Projects
Ukrainian soldier who was wounded in action in the war zone in eastern Ukraine needs rehabilitation
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] International Social Project “An Embroidered dream” helps to children from IDPs families who left the war zone in eastern Ukraine learn how to earn money better than wait for any help from the beneficiaries.
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text][/vc_column_text][vc_column_text] A new school year is approaching. All the schools in Ukraine will have the traditional “first bell” festivities. The schools within the ATO zone will have a festive day, too.
Together with my friends I have been helping the children abandoned near the war zone in Ukraine who have been brought to the pediatrics department at the hospital in Kramatorsk.
Tetiana Bilinski needs a liver transplant, day.kyiv.ua reports. She is from Lutsk city. She served as a volunteer doctor on the Maidan, including during the tragic days in February, 2014 and in Pisky near Donetsk airport. She is a member of the group "Maidan Doctors."
In recent days the presentation of Liberi liberati's International project "An Embroidered dreams" was hosted recently by the "Caritas-Kyiv" Charitable Fund in Kyiv. Children with disabilities and their families, all internally displaced persons from eastern Ukraine, attended the event.
Since January 2014 the team of EMPR - independent citizen media about Ukraine - has been informing our readers 24/7 about the real situation in the zone of international conflict in Ukraine, where Russian forces and their proxies, the special reconnaissance and sabotage units, Russian mercenaries and other terrorists invaded and waged war.
Recent UN data shows Ukraine now has over 1 million internally displaced persons. While government’s initiatives are often criticized for inability to address the needs of IDPs quickly and efficiently volunteers seem to have taken the central role in aid provision to those who had to leave their homes.
While fighting rages in Ukraine’s East, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) helping people map the damage to prepare for a swift recovery.



