List of foreign aid to Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian War

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  Russia
  Ukraine
  Countries sending military equipment to Ukraine
  Russia
  Ukraine
  Countries sending foreign aid, including humanitarian aid to Ukraine

This is a list of foreign aid, including military aid, humanitarian aid and financial aid, provided to Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian War.

Provided by sovereign states[edit]

Country Military aid Financial aid
(including non-earmarked for humanitarian purposes)
Humanitarian aid
(including earmarked funds)
 Albania Minister of Defense Niko Peleshi said on 18 March that Albania had sent military equipment to Ukraine. He added that Albanian troops are present in Latvia, and the country is ready to deploy more if need be.[1]
 Argentina The Argentine Government has sent the following humanitarian aid to Ukraine:
  • A special deployment of the White Helmets humanitarian taskforce, to help provide assistance to refugees on the Ukrainian-Polish border.[2]
  • 1,500 t (1,500 long tons; 1,700 short tons) of foodstuffs, medicine and clothing, as of 4 March 2022.[3]
  • More humanitarian assistance will be supplied in the coming days.[3] The government of the city of Buenos Aires has also announced its own humanitarian aid package to Ukraine.[4]
 Australia The Australian Government approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • $25 million worth of non-lethal military equipment on 25 February 2022.[5][6]
  • $50 million worth of lethal military equipment ("rockets and ammunitions") on 28 February 2022.[7][8][9]
  • AU$21 million to the Ukrainian Armed Forces on 20 March 2022[10]
AU$30 million on 20 March 2022:[10]

At least 70,000 tons of thermal coal for Ukrainian power stations on 20 March 2022[10]

 Austria Chancellor Karl Nehammer approved military aid for Ukraine:
 Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev approved aid for Ukraine:
  • €5 million of medical supplies and equipment.[14]
  • Free fuel for ambulances and vehicles of the State Emergency Service at SOCAR petrol stations.[15]
 Belgium The Belgian Government announced that it will send Ukraine the following:
 Brazil The Brazilian Air Force sent 11.6 tons[clarification needed] of donations with food and water purifiers from human donations that was destined to Warsaw, Poland, while rescuing Brazilians who are leaving the European country.[20]
 Bulgaria
  • Unspecified number of clothes, shoes, tents, sheets, blankets.[21]
 Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • Conducted more than 600 courses[22] and trained more than 33,000 Ukrainian troops since September 2015 as part of Operation Unifier (extended until the end of March 2025).[23]
  • Non-lethal military equipment on 3 February 2022.[24]
  • $7.8 million worth of lethal military equipment on 14 February2022.[25][26]
  • 100 Carl Gustaf 8.4cm recoilless rifle launchers (M2 version) with 2,000 rounds.[27][28]
  • $25 million of non-lethal military equipment on 27 February 2022.[29]
  • 400,000 meal packs, and 1,600 fragmentation vests on 2 March 2022.[30]
  • 4,500 M72 LAW light anti-tank weapons, 7,500 hand grenades, $1 million for the purchase of high resolution satellite imagery was announced on 3 March 2022.[31]
  • $50 million military aid package in specialized equipment, including Canadian-made cameras for surveillance drones announced on 9 March 2022.[32]
  • Loan of $120 million to the Government of Ukraine announced on 21 January 2022.[33]
  • Additional loan of up to $500 million to the Government of Ukraine announced on 14 February 2022 and offer of a technical assistance grant of up to $6 million to support the loan's implementation.[33]
  • Government of Canada to match up to $10 million in donations from Canadians in response to humanitarian crisis in Ukraine announced on 25 February 2022.[34] The amount of donations to the Canadian Red Cross' Ukraine Humanitarian Crisis Appeal that will be matched by the Government of Canada was increased to $30 million on 10 March 2022.[35]
  • $100 million in humanitarian assistance announced on 1 March 2022 to address humanitarian needs on the ground in Ukraine and neighbouring countries.[36]
 China
  • The Chinese Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, said on 9 March that the Chinese Red Cross would provide humanitarian assistance worth 5 million yuan ($791,540) to Ukraine, consisting of daily necessities.[37]
  • Additional 10 million Yuan ($1.57 million) of humanitarian assistance offered on 21 March 2022.[38]
 Croatia

The Croatian Minister of Defence, Mario Banožić, approved military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine:

