Mise à jour

Le gouvernement français alloue 4 millions d’euros en soutien aux femmes et filles affectées par la guerre en Ukraine

calendar_today10 Janvier 2023

Olesia était chez elle lorsque sa ville de Boutcha, dans la région de Kiev, a été envahie par les troupes russes. Le traumatisme de la guerre l’a amenée à demander l’aide des équipes psychosociales mobiles de l’UNFPA, qui ont pu travailler dans sa zone lorsque la ville est repassée sous contrôle ukrainien. © UNFPA Ukraine / Volodymyr Ovsiuchenko
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Actualités

En Ukraine, en pleine guerre, une maternité mobile permet des accouchements et propose des soins de santé essentiels

calendar_today07 Décembre 2022

Des médecins d’un centre médical d’urgence travaillent dans des zones reprises de la région de Kharkiv (Ukraine) pour fournir des soins de santé sexuelle et reproductive aux femmes et filles qui en ont urgemment besoin. © UNFPA/Andriy Kravchenko
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Actualités

En Moldavie, les réfugiées ukrainiennes bénéficient d’un accès garanti à des services complets de santé sexuelle et reproductive

calendar_today29 Juin 2022

Olga se repose avec sa fille après un accouchement par césarienne à la maternité de Balti, en République de Moldavie. Olga était enceinte de sept mois lorsqu’elle est arrivée en avion avec son fils de quatre ans Timofey depuis sa ville natale d’Ochakiv, près de la ville portuaire d’Odessa, dans le sud de l’Ukraine. @ UNFPA Moldavie
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Actualités

L’assistance humanitaire en Ukraine soutenue par des échanges collaboratifs de données

calendar_today09 Juin 2022

Des réfugiées ukrainiennes reçoivent une aide psychosociale en Moldavie. © UNFPA/Siegfried Modola
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Diaporama

100 jours de guerre en Ukraine : des vies en suspens

calendar_today02 Juin 2022

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It’s been 100 days since Russia’s recent invasion of Ukraine, with far more grim tallies: lives lost, families separated, homes and infrastructure destroyed, futures upended, dreams ended. More than 6.9 million people – an estimated 90 per cent of them women and children – have fled Ukraine to surrounding countries and beyond with an additional 8 million displaced within the country, contributing to another devastating milestone: over 100 million people forcibly displaced globally, according to the United Nations Refugee Agency. One of those neighbouring countries is the Republic of Moldova (population: around 2.7 million), which has become home for now for some 87,000 refugees.

Conflict and crisis exact a massive toll on women and girls – particularly the displaced – who are vulnerable to sexual violence, exploitation and abuse. Pregnant women have given birth underground or within health systems under duress. Many women, including the elderly, have had to rebuild lives in unfamiliar lands without partners who could not leave home. Here are five of them, who share how their lives changed since that fateful day of 24 February and how their new lives in the Republic of Moldova are unfolding.

Marina fled Ukraine with her children, a 15-year-old daughter and a 9-year-old son, at the start of the conflict. Their father stayed behind. Before the war, her son, Timur, was busy planning a summer with his grandfather, while Marina was trying to reconnect with her daughter. Now her children are struggling to cope in a new country. “I feel that my daughter is becoming even more distant every day,” Marina said. “She misses her friends and wants her life back. Marina is seeing a psychologist at UNFPA’s youth-friendly health clinic in Chișinău to talk about how she can support her children – and herself – at this difficult time. “We are all just waiting for the war to end,” she said, “and to go back home.” © UNFPA Moldova

Olga fled from Ochakiv, close to the southern port city of Odessa, with her four-year-old son, Timofey. They are hosted by a family in Balti, where Olga gave birth to her daughter at the local hospital without her partner. “Our New Year’s resolution was to buy a new home. We planned to celebrate the birth of our baby girl and our son turning five at our new house with our family and friends.” Then the bombings started. “Today everything has changed,” she said, “and nothing is certain.” © UNFPA Moldova

“The war has changed my plans. I have reassessed my values,” said Yelena from Nikolaevo, Ukraine. “I was so busy with my daily life and problems, but it turns out these are not important at all. What is important is family, their safety and our support for each other.” Yelena has not given up hope of returning home – she dreams of buying a house in the countryside living a quieter life after so much upheaval. She sees a counsellor at one of UNFPA’s nine Orange Safe Spaces providing psychosocial support in the Republic of Moldova, which is helping her deal with the trauma of a disrupted present and an uncertain future. For now, her dreams must wait. © UNFPA Moldova

“Our farm was our life,” said Margo, a 20-year-old veterinarian from the Odessa region who fled her home with her mother, younger siblings and best friend, Svetlana, when the bombs began to fall. Youth is already a fraught time when the young are figuring out their lives, but their confusion and insecurities have soared since the war began: “My friends and I are unsure of what the future holds.” Margo is trying to hold fast to her aspiration of changing careers and becoming a make-up artist by training online at an Orange Safe Space for young people. © UNFPA Moldova

Irina, who hails from Kyiv, compares herself to a piece of stretched string, describing the weight of emotions and fear she has been carrying. “When driving to Moldova, I sped like crazy because I was terrified to be under the open sky, scared to be in the wrong place at the wrong time,” she recalled. Irina is one of hundreds of women who visit the Orange Safe Space at the Moldexpo Centre in Chișinău, which is currently accommodating refugee families. There she can unburden herself to a counsellor and try to find the strength to keep moving forward. “The sky,” she said, “will never be the same for me.”  © UNFPA Moldova

In addition to establishing safe spaces for women and youth in the Republic of Moldova, UNFPA has delivered over 10 metric tons of reproductive supplies, medicines and equipment for emergency obstetric care, sexually transmitted infections treatment and clinical management of rape to hospitals; signed an agreement with the Republic of Moldova’s National Health Insurance Company to ensure free sexual and reproductive health care for refugees; delivered post-rape kits to all emergency units, maternity wards and youth-friendly health clinics; and helped train more than 1,200 health professionals in the clinical management of rape and on sexual and reproductive health in crises. 

