Projects and programs
“Lifesaving Response to Protection Concerns and Humanitarian Needs of Conflict Affected People in the South and South-East of Ukraine”
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Humanitarian response

“Lifesaving Response to Protection Concerns and Humanitarian Needs of Conflict Affected People in the South and South-East of Ukraine”

The team at the Stabilization Support Services Charitable Foundation, in partnership with the international humanitarian organization CARE and with financial support from the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is launching a new humanitarian project — “Lifesaving Response to Protection Concerns and Humanitarian Needs of Conflict Affected People in the South and South-East of Ukraine”.

As part of this project, residents of Zaporizhzhia, Mykolaiv, and Kherson regions will be eligible to receive assistance. The overall goal of the project is to maximize access to essential aid—including humanitarian, psychological, and legal assistance—for communities affected by the conflict, as well as for internally displaced persons. It will be implemented from September 2025 to May 2026. 

Overall, as part of the project, our Charitable Foundation plans to: 

  • Provide drinking water to communities affected by the conflict. Bottled water will be distributed to 4,869 residents of Zaporizhzhia, Mykolaiv, and Kherson regions. 
  • Distribute individual hygiene kits to women, people with disabilities who need adult diapers and incontinence pads, and the elderly. All types of hygiene kits have different contents and therefore meet the needs of various vulnerable population groups. A total of 1,700 kits are planned to be distributed. 
  • Provide structured and unstructured psychosocial support to people in the most affected and frontline communities. Part of these activities will be dedicated to children affected by the conflict and their families. As part of the project, 230 individual psychological sessions will be conducted for 60 beneficiaries and 48 group sessions for 60 beneficiaries.
  • Organize the provision of legal assistance to communities affected by the conflict to help them regain access to civil documents, file claims for compensation, and exercise their rights and entitlements. The plan is to provide 1,200 legal consultations to 400 beneficiaries.

Priority will be given to households affected by the war, the elderly, people with disabilities, and families with young children.