  • 124 million HRK (€16.5 million) worth of lethal military equipment, including infantry weapons and protective equipment.[39][40]
  • On 3 March 2022, Government of Croatia approved 1.8 million HRK ($264,000/€238,000) of urgent humanitarian aid to Moldova, to help Ukrainian refugees. This aid includes electricity aggregators, tents, blankets, and masks.[41]
  • On 17 March 2022, The Croatian Medical Chamber (HLK) donated 300,000 HRK in humanitarian aid to buy medical products and equipment for Ukrainian people and doctors.[42]
 Czech Republic Czech Ministry of Defense approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • 36.6 million korunas ($1.6 million) worth of lethal military equipment (4006 152-mm artillery shells) on 26 January 2022.[43][44]
  • 188 million korunas ($8.3 million) worth of lethal military equipment on 26 February 2022.[45][46] Including:
  • 400 million korunas ($17.7 million) worth of lethal military equipment on 27 February 2022.[48][49] Including 10 anti-air Strela-2 launchers with 160 missiles.[50]
  • 61 million korunas ($2.7 million) worth of lethal and medical military equipment between 2 and 9 March 2022.[51]
Government of the Czech Republic approved humanitarian aid on 25 February 2022, including:[52][53]
  • 1.5 billion korunas ($66 million) to provide refugees with accommodation, food and hygiene products.
  • 300 million korunas ($13.2 million) for humanitarian aid for civilians in Ukraine.
 Denmark
  • 2,000 bulletproof vests, 700 first-aid field kits on 26 February 2022.[54]
  • 2,700 M72 LAW light anti-tank weapons, 300 incomplete FIM-92 Stinger anti-aircraft systems (to be assembled and made operational by the US before shipping) on 27 February 2022.[55][56]
  • 1 mobile hospital, 50 million DKK for humanitarian aid on 26 February 2022.[57]
  • 150 million DKK for humanitarian aid on 28 February 2022.[58]
  • 1,700 treatments against tetanus on 3 March 2022 (requested via WHO).[59]
 Estonia
  • Total €220 million worth of military aid provided by 11 March 2022:[60]
    • Javelin anti-tank weapons systems arrived on 18 February 2022.[61]
    • Additional Javelins, munitions, medical equipment, personal equipment, and 25,000 field rations announced on 25 February 2022.[62]
    • 9 D-30 howitzers, originally put forward on 30 December 2021, but stalled due to needing approval from previous owners Germany and Finland. Approvals were received on 26 and 27 February 2022 respectively.[63][64][65]
 Finland
  • 2,000 bulletproof vests, 2,000 composite helmets, 100 stretchers, and equipment for two emergency medical care stations announced on 27 February 2022.[66]
  • 2,500 assault rifles with 150,000 cartridges, 1,500 M72 LAW light anti-tank weapons, and 70,000 field rations announced on 28 February 2022.[67]
Finland's humanitarian aid to Ukraine in 2014–2022 will be €86 million.[68]
 France President Emmanuel Macron approved:
  • Defensive weapons and fuel, announced on 26 February 2022.[69][70] Specifics voluntarily kept confidential but include:[71]
    • Protective equipment
    • Fuel
    • ~10 MILAN anti-tank systems[72]
    • Munitions
€300 million ($337.56 million), on 25 February 2022.[73]
  • 33 t (32 long tons; 36 short tons) of emergency equipment (tents, medicine, food) delivered on 1 March 2022[74][75]
  • 30 t (30 long tons; 33 short tons) of humanitarian aid through Moldova[74]
  • 2 airplanes full of medicine through Poland[74]
  • 8 t (7.9 long tons; 8.8 short tons) of medical equipment delivered by 2 March 2022[75]
 Germany Chancellor Olaf Scholz approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • 5,000 helmets, on 25 February 2022.[76][77]
  • 1,000 light anti-tank weapons (Panzerfaust 3), 500 Stinger missiles, on 26 February 2022, breaking a long tradition of banning weapon exports to active warzones.[78][79]
  • 2,700 man-portable air-defense missile system (9K32 Strela-2m, on 3 March 2022.[80][81]
  • €1.83 billion in bilateral aid since 2014[82][83]
  • approx. €4 billion via the EU in the form of grants and loans since 2014.[82]
  • €240 million via the EU in loans in 2022.[82]
  • One mobile field hospital worth €5.3 million and associated training of medical staff in February 2022[84]
  • Shipment of large donations from Germany (including 440 tons of food) in March 2022[85]
 Greece
 Hungary
  • 28 t (28 long tons; 31 short tons) of food and 100,000 l (22,000 imp gal; 26,000 US gal) of vehicle fuel on 28 February 2022.[88]
 Iceland The Government of Iceland decided to offer to transport military equipment to Ukraine for other countries, as Iceland does not have a military of its own. An Air Atlanta Icelandic freighter has been chartered and used to deliver military equipment from Slovenia to Ukraine.[89]
 India
  • Medicines, medical equipment.[90][91]
  • 100 Tents, 2,500 blankets on 3 March 2022.[92]
 Ireland The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Simon Coveney, approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • €9 million worth of non-lethal military equipment on 27 February 2022.[93][94][95]
 Israel
  • 100 tons[clarification needed] of humanitarian aid, including 17 tons[clarification needed] of medicines and medical equipment, water purification systems and emergency water supply kits, and thousands of tents, blankets, sleeping bags, and coats.[96]
  • Medical team of 40 doctors and paramedics, with medical and humanitarian equipment at the Moldova–Ukraine border to provide medical assistance to refugees.[97]
 Italy The Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Luigi Di Maio, approved military aid for Ukraine:

