Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, at least 2,400 children have been dead or injured, according to the most recent UNICEF reports.U.N agency says the war is creating a mental health crisis among children in Ukraine.
The population of Ukraine has been shrinking for the past 30 years, and officials say that the full-scale war with Russia has accelerated its decline.
Ukraine now a world leader in the driver, to digitize government services, from digital passports to apps that allow conscripts to update their details in the draft register or issue air alerts.
This week marks 1,000 days of fighting in Ukraine.For millions of Ukrainians, including 32-year-old Oleh Reshetnyak and his loved ones in Kyiv, the mounting death toll, air raid sirens, and explosions have been a grim reality.
In order to educate students lifetime lessons on survival and patriotism, Ukrainian schools have introduced a new subject called “Defense of Ukraine,” which includes first aid, drone operation, and weapons safety handling.
With Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the number of Ukrainian citizens seeking adoption for children has significantly increased.
Certain convicts may serve in the Armed Forces in exchange for parole under a mobilization law that Ukraine adopted in May. Over 6,000 applications have been submitted, and nearly 4,000 have been approved to enlist in the army, according to the Ministry of Justice in Ukraine.
Ukrainian civilians are doing their best to survive while the war in their country drags on.For hundreds, that means attending special military centers to learn how to fight.
The latest claims that Ukraine may be linked to the 2022 attacks on the Nord Stream gas pipelines have the Ukrainian people responding sceptically. Concerns regarding Ukraine’s ties with its partners in the West are also being raised by the allegations.
Serhiy Danilets is one of the more than 100,000 Ukrainian soldiers who have wounded during Russia’s war on Ukraine. Despite suffering severe injuries during combat, he and other fighters continue to enjoy life and, in some cases,are even planning to return to the front lines.