- Pakistan reopens Punjab schools after smog improves
- All Black fly-half Plummer to join French side Clermont
- Stock markets retreat ahead of Nvidia earnings
- Ford to cut 4,000 jobs in Europe
- As Trump returns, China seizes chance for climate mantle
- Spurs appeal against length of Bentancur ban for Son slur
- French comedian faces victims of drug-fuelled car crash
- Focus purely on Springboks, not future, insists under-fire Wales coach Gatland
- Ukraine criticises Western allies for embassy closures
- One Direction stars attend Liam Payne's funeral in UK
- French farmers lift border blockade after talks with PM
- US envoy heading to Israel to press for truce with Hezbollah
- Uganda opposition figure Besigye appears in military court
- General strike in Greece against cost of living
- UN nuclear chief welcomes Iran's 'concrete step' on uranium stockpile
- Floods to shave 0.2 percentage points off Spain's growth
- Argentina's Contepomi makes one change for France Test
- 'Steep climb' ahead as clock ticks on stalled climate talks
- Gatland changes four for Wales clash with South Africa
- 'Sport will have the last word' as WRC title goes down to the wire in Japan
- Western powers move to censure Iran at UN nuclear meet
- US envoy presses Israel-Hezbollah truce bid in Lebanon visit
- 'No controversy' around Alldritt exclusion for Argentina Test
- Stock markets gain, dollar higher before Nvidia earnings
- New WHO financing mechanism put to the test
- Besigye kidnapping: Uganda president's doctor turned rival
- Star K-pop producer of NewJeans quits after legal spat with BTS agency
- 'Eternal' Nadal leaves legacy as he retires from tennis
- Vieira takes over at struggling Gerona
- Australia's Kerevi banned for Morgan tackle
- Bellamy defies 'lunatic' reputation to inspire Wales revival
- Kremlin says US 'doing everything' to prolong 'war' in Ukraine
- Magritte painting nets auction record of $121 million
- Markets fluctuate as traders weigh geopolitical tensions
- N. Korea's latest weapon? Bombarding South with noise
- 'Kidnapped' Uganda opposition figure Besigye to appear at military court: lawyer
- Asian markets fluctuate as traders weigh geopolitical tensions
- 'An inauspicious day': the landmines ruining Myanmar lives
- UN to vote again on Gaza ceasefire, US plans unclear
- Japan's manga powerhouse 'Dragon Ball' turns 40
- Japanese, Koreans bottom of global love life survey
- Son blames 'mistakes' after South Korea held by Palestine in qualifier
- Japan ramps up tech ambitions with $65 bn for AI, chips
- Lights, action, melodrama! Silent films get new reel at London haven
- Myanmar led world in landmine victims in 2023: monitor
- ICC to sentence Timbuktu war criminal
- Ugandan opposition figure Besigye 'kidnapped', says wife
- Australia's Jason Day eyes more major glory after resurgence
- Machu Picchu security boosted after visitors spread human ashes
- Popovic hails Australia character in 'crazy' World Cup qualifier
RBGPF | -0.91% | 59.65 | $ | |
RIO | 0.21% | 62.56 | $ | |
BTI | 0.03% | 36.94 | $ | |
RELX | -0.86% | 44.905 | $ | |
AZN | -0.14% | 63.71 | $ | |
BP | -0.38% | 28.98 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.17% | 24.606 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.75% | 6.64 | $ | |
GSK | -0.34% | 33.345 | $ | |
NGG | -0.85% | 63.045 | $ | |
BCC | -0.52% | 137.465 | $ | |
JRI | 0% | 13.26 | $ | |
BCE | -0.55% | 27.16 | $ | |
VOD | 0.22% | 8.94 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.18% | 24.3 | $ | |
SCS | -0.04% | 13.085 | $ |
Behind the frontlines, Ukrainians find world of ways to help
Inside a packed warehouse in war-torn Ukraine, 35-year-old volunteer Roman Kolobochok said his friend on the frontline needed a sniper scope and he was going to find him one.
His friend had messaged him a website link for the telescopic lens he needed, and he was in the middle of ordering one from the United States.
In times of war, everybody should contribute with their best skill, said the veteran scout in the western region of Lviv.
"If you're a good hustler, you should do it," he said.
Standing between shelves stuffed high with donations from across the world, the improvised logistician is just one of a flurry of volunteers across Ukraine applying a range of talents to help.
Before the war, Kolobochok headed the souvenir department of a restaurant chain, but also travelled to the US through his job as a medical courier for a Ukraine-based surrogacy company, he said.
After Russia invaded on February 24, he asked his bosses at the restaurant business to borrow a corner of their warehouse.
Today, a team of fellow scouts receive requests for aid from across the country on a messaging app, then carefully match them up with available supplies on a multicoloured spread sheet.
The storehouse shelves are stacked with everything from sleeping bags and tents, to flour, coffee drinks, medical gloves and soap. In a medicine section, insulin sits in the fridge.
- Boots and chainsaws -
In recent days, the scouts have dispatched humanitarian and medical aid to the capital Kyiv, to the eastern city of Kharkiv and Mykolaiv near the Black Sea, Kolobochok says.
But with around 50 fellow scouts now fighting the Russians, his team are also actively looking for night-vision goggles, GPS systems, and army food ration packs.
The response has been overwhelming, he says.
Strangers are making donations and the Spanish scouts have sent in truckloads of aid. One American even took time off from work in Texas to fly to Philadelphia, where he picked up 100 trauma first aid kits he had bought and then drove them to a New York airport.
In just days, they managed to raise enough funds to buy a drone.
"The world is supporting us," Kolobochok said.
At a different storage point in the city of Lviv, fellow scout Anastasiia Sokhatska