The Council of Ministers passed a law allowing Minister of Defence – after deliberation by the parliament – to send military aid to Ukraine on 1 March 2022,[101] in particular: an undisclosed number of mortars, Stinger missiles, M2 Browning, light machine guns, anti-tank guided missiles and military equipment.[102][103]

 Japan Prime Minister Fumio Kishida approved military aid for Ukraine: $200 million on 28 February 2022.[106][107][clarification needed] Tents, winter clothing, food items, hygiene products, cameras and power generators.[104]
 Kazakhstan Decision 1 March to send unspecified amount through flights scheduled for 3 March 2022.[108]
 Latvia
 Lithuania
  • Stinger anti-aircraft missile systems and ammunition on 13 February 2022.[114]
 Luxembourg
  • 100 NLAW anti-tank weapons, jeeps, and 15 military tents announced on 28 February 2022.[115]
 Netherlands Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation Liesje Schreinemacher, Minister of Foreign Affairs Wopke Hoekstra and Minister of Defence Kajsa Ollongren approved military aid for Ukraine on 18 February 2022 for a total value of 7.4 million:[116][117]

Schreinemacher, Hoekstra and Ollongren approved military aid for Ukraine on 27 February 2022:[118][119][120]

 New Zealand Pledge of $5NZ million partially for the purchase of non-lethal military equipment through NATO announced on 21 March 2022. Donation of surplus NZDF equipment:[121]
  • 473 helmets
  • 1066 bullet-proof vests
  • 571 camouflage vests
  • Initial pledge of $2NZ million to support health facilities on the ground and providing basic needs – such as food and hygiene items.[122]
 Norway Flown to Poland on the afternoon of 28 February 2022:[123]
  • 5,000 helmets, 1,500 bullet-proof vests and 1,000 gas masks.
  • 2,000 sleeping bags, 10,000 sleeping pads and 15,000 field rations.[124]

The Norwegian government announced the following aid on 28 February flown to Poland on 3 March 2022:[125]

  • 2,000 M72 LAW (light anti tank weapon), breaking a 60-year ban on weapon exports to active warzones.[126] Left wing parties Rødt[127] and SV[128] protested the policy change.
Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre approved humanitarian aid for Ukraine:
 Pakistan 15 tons of humanitarian assistance which include emergency medicines, electro-medical equipment, winter bedding and food items, delivered on 15 March 2022.[130][131]
 Poland
 Portugal President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • Undisclosed amount of "military equipment such as (ballistic) vests, (ballistic) helmets, night vision goggles, grenades and ammunition of different calibers, complete portable radios, analogue repeaters and G3 automatic rifles", on 26 February 2022.[139][140][141]
 Republic of Artsakh The Republic of Artsakh sent 14 tons of humanitarian aid to Ukraine.[142]
 Romania President Klaus Iohannis approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • €3 million ($3.3 million) worth of non-lethal military equipment on 28 February 2022.[143][70]
    • 2,000 combat helmets.[144]
    • 2,000 bulletproof vests.[144]
    • Fuel, ammunition, food, water, and medicines.[143]
Romania is also offering to treat the wounded in its 11 military hospitals.[144]
 Slovakia
  • 10 million l (2,200,000 imp gal; 2,600,000 US gal) of petrol.
  • 2.6 million l (570,000 imp gal; 690,000 US gal) of kerosene jet fuel for aircraft.
  • 12,000 rounds of 120 mm ammunition.[145]
  • 486 air defence systems, 100 air defence launchers and anti-tank missiles, altogether worth €4.5 million[146]
 Slovenia The Slovenian Government approved aid for Ukraine in form of automatic rifles, ammunition and helmets.[147] The Slovenian Government sent €100,000 to the ICRC, earmarked for the Ukrainian refugees[148] Slovenia sent to Ukraine 200 sleeping bags, 200 pairs of rubber boots, ten diesel generators, 250,000 latex gloves, 250,000 nitryl gloves and 600,000 facemasks.[149]
 South Korea

The Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs approved military aid for Ukraine:

  • An unspecified amount of cash announced on 8 March.[153][154]
  • Bilateral ODA to be increased by designating Ukraine as key 중점협력국 "Priority Cooperation Country" for years 2021–2025.[150][151]
  • US$10 million worth of humanitarian assistance announced on 28 February 2022,[155] amounting to 40 tons of medical supplies which prioritizes Ukraine's specific requests including first aid kits, portable oxygen generators, blankets, respirators, etc.[153][154]
  • On 28 February, offered temporary work and residency permits to 3,843 Ukrainian expats living in Korea. The permit is of indeterminate length and lasts until the situation in Ukraine "stabilizes". The offer includes amnesty for Ukrainians whose period of stay has already expired.[156]
  • Announced plans to open a new KOICA office in Ukraine.[150]
  • Market release of some of the petroleum which Korea holds as part of its strategic reserve, as well as re-selling LNG to Europe as part of "international efforts to help Ukraine."[157][158][150]
 Spain
  • 1,370 Instalaza C-90 anti-tank grenade launchers, an unspecified number of light machine guns and 700,000 bullets on 2 March 2022.[159]
20 tons[clarification needed] of humanitarian aid worth more than €150,000, on 27 February 2022.[160][161][70]
 Sweden 27 February 2022: military aid for Ukraine which was approved by the Riksdag on the 28 February:[162] 27 February 2022: 100 million Swedish krona towards humanitarian aid in Ukraine distributed as follows:[165][166]
  Switzerland
  • 35 t (34 long tons; 39 short tons) of aid and medical supplies delivered to Kyiv by the Swiss Humanitarian Aid Unit on 6 March 2022.[167][168]
 Taiwan
 Thailand
  • 2 million baht (~$60,000) towards humanitarian aid in Ukraine [171]
 Turkey Unspecified number of blankets, tents, sleeping bags, cleaning and hygiene materials as well as five specialists, one mobile kitchen and one disaster response vehicle.[173]
 United Kingdom
  • Trained 22,000 Ukrainian troops since 2015 as part of Operational Orbital.[174]
  • Delivered "thousands" of NLAW and Javelin anti-armour weapons.[175] Stated to be over 4,000 as of 16 March 2022.[176]
  • Sale of two Sandown-class minehunters.[177]
  • £1.7bn agreement to support the acquisition of eight missile craft and one frigate.[178]
  • Deployment of RC-135W Rivet Joint surveillance aircraft to provide information on size and position of Russian forces.[179]
  • Unspecified further military aid, on 28 February 2022.[180]
  • Unspecified number of Javelin anti-tank missiles, on 10 March 2022.[181]
  • Starstreak man-portable air-defense systems.[182]
  • ISTAR (intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition, and reconnaissance) support, both standalone and in partnership with the US.[183]
Increased the amount of financial support available to Ukraine.[184]

UK allocates an additional $100m directly to the Ukrainian government budget to mitigate financial pressures created by Russia's unprovoked and illegal invasion.[185]

