Humanitarian and Refugee Crisis in Ukraine




INSIGHTi

Humanitarian and Refugee Crisis in Ukraine
Updated November 23, 2022
Russia’s war against Ukraine has triggered a humanitarian crisis and resulted in massive refugee flows to
neighboring countries. It has also exacerbated global food insecurity. Congress passed two emergency
supplemental appropriations bills in FY2022 (P.L. 117-103, Division N, and P.L. 117-128) that included a
combined nearly $8.9 billion for the humanitarian response in Ukraine and other countries directly
affected by the conflict. The Biden Administration’s November 15, 2022, emergency supplemental
funding request included $500 million in humanitarian assistance for “vulnerable and displaced
populations in Ukraine, the broader region, and around the globe.” In addition, the Biden Administration
is providing Temporary Protected Status to Ukrainian citizens already in the United States. The European
Union (EU) and individual European countries also have played a main role in addressing the crisis.
Conditions Inside Ukraine
The winter season is likely to worsen already deteriorating humanitarian conditions for millions of people
inside Ukraine (which has a total population of about 44 million, including Crimea). From late February
2022 through August 23, 2022, nearly 7 million people became internally displaced persons (IDPs).
(Previously, the armed conflict in eastern Ukraine since 2014 had resulted in an estimated 1.4 million
IDPs, with roughly 3 million people in need of humanitarian assistance and protection.) In the current
crisis, from February to September, nearly 580 national and international humanitarian groups provided
life-saving assistance and protection services to 13.4 million of those in need (including IDPs, evacuees,
returnees and other conflict-affected people residing in areas directly affected by hostilities) across
Ukraine, except where access was limited or denied in areas under attack. Evacuations from cities under
siege by Russian forces have been precarious, with widespread reports of violations of human rights and
international humanitarian law (IHL). Death and injury to civilian populations is extensive, with at least
16,631 civilian casualties from the start of the invasion to November 14, 2022. The needs of IDPs and the
communities hosting them are changing with the situation on the ground and conduct of hostilities.
Recent attacks on civilian power and water infrastructure have resulted in widespread power outages and
some flooding. Food insecurity is a problem in many areas. Winterization assistance, such as shelter
weather-proofing and repairs, is being implemented, while humanitarian organizations are also mobilizing
to provide emergency assistance to vulnerable populations in recently liberated areas. The United Nations
has estimated that nearly 18 million people inside Ukraine will need relief and protection, including
winter-specific interventions.
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Refugee Flows to Europe
As of November 15, 2022, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported that more than
7.8 million refugees, half of which are estimated to be children, had fled hostilities in Ukraine, with
Poland receiving the highest number of any European country. Other neighboring countries—Hungary,
Moldova, Romania, and Slovakia—also have received large numbers of refugees, although many have
continued moving west to Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, and France,
and a significant number have arrived in Turkey.
Figure 1. Ukraine Refugee Crisis

Sources: Created by CRS. Refugee data from UNHCR; boundaries from U.S. Department of State.
U.S. officials estimate Russian authorities have forcibly sent between 900,000 and 1.6 million Ukrainians
to Russia; an unknown number of other people reportedly have moved from Russian-occupied areas in
Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions to the Russian Federation and Belarus, but their number and
status are unclear. As of November 15, UNHCR reported nearly 2.9 million Ukrainian refugees in Russia
and Belarus combined.


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European Responses
In March 2022, the European Union (EU) adopted a temporary protection mechanism for displaced
persons fleeing Ukraine. The mechanism provides Ukrainian nationals and other legal residents of
Ukraine who cannot safely return to their countries of origin with immediate rights of residency, medical
assistance, and access to housing, education, and the labor market in EU countries. To take pressure off
national systems for processing asylum claims, the mechanism applies collectively, waiving the need to
examine individual applications. The decision initially applies for one year, with a provision that the EU
may extend the mechanism to up to three years. In addition to providing funding and material for
humanitarian assistance in Ukraine, the EU has taken steps that unlock €20 billion in EU resources for
member states hosting refugees to use in meeting their housing, education, and health care needs. Non-EU
members such as the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and Norway have adopted national protection
mechanisms for Ukrainian refugees. As of November 15, 2022, more than 4.7 million Ukrainian refugees
had registered for temporary protection in European countries. Government authorities, humanitarian
organizations, local communities, and volunteers in European countries have been providing refugee
reception and assistance. Although many of the refugees have been welcomed, the willingness and
capacity
of European countries to host Ukrainian refugees over the long term is unclear.
U.N. Humanitarian Appeals
The U.N. humanitarian funding appeal (2022) for Ukraine seeks nearly $4.3 billion to address the acute
humanitarian needs of the most crisis-affected people within the country. The U.N. Regional Refugee
Response Plan
projects that 8.3 million Ukrainian refugees may need protection and assistance in
neighboring countries and seeks $1.85 billion to help support the most vulnerable refugees and asylum
seekers.
U.S. Response and Issues for Congress
According to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the United States provided more
than $351 million in humanitarian assistance to Ukraine between FY2014 and FY2021. In FY2022
Congress appropriated nearly $8.9 billion specifically for global humanitarian accounts within two
broader emergency supplemental appropriations bills for Ukraine. (Congress also authorized funds from
two other aid accounts for the response to long-term food insecurity related to the conflict.)
As of September 30, 2022, of the nearly $8.9 billion appropriated, USAID and the State Department had
obligated or disbursed more than $1.5 billion in humanitarian assistance, of which over $1 billion was for
the response in Ukraine and $499 million was to support refugees hosted by countries in the region. To
date, the agencies have not officially reported on humanitarian assistance obligations in countries outside
the region but affected by the situation in Ukraine.
While U.S. humanitarian assistance in response to the situation in Ukraine had bipartisan support in
FY2022, Members of Congress may continue to debate how such funds should be allocated, whether U.S.
assistance is being used efficiently and effectively, and whether enacted funding is sufficient to support
U.S. objectives. Members may also
 monitor the pace and levels of disbursed versus appropriated funds;
 conduct oversight of delivery challenges, including those associated with access and
security conditions, as well as civilian protection and violations of IHL; and
 assess the needs of countries hosting refugees from Ukraine, and the appropriate division
of responsibility between the EU, the United States, and other donor countries.


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Author Information

Rhoda Margesson
Derek E. Mix
Specialist in International Humanitarian Policy
Specialist in European Affairs





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IN11882 · VERSION 6 · UPDATED