The New Year holiday period witnessed a fresh surge of deadly attacks by Russian forces in Ukraine, UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq said.
Citing UN humanitarian colleagues, he informed the media at the regular daily press briefing that intensified violence in different regions of the war-torn country caused “multiple civilian casualties”, which included children and journalists.
“Ukrainian authorities reported more than 50 civilian casualties on December 31st alone”, said Haq, according to the UN News Centre.
The latest attacks on the capital Kyiv, damaged a hotel, residential homes, and several education facilities, including a university.
And on December 31, during hostilities in the Kherson region, two children were injured – one of them a 13-year-old boy who was evacuated to the children’s hospital in Kherson, which itself was shelled in the early hours of New Year’s Day, said Mr. Haq, citing the regional governor.
Moreover, intensive fighting also continues in eastern Donetsk and the Luhansk region, with civilian casualties and infrastructure damage reported “on both sides of the front line.”
“Despite continued attacks we, along with our humanitarian partners, continue to deliver support to the people in need in the most impacted communities”, said the UN Deputy Spokesperson.
He went on to outline some of the life-saving assistance being delivered by the Organisation as the fighting continues.
“On December 28, an inter-agency convoy delivered food, water, blankets, emergency shelter kits and other supplies from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), UNICEF (UN Children’s Fund) and the World Food Programme (WHO) to the front-line towns of Lyman and Sviatohirsk in Donetska oblast”.
Both communities have been exposed to heavy fighting, which has destroyed houses, demolished critical infrastructure, and decimated access to basic services.
“The people who still live in these areas are mostly the elderly and people with limited mobility.”
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