  • £100 million of humanitarian aid announced on 23 February 2022.[186]
  • £40 million additional humanitarian aid announced on 27 February 2022.[187]
  • Additional £80 million in aid to help Ukraine deal with humanitarian crisis on 1 March 2022.[188]
  • £4 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine on 28 February 2022.[189]
  • £4 million combined package of financial and humanitarian aid, announced on 1 March 2022.[190]
  • UK announced "supplies of rations, medical equipment and other non-lethal military aid will also be increased" on 10 March 2022.[181]
  • On 14 March 2022, the UK government announced plans to provide vital energy support to Ukraine through the Ukraine Electricity Network Support Taskforce. The UK donated more than 500 mobile generators.[191]
 Bailiwick of Jersey £360,000 in humanitarian aid, announced on 2 March 2022.[192]
 Bailiwick of Guernsey £500,000 in humanitarian aid announced on 2 March 2022.[193][194] Donation of firefighting gear on 8 March 2022.[195]
 United States President Barack Obama approved military aid for Ukraine:
  • $5 million of non-lethal military equipment on 4 June 2014.[196][197][198]
  • $75 million of non-lethal military equipment on 11 March 2015.[199][200][201]

President Donald Trump approved military aid for Ukraine:

President Joe Biden approved military aid for Ukraine:

  • 90 tons[clarification needed] of lethal military equipment on 22 January 2021.[214][215]
  • $125 million of lethal military equipment on 1 March 2021.[216][217]
  • $150 million of lethal military equipment on 11 June 2021.[218][219]
  • $60 million of lethal military equipment on 1 September 2021.[220][221][222]
  • $350 million of lethal military equipment, on 25 February 2022.[223][224][225]
  • $200 million of arms and equipments, including Javelin anti-tank missiles and Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, on 12 March 2022.[226]
  • The White House said that before 16 March 2022, aid sent by the US included:[227]
    • 600 Stinger systems
    • About 2,600 Javelin systems
    • Five Mil Mi-17 helicopters
    • Three patrol boats
    • Four counter-artillery and counter-unmanned aerial system tracking radars
    • Four counter-mortar radar systems
    • 200 grenade launchers and ammunition
    • 200 shotguns
    • 200 machine guns
    • Nearly 40 million rounds of small arms ammunition
    • Over 1 million grenade, mortar and artillery rounds
    • 70 Humvees and other vehicles
    • Unspecified amounts of secure communications, electronic warfare detection systems, body armor, helmets and other tactical gear, military medical equipment, explosive ordnance disposal and demining equipment
    • Satellite imagery and analysis capability.
  • $800 million in military equipment announced on 16 March 2022, funded from the $13.6 billion in aid signed on 15 March. The package includes:[228]
    • 2,000 Javelin anti-tank weapons
    • 1,000 light anti-armor weapons
    • 6,000 AT4 anti-armor systems
    • 800 Stinger anti-aircraft systems
    • 100 Switchblade drones[229]
    • 100 grenade launchers
    • 5,000 rifles
    • 1,000 pistols
    • 400 machine guns
    • 400 shotguns
    • Over 20 million rounds of small arms ammunition, grenade launcher rounds and mortar rounds
    • 25,000 sets of body armor and
    • 25,000 helmets

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken assured Ukraine's foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba of unspecified further military aid, on 1 March 2022.[230][231]

Obama:

Trump:

Biden:

  • $200 million on 19 January 2022.[238][239][240]
  • $13.6 billion in combined military and humanitarian aid for "responding to the situation in Ukraine", via the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022 on 15 March 2022.[241][242]
Obama:
 Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan sent 28 tons of medical equipment to Ukraine as part of humaintarian aid.[246]

Provided by intergovernmental organizations[edit]

Intergovernmental organization Aid provided
 EU
  • €450 million worth of lethal weapons, announced on 27 February 2022.[247]
  • €50 million worth of non-lethal aid, announced on 27 February 2022.[248]
  • €500 million in humanitarian aid, announced on 1 March 2022.[249]
  • Provision of satellite intelligence, notably through the European Union Satellite Centre, as part of the 1 March 2022 resolution on the Russian aggression against Ukraine.[250]

Provided by companies[edit]

More than 100 companies have taken actions in support of Ukraine, including boycotts, in February and March 2022.

Company Aid provided Date provided
Microsoft

Deployed patches against a targeted "wiper" malware used against Ukrainian authorities, placing their Threat Intelligence Center on high alert for such attacks.[251]

23 February

FTX

Provided the equivalent of $25 in FTX cryptocurrency to each Ukrainian citizen.[252][253]

24 February

Google

Provided $2M in donated ads to help those affected find resources.[254][253]

25 February

KFC

Opened their kitchens to prepare food for those in need, especially for the military and hospitals.[255]

26 February

McDonald's

Donated food to local councils to be distributed to those in need, including water, vegetables, fruit, eggs, rolls, and salads.[255]

27 February

Airbnb
  • Provided free short-term housing for up to 100,000 Ukrainian refugees.[256]
  • Waived fees for Ukrainian Airbnb hosts so that foreign donors could book rentals, without staying there, as a direct donation to hosts.[257][253]

28 February

SpaceX

28 February to 18 March

Lego

110 million DKK for humanitarian aid via Red Cross, Save the Children and UNICEF.[263]

1 March

Snap

Pledged $15 million in humanitarian aid.[264]

1 March

Amazon

Pledged $10 million in aid; using its logistics capability for supplies and cybersecurity expertise.[264]

2 March

Kakao
  • Donated ₩4.2 billion (approx. $3.65 million) worth of Klay cryptocurrency to UNICEF.[265]
  • Separately, various fundraising campaigns through Together Kakao have gathered ₩430 million (approx. $374,000) as of 5 March.[265]

2 ~ 5 March

Wizz Air

Provided 100,000 airline tickets free of charge, to refugees, for short-distance flights from Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania in March 2022.[266]

2 March

LMG Tactical

South Korean military gear manufacturer LMG Tactical donated bulletproof vests and ammunition pouches directly to the Ukrainian Embassy in Seoul.[267]

3 March

Meta Platforms

Committed $15 million to support humanitarian efforts in Ukraine and neighboring countries.[268]

3 March

Pearl Abyss

Provided ₩100 million (approx. $87,000) in emergency medical relief funds[269]

3 March

SK Group

Provided ₩1.2 billion (approx. $1 million)[270]

3 March

AMMO, Inc. Has pledged to donate 1 million rounds of ammunition worth roughly $700k to Ukraine after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's famous statement "I need ammunition, not a ride".[271]

4 March

Medi-Tox
  • South Korean biopharmaceutical company Medi-Tox provided ₩100 million (approx. $87,000) to the Ukrainian Embassy in Seoul.[272]
  • Donated ₩200 million (approx. $174,000) worth of biopharmaceutical goods to Ukrainian company EMET for free.[272]

4 March

Polkadot and VeChain Polkadot and VeChain developers also donated $13M for Ukraine for their help. Based on data collected, the amount of tracked crypto donations that are sent to the Ukrainian government, military, and charities has surpassed (approx.$37 million). These amounts include Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), Tether (USDT), and some other altcoins.[273] 4 March
Vista Outdoor Pledged to donate 1 million rounds of small-caliber ammunition to Ukraine after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's famous statement "I need ammunition, not a ride".[274]

4 March

Grammarly Ukrainian-founded Grammarly stated to donate all the profits it made in Russia and Belarus since 2014. It plans to create a $5 million fund, in addition to already donated $1 million to Ukrainian humanitarian communities.[275]

5 March

Samsung Electronics
  • Donated $5 million to the Ukrainian Red Cross Society and other charities.[276]
  • Donated $1 million worth of personal electronics and white goods to the people of Ukraine.[276]
  • Separately, a private fundraising campaign by Samsung Electronics employees will donate additional funds.[276]

5 March

Binance Donated $10 million for humanitarian needs[277] and donated $2.5 Million to UNICEF on 7 March to help Ukrainian children.[278]

7 March

Hyundai Motors

Donated $1 million to the Red Cross earmarked as emergency relief for Ukraine.[279]

8 March

POSCO International
  • Donated $500,000 to the Red Cross earmarked as emergency relief for Ukraine.[280]
  • Donated medical supplies directly to Ukrainian hospitals.[280]

8 March

TYM
  • Donated 10 tractors along with other farming equipment to the Ukrainian Embassy in Seoul.[281]
  • Donated ₩100 million (approx. $87,000) in cash for Ukrainian humanitarian relief.[281]

8 March

Provided by other[edit]

Appealed and pledged by United Nations[edit]

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs made an appeal for $1.7 billion in aid to the 2022 Ukrainian refugee crisis – including $1.1 billion in humanitarian aid to Ukraine – on 1 March 2022.[308] United Nations's under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths announced that "$1.5 billion has been pledged".[309]

See also[edit]

Invasion[edit]

Reactions[edit]

Sanctions, boycotts, censorship and cyberwarfare[edit]

Humanitarian crisis[edit]

Equipment[edit]

References[edit]

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External links[edit]