Actualités

En Ukraine, les refuges créés pour les survivantes de violences domestiques hébergent désormais des survivantes de la guerre

calendar_today09 Mai 2022

Iryna et ses deux enfants ont trouvé refuge dans une chambre de crise. © UNFPA Ukraine
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Actualités

Guerre en Ukraine : des répercussions sur les ressources alimentaires dans le monde entier, des vies menacées

calendar_today27 Avril 2022

Une jeune mère et son bébé sont pesés avant d’être examinés pour malnutrition, à l’hôpital général de Marib (soutenu par l’UNFPA) au Yémen. Le pays dépend beaucoup des importations de nourriture. L’envol des prix des denrées a fait exploser le nombre de personnes ayant besoin d’assistance alimentaire : leur nombre est passé de 16,2 millions en 2021 à 19 millions en 2022. © ONU/Giles Clarke
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En Ukraine, l’intensité du conflit provoque un exode massif de personnes qui cherchent refuge
01 Mar 2022

Plus de 500 000 personnes, dont une large majorité de femmes et d’enfants, affluent dans les pays voisins de l’Ukraine pour échapper aux hostilités provoquées par l’offensive militaire de la Fédération de Russie. Ce chiffre augmente de façon exponentielle, selon le Haut-Commissaire de l’ONU pour les réfugiés, et pourrait atteindre plusieurs millions en quelques semaines.

Au point de passage de Palanca, près de la frontière moldavo-ukrainienne, la foule a commencé à se masser à 6 heures du matin, avant même le lever du jour. La police aux frontières et les bénévoles sont présents pour aider femmes et enfants à quitter l’Ukraine munis de nourriture et de matériel.

 

© UNFPA Moldovie/Eduard Bîzgu
Une foule de personnes est rassemblée.
Liza, 24, had five minutes to pack before leaving her home and her husband in Odessa. Male citizens between the ages of 18 - 60 cannot leave the country, but the couple hopes to reunite in Israel where Liza has extended family. Their daughter, Veronica, turned four months old the day they left for the Republic of Moldova on 27 February. Though Liza was traveling in her pajamas, she made sure to pack a yellow dress to celebrate Veronica’s birthday. “Even under these circumstances,” she said, “we will find a way to have beautiful memories.”
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu
More than half a million people have left Ukraine and more than 100,000 have been displaced within the country, according to the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNCHR). Besides the Republic of Moldova, where about 40,000 have gone (as of 28 February), they are seeking refuge in neighbouring countries including Poland, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia. Lines to cross at some international borders can reach 15 kilometres and can take as long as three days.
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu
Maria, 25, is a single mother of a 1-year-old son who left her parents and two brothers behind in Odessa. She packed enough diapers and food for one week.
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu
Elena, 61, and Sergey Zincenco, 65, are a retired couple making their way to France where their daughter is expecting them. They spent 18 hours on the road from their home in Mykolaiv until reaching the border. Ms. Zincenco is devastated by the war especially for young families that must separate even as men are more engaged as husbands and fathers these days.
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu
A tent camp/triage centre at Palanca near the Moldova-Ukraine crossing point has 300 beds.
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu
UNFPA has distributed 1,300 dignity kits to Ukrainians in placement centres across the Republic of Moldova, like this one at the football club Zimbru in the capital city of Chișinău. UNFPA is also providing information on reproductive health services and referring pregnant women to medical care units. Of the nearly 100,000 people who have crossed into the Republic of Moldova, about half remain in the country.
© UNFPA Moldova/Adriana Bîzgu
Svetlana, 31, crossed the border with her three children, including six-month-old Artiom. Her husband, Sasha, could not enter with them. She will stay in her mother’s native village in Moldova, where she never thought she would end up. But she is hopeful as people are warm and welcoming and will stay as long as needed to live in safety and peace.
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu
As of 6 March, 235,000 people from Ukraine have entered the Republic of Moldova, with 123,000 moving on to other destinations. There are more than 70 refugee centres across the country, including this one at the Manej Sport Arena in Chișinău, which was housing more than 650 people when UNFPA visited.
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu
Nagir and her two-month-old granddaughter, also named Nagir, at the Manej Sport Arena refugee centre. Her family of 10 planned to make their way to their country of origin, Azerbaijan.
© UNFPA Moldova/Eduard Bîzgu

Actualités

Pour beaucoup de femmes en Ukraine, échapper au conflit ne garantit pas d’échapper à la violence

calendar_today07 Juin 2017

Les équipes mobiles de l’UNFPA sont entrées en relation avec des milliers victimes de violences basées sur le genre. © UNFPA/Maks Levin
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