over to regional authorities. In Donetsk oblast, local authorities together with the State Emergency Service of Ukraine have allocated more than UAH 22 million to provide repairs to more than 1,200 households since 2018. This intervention will continue in 2020.