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The Emergency Action Alliance Ukraine Appeal has warmly welcomed the Australian Government’s $2 million commitment to Ukraine, which will support 15 Australian humanitarian aid charities that have united to launch an unprecedented, centralised appeal to help those affected by the war.

This Emergency Action Alliance Ukraine Appeal makes it easier for Australians to know how to help, and ensures funds are directed to those charities best able to help.  Australians can donate to the appeal via the Emergency Action Alliance website.

In a joint media statement from Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Foreign Minister Marise Payne and other key ministers, the Government said: “to enhance the response of Australian NGOs and their partners in the region, we will provide $2 million to the Emergency Action Alliance Ukraine Appeal – funding which will attract matched private donations.”

EAA Executive Director Kerren Morris said: “We welcome the support of the Australian Government through this $2 million contribution.  This funding will be used to help attract matched private donations – thus helping to increase the impact.  Now we are asking the public to give to this appeal so we can help even more people.  The crisis in Ukraine is of such a scale that the Australian charities involved will leverage efforts together to raise more funds to assist those affected by this crisis. Families, including many children, have been forced to leave everything they know behind to find safety and desperately need food, water and shelter.  Our members are working tirelessly with local partners to reach people in Ukraine swiftly as the brutal conflict turns lives upside down.”

EAA gives Australians one single, trustworthy way to help in a time of crisis. EAA has 12 member charities responding in Ukraine and across the border in the neighbouring countries, working to meet the immediate needs of all people fleeing with food, water, medical assistance, protection and trauma care.

CEO of ChildFund Australia, Margaret Sheehan, said: “ChildFund Australia welcomes the action taken from the Australian Government to commit $2M to Ukraine, as we join forces with 15 charities to mobilise assistance, to assist families, children and young people fleeing their homes in the millions. We are collaborating closely with our partners on the ground by supplying food, basic items, temporary accommodation and psychosocial support for children and families. We continue to call for immediate ceasefire.”

CEO of EAA Member agency Tearfund, Matthew Maury, said: “This contribution from the Australian Government underscores the importance of a collective approach.  Not only are our 15 EAA charities working together to raise more funds, 12 of them are also working together on the ground, with their counterparts and partners in Ukraine and in neighbouring countries.  It is for emergencies like this, with such immense need and so many charities assisting that we established Emergency Action Alliance.  The EAA makes it easier for Australians to know how to help, and the money goes directly to those organisations best placed to provide that help.” 

The conflict in Ukraine has created Europe’s fastest growing refugee crisis since World War II.  Three million people have been forced to flee Ukraine and at least 1.85 million more have been internally displaced by the military hostilities. 

Inside Ukraine, homes have been destroyed, essential infrastructure such as water supplies, hospitals and schools have been hit. People are being forced to hide in shelters and metro stations to stay safe.

As a result, hundreds of thousands of people are crossing borders into Poland, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia and Moldova, triggering a large-scale humanitarian crisis. The majority crossing the borders are women and children arriving with only what they can carry. The UN estimates that 12 million people are in need of life-saving assistance.

Australians who want to help in this crisis are encouraged to donate via the Emergency Action Alliance website.

The EAA is made up of ActionAid, Act For Peace, ADRA, Anglican Overseas Aid, Australia for UNHCR, Australian Lutheran World Service, Baptist World Aid, Care Australia, Caritas, CBM, ChildFund, Oxfam, Plan International, Save the Children Australia and Tearfund Australia.

ENDS
 
Notes to editors:
Media enquiries please call 0410457869.

We have spokespeople available in Ukraine, Poland, Romania, Hungary, Moldova and Australia.   

Interview requests:  For more information or to request interviews please contact: kmorris@emergencyaction.org.au

A collection of images and video footage of EAA member charities responding as refugees arrive into neighbouring countries is available on request.
  
About Emergency Action Alliance (EAA): EAA brings together 15 leading Australian aid charities at times of crisis overseas to raise funds quickly and efficiently. In these times of crisis, people in life-and-death situations need our help and our mission is to save, protect and rebuild lives through effective humanitarian response. EAA’s 15 member charities are: ActionAid, ADRA, Act For Peace, Australian Lutheran World Service, Anglican Overseas Aid, Care Australia, Baptist World Aid, Caritas, CBM, ChildFund, Oxfam, Plan International, Save the Children Australia, Tearfund and Australia for UNHCR.   
  
Twelve of EAA’s 15 members are either responding or planning to respond in Ukraine or in neighbouring countries and will receive funds from this appeal. Some may work through trusted local partners while others will work through their European counterparts.

Photo credit: Anthony Upton/DEC
  
How to donate:    
Online: https://emergencyaction.org.au/ukraineemergencyappeal
Phone: 1300 939 000
SMS: Text ACTION to 0400 662 662

This World Water Day, ChildFund in Laos is working across rural and remote of the country to ensure that children and young people can access safe, clean water in their homes.

Khamdee, 30-years-old, is a mother to three young children and lives in a remote village in Huaphanh province, her home perched on top of the steep slope of the mountains. She walks up to nine kilometres every day to provide safe water to her family.

In 2015 a water tank was built by the community near her home, but it wasn’t big enough to supply water to all 300 homes in the village and over time the tank cracked and broke down.

Many children in the village were sent by their parents to collect water from a nearby stream. But Khamdee knows how dangerous and difficult this trip could be and has never allowed her children to make the journey.

“Carrying water all the way back home is heavy,” she said. “The stream is in the lowlands, about four kilometres away from my home. Sometimes we must walk eight kilometres to get enough water. My husband and I have to carry two 18L barrels each twice a day — once in the morning before we head to the farm, and another after coming back home in the evening.”

Some days, she would have to make three trips so everyone in her family could have safe drinking water and water for hygiene. This placed a significant burden on Khamdee, who is already responsible for her young children, and running her household and the family farm. She said every day was exhausting.

ChildFund in Laos partnered with local authorities and organisations to rebuild the water tank and create a plumbing system in Phoupied village so that every household could have access to safe, running water at any time of day.

They also installed a water meter in each household to monitor water usage. Each household pays for how much water they use and these funds are then used to maintain the water tank and plumbing system, to ensure it is sustainable.

“I was so happy when I heard that a new water tank was going to be constructed for our village,” said Khamdee. “To have running water available in our homes is amazing. I can cook, do our laundry, bathe, and have clean and safe drinking water to give to my children anytime.”

In partnership with Save the Children, CARE, and Comité de Coopération avec le Laos (CCL), the ‘Sustainable Change Achieved through Linking Improved Nutrition and Governance’(SCALING)project seeks to improve food, water and nutrition security among rural areas in the Huaphanh Province.

The project focusses on improving nutrition in adolescent girls, and pregnant and lactating women. ChildFund’s SCALING activities is funded by the European Union and works in three villages and a total of 14 districts in Huaphanh.