Responding to the Kakhovka dam emergency
Responding to the Kakhovka dam emergency
A collective humanitarian response
UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is contributing to the collective humanitarian response to the emergency, under the leadership of the Government and local authorities, and the UN Humanitarian Coordinator. In the Mykolaiv and Odesa regions, UNHCR has delivered jerry cans, hygiene kits and bedding (beds, mattresses, blankets, bed linen) to displaced and affected communities. Further humanitarian aid has been dispatched to Kherson and Dnipropetrovsk regions.
On 9 and 10 June, UNHCR, as part of an inter-agency convoy delivered essential items such as jerry cans, solar lamps and tarpaulins to people in Bilozerka and Ostriv in Khersonska oblast.
Working with local partners
UNHCR’s local partners quickly responded to the unfolding emergency. "When the emergency began, we quickly started providing support to people arriving in Mykolaiv. We immediately created two multi-function teams including a lawyer, a psychologist, and a housing specialist to provide information and services to people who evacuated”, says Serhii Voitovsky, local NGO Tenth of April Coordinator of the response in Mykolaiv.
Working closely with local partners, UNHCR also scaled up cash assistance for people affected by the floods to help buy food, medicines and other needs. In Kherson and Mykolaiv, to where people evacuated from the flooding are being brought to safety, psychosocial support as well as legal counselling and assistance is being provided by local partner NGO Tenth of April at bus and train stations for those arriving. Collective centres, where people evacuated can be provided with temporary accommodation, are being assessed and prepared.
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Next steps
The vast majority of people are hoping that they will be able to return home when the water recedes. This is when the second part of this emergency will unfold. Estimates indicate that some 3,000 houses have been damaged by the flood waters. Communal utilities will need to be repaired, including access to drinking water. Agricultural land has also been polluted and mines have been dislodged and displaced requiring further demining before settlements are safe for return.
UNHCR and partner agencies are currently carrying out a damage assessment to understand the scale of the impact of the flooding. However, access to the area remains extremely challenging due to the extensive flooding and serious risk of floating landmines in the areas affected.
The war continues to bring enormous suffering and devastation to the people of Ukraine. UNHCR and its partners are determined to continue to support authorities in responding to the needs on the ground.