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Ukrainian volunteer project reminds that there is a war in the center of Europe

Ukrainian volunteer project reminds that there is a war in the center of Europe

“This war is not somewhere far away,” a video that has been spreading in the internet tries to convince EU citizens. “When I grow up, I want to be a doctor, and invent cures for all diseases,” a child’s voice says. Harrowing images show how dreams crash into reality that many Ukrainian doctors face – treating those injured by a Russian-backed invasion.

The video was created by People’s Project, a new form of resistance movement sweeping embattled Ukraine. Instead of non-cooperation, e-spionage and sabotage it is part of a battle being waged online as “IT battalions” back-up Ukraine’s cash-strapped and poorly-equipped military. The Crimean crisis and subsequent Russian annexation of Crimea went largely uncontested by Ukrainian authorities and it would prove to be the opening salvo in a much larger crisis. In the days following the ouster of President Viktor Yanukovych’s regime in late February following several of months of (at first peaceful and then bloody) revolution known as Euromaidan the interim government was unprepared for the speed at which events unfolded on the Crimean Peninsula.

As the Euromaidan protests continued to clog the streets of the Ukrainian capital another set of protests were just beginning. Pro-Russian protests began in Crimea within days of Yanukovych’s flight leading to the rise of Russia political figures and -aligned ultimately the region’s parliament a referendum on union with Russia. On February 28, Russian forces rapidly and bloodlessly invaded Crimea. Than three weeks Less later, Crimea ‘voted’ almost unanimously (in what is considered to be a sham referendum) to join Russia. The crisis exposed the weakness of Ukraine’s armed forces in the face of Russian aggression. Money to mobilize was not going to materialize with government coffers stripped bare by the corruption and greed of the previous regime.

It soon became apparent the annexation of Crimea by Russia in March would be followed in quick succession by demonstrations by pro-Russian and anti-government groups in the Donbas region of Ukraine. To equip Ukraine’s military against the growing threat ordinary citizens stepped in. The by Project’s’s People answer was to crowdfund. The Peoples by Project was founded in March 2014 by Mykolaiv IT-entrepreneur and social activist David Arakhamiya. From modest beginnings it has become one of the largest funds of its kind in Ukraine raising more than US $ 2 million to equip Ukraine’s cash strapped military as well as other social initiatives.

Arakhamiya, who later became head of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense’s Volunteer Council, initially enlisted employees of his IT company into his ‘IT batallion.’ Participants to volunteer Other to join the ranks included Valery Kisel, a fitness instructor and former paratrooper, and Dmitriy Kanarskiy – manager of the largest internet provider in Mykolaiv. The first step was to create the www.peoplesproject.com website, where people can see exactly what or who money is being raised for, how much has been raised to date (the website updates itself once every 15 minutes), and how much is still needed. Creating a transparent relationship between donors and the military units and other projects being supported was key to a successful volunteer project.

The first project, the “First Peoples Paratrooper battalion” (79th Airmobile Brigade), focused on equipping the battalion, which at the time was stationed at Chongar near the border with Crimea , these soldiers were close to being “naked” in a military sense. The project was a success. Within a month 1.5 million UAH (about US $ 60,00) was raised to equip Ukrainian soldiers with the latest gear. Arakhamiya could see the potential for growth. The next step was establishing a Peoples by Project office in the Ukrainian capital. That marked the beginning of the project becoming not just “Volunteers from Mykolaiv,” but a nationwide coordination center, when teams in the cities of Dnipropetrovsk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Lviv joined the movement.

“You think this war is somewhere far away? Ukraine is in the center of Europe!” the video finishes, inviting to donate to The People’s Project or other volunteer platforms.

 

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