The Ukraine Conflict Has Now Displaced One Million People

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Ukraine Soldiers Checkpoint Eastern UkraineDavid Mdzinarishvili/ReutersUkrainian servicemen stand at a checkpoint near the town of Horlivka in eastern Ukraine, on Sept. 18, 2014.

LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - More than one million people have been driven from their homes by the conflict in Ukraine, hampering aid efforts and leaving the country on the verge of a humanitarian catastrophe, aid agencies said on Thursday.

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The number of people uprooted within Ukraine, 610,000, and of refugees who have fled to neighboring countries, 594,000, has more than tripled since August, figures from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) show.

Ukraine's pro-Moscow separatists signed a ceasefire agreement with the Ukrainian government in early September of 2014, raising hopes that an end to the conflict could be negotiated during the anticipated halt in fighting. Instead, fighting continued, including major combat surrounding the airport in Donetsk and repeated signs of Russian assistance for the rebels in Ukraine. The self-declared prime minister of the breakaway, pro-Russian Donestk People's Republic declared the cease-fire "over" on Oct 20.

With the ceasefire failing to halt combat, Eastern Ukraine's humanitarian situation has become increasingly dire. The UN said an estimated 5.2 million people in Ukraine were living in conflict zones, of whom 1.4 million were highly vulnerable and in need of assistance as they face financial problems, a lack of services and aid, and harsh winter conditions.

The conflict between Ukraine and pro-Russia separatists, killed more than 4,700 people last year and provoked the worst crisis in relations between Russia and the West since the Cold War.

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Denis Krivosheev, deputy director of Europe and Central Asia at Amnesty International, said residents in the separatist-controlled enclaves of Luhansk and Donetsk could barely afford food and medicines, especially vulnerable people such as pensioners.

"While it may be too early to call this a humanitarian catastrophe, it's clearly progressing in that direction," Krivosheev told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by email.

The provision of humanitarian aid was being hampered by pro-Kiev volunteer battalions that were increasingly preventing food and medicine from reaching those in need in eastern Ukraine, he said.

"Attempting to create unbearable conditions of life is a whole new ballgame... using starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is a war crime."

The battalions often act like "renegade gangs" and urgently need to be brought under control, Krivosheev added.

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Social benefits, including pensions, have also become a major concern for those in eastern Ukraine following Kiev's decision to transfer the payments to government-controlled areas, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said.

UNHCR spokesman William Spindler said those unable to leave their homes, such as the elderly and the sick, and people living in institutions were not receiving the help they needed.

The problem was made worse by the fact that humanitarian organizations had limited access to the areas controlled by armed groups fighting the government, he added.

With 1 million people now displaced, the fighting in Ukraine has led to one of the biggest violence-related displacements in recent decades in Europe. In 1998, 863,000 ethnic Albanians fled Kosovo as the Serbian army invaded the autonomous region, while the still-unresolved Ngarno-Karabkh conflict involving Armenia and Azerbaijan has displaced over a half-million people. 

(Reporting By Kieran Guilbert; Editing by Tim Pearce)

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