On 11 January, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in partnership with the European Union, Denmark and Sweden, opened a Recovery and Development Office in the war-torn community of Voznesensk in Mykolaiv Oblast.
The office will play a key role in a nationwide initiative led by the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities under the President of Ukraine to coordinate international cooperation at the local level.
“Active military hostilities resulted in the destruction in Voznesensk of more than 700 residential buildings, health care and educational facilities, and crucial transport infrastructure, such as a road bridge and two railway bridges,” says a press release by UNDP Ukraine. “Currently, the community hosts 37,400 residents, including 3,700 internally displaced people.”
The newly established Recovery and Development Office, which features advanced facilities and expert advisors, will provide support for the community’s recovery and development. As a communications hub, it will bring together local authorities, international organisations, media, civil society, and the business sector.
To date, UNDP, with EU support, has helped to open ten recovery and development offices, four of which operate at the oblast level in Kharkiv and Mykolaiv, and two in Dnipro (supporting Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts). At the community level, six additional offices have been set up in Sumy, Nizhyn (Chernihiv Oblast), Mykolaiv, Pervomaiskiy (Kharkiv Oblast), Kamianske (Dnipropetrovsk Oblast), and Voznesensk (Mykolaiv Oblast).
Find out more
News
-
Seven key border crossing points in Ukraine equipped with uninterruptible power supply systems thanks to EU project
-
With EU support, Ukrzaliznytsia opens modernised train inspection point on the border with Poland at Mostyska II station
-
European Commission disburses first €3 billion of its part of G7 loan to Ukraine
-
EU announces €148 million humanitarian aid package for Ukraine
-
EU-funded reconstruction of Russian-destroyed kindergarten starts in Makariv, Ukraine
-
EIB provides €4.7 million for waste management improvements at Lviv’s Hrybovychi landfill