US aid freeze puts at risk Ukraine’s wartime help for frontline evacuees
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[February 05, 2025]
By HANNA ARHIROVA
PAVLOHRAD, Ukraine (AP) — In what used to be the concert hall in this
town in eastern Ukraine, cots are arranged on stage. Instead of music,
the room is filled with the muffled sobs of local people driven from
their homes by fighting in the country’s almost three-year war with
Russia.
The Russian army’s recent advances have engulfed towns and villages in
the area. The Pavlohrad concert hall was requisitioned as a temporary
center for local civilians fleeing the relentless Russian bombardment.
“It’s good here. There’s food, warmth, and a place to wash,” said
83-year-old Kateryna Odraha, who lived through the Nazi German
occupation of her village during World War II.
That refuge may now be in peril.
The shelter costs the equivalent of $7,000 a month to run, and 60% of
that was being covered by U.S. funds sent to help Ukraine.
President Donald Trump’s decision last week to freeze for 90 days the
humanitarian aid that the United States provides to countries overseas
was felt in places far from Washington, including here, a few kilometers
from the front line in eastern Ukraine.
Trump’s decision immediately halted thousands of U.S.-funded
humanitarian, development and security programs. The consequences have
rippled across the world.
“This news was abrupt and unexpected,” said Illia Novikov, the
coordinator of the Pavlohrad transit center, which is run by the charity
organization Relief Coordination Center. “At this moment, we have no
idea what the future holds.”
The U.S. funding covered fuel for evacuation vehicles, salaries for aid
workers, legal and psychological support, and tickets to help evacuees
reach safer locations, he said.
Usually about 60 people pass through the shelter each day, but when the
Russian bombardment worsens, that can climb to more than 200, according
to Novikov.
Many people heading here have spent months living in their basement
without electricity, running water or enough food.
Vasyl Odraha, 58, remained in his local village for months, even as
artillery fire and Russian guided bomb strikes became more frequent as
the war moved closer.
He said he initially believed that Trump would stop the war within 24
hours of taking office, as he had promised during his election campaign.
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“We pinned our hopes on Trump’s election,” he said, sitting on a cot
beside his 83-year-old mother.
When the fighting didn’t stop, and the front line moved to within less
than 3 kilometers (2 miles) of where they lived, they fled at dawn.
“If we hadn’t left, we would have died that very night,” said Kateryna
Odraha.
Across Ukraine, many other sectors are reeling from the aid freeze,
which places additional strain on Ukraine’s stretched wartime finances.
Energy projects, veteran support programs, psychological helplines,
cybersecurity, health care, independent media, and even border
infrastructure projects have been affected. The aid was intended to help
cushion the war’s impact.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says his government expects
$300-400 million in aid to be cut. Most of that was for the energy
sector that has been targeted by Russia.
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Ukraine hopes to make up the shortfall from European sources of aid or
internal ones, Zelenskyy said.
The World Health Organization, a U.N. agency which Trump wants the U.S.
to leave, launched an emergency appeal Tuesday to raise $110 million for
its humanitarian response in Ukraine where it said almost 13 million
people are “in dire need” of assistance.
“The humanitarian crisis in Ukraine has reached a scale of undeniable
severity,” the WHO said in a statement.
In the latest devastating Russian attack on a civilian area, authorities
said a ballistic missile smashed into an administrative building in
downtown Izium, a city in Ukraine's northeastern Kharkiv region, killing
five people and injuring 50 others, including three children.
U.S. military aid has not been frozen, according to Zelenskyy, but
Ukraine has received only about 42% of the money approved by Congress.
There is no clear sign the war might be close to ending, and that means
Ukrainian civilians will need more help.
“Evacuations will continue for a long time,” Novikov, the transit
center’s coordinator, said. “There may be new front lines, new affected
communities, so we must be prepared to keep providing assistance.”
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Associated Press journalists Samya Kullab, Susie Blann and Illia Novikov
in Kyiv contributed.
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