A man in a reflective vest and a woman in a beige vest is standing next to each other. In front of them are two big soup terrines. They are standing in a large tent.
Sorin and Liliia help Ukrainians who have fled across the border into northern Romania. Liliia fled her home in Ukraine just two weeks ago. Now she’s working for NRC, helping us to scale up our operations over the border in Romania. Photo: Ingrid Prestetun/NRC

Ukraine crisis: NRC scaling up response with local partners

Published 18. Mar 2022|Updated 17. Mar 2022
The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) is now scaling up its efforts inside Ukraine and in neighbouring countries to provide aid to tens of thousands of people forced to flee. Over the past three weeks, NRC has deployed additional emergency teams to Ukraine, Poland, Moldova, and Romania.

Starting this week, NRC is with local partners providing welcome centres and warm meals to hundreds of people in Lviv, western Ukraine. In Warsaw a transit centre will be constructed and run with partners at the central train station.

NRC teams are also providing information and legal assistance to help Ukrainian and non-Ukrainian displaced people obtain protection and access essential services in several locations across the country, including in the eastern and west regions.

“The situation for millions of people inside Ukraine is growing more desperate by the day. We are therefore organising food, water, sanitation, shelters, and legal support. But most of all the vulnerable families need protection from the ruthless bombing and shelling that engulfs them,” said Jan Egeland NRC’s Secretary General.

NRC is working with a large number of national partners in Poland, Moldova, and Romania, to ensure Ukrainian refugees have somewhere safe to sleep, that children can go to school, and that families are able to access existing national social support systems.

In the coming weeks NRC will work to provide cash directly to thousands of displaced mothers and fathers so they can take care of the basic needs of their families, both inside Ukraine and when they become refugees. Agreements have been signed with financial providers, partner organisations and needs assessments have been carried out in Ukraine and Poland.  

NRC has also started cross-border operations into Ukraine through neighbouring countries and has so far provided food and other aid supplies along evacuation routes.

“Our brave colleagues are working day and night under extreme conditions to meet the growing needs of exhausted children, women, and men. We have used and committed all our private donations and funding received from the Norwegian government, USD 17 million, to aid displaced and conflict-stricken Ukrainians. Without more funding faster from more donor countries, we will run out of resources to continue our emergency work by April,” said Egeland.

So far, NRC has entered partnerships with 15 local organisations in Ukraine, Poland, Moldova, and Romania that effectively can deliver services. NRC will also provide training for an effective response in accordance with humanitarian principles.

NRC’s regional crisis response plan sets out to assist 800,000 people with a total cost of US$82 million in the next six months. The organisation needs an additional 65 million to reach its operational goals across the region.