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Russian Invasion Creates Europe’s Worst Refugee Crisis Since WW2

Russian Invasion Creates Europe’s Worst Refugee Crisis Since WW2 - Photo/Image

The invasion of Ukraine by Russian Forces on February 24 has created the worst refugee crisis in Europe since the end of the World War 2.

Over 1.5 million people have fled Ukraine to neighbouring countries in what has been described by the head of the UN refugee agency as the fastest-growing refugee crisis Europe  has faced since the Second World War.

“More than 1.5 million refugees from Ukraine have crossed into neighbouring countries in 10 days – the fastest-growing refugee crisis in Europe since World War II,” Filippo Grandi, the head of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), said in a tweet yesterday.

UN refugee agency chief said a million people fled the country in the first seven days of Russia’s invasion.

“In just seven days we have witnessed the exodus of one million refugees from Ukraine to neighbouring countries,” Mr Grandi said on Twitter.

A precise update on the figures has not been given yet, according to the Associated Press but Mr Grandi is currently visiting countries that have borders with Ukraine.

The UNHCR reported that numbers had crossed the million mark at midnight on 2 March, according to the agency’s spokesperson Joung-ah Ghedini-Williams.

At the time, the UNHCR said the exodus was responsible for more than 2 per cent of Ukraine’s population being on the move in under a week.

News of the jump in the number of refugees came as a second attempt at evacuating citizens from the two Ukrainian cities of Mariupol and Volnovakha was due to begin at midday local time.

A number of Ukraine’s neighbours have been welcoming the growing number of people fleeing from the country.

Slovakia, Romania, Poland, Moldova and Hungary have each accepted a large number of people. Poland has taken in more than 650,000, the lion’s share of refugees fleeing Ukraine, while Moldova has taken in more than 96,000 people.

The UK has been accused by France of “lacking humanity” in dealing with a cohort of refugees who thronged the French port city of Calais. At least 150 Ukrainians looking to be reunited with their families in the UK were turned away and asked to obtain visas at UK consulates in Paris or Brussels, in what French interior minister Gerald Darmanin called a “completely unsuitable” response to refugees “in distress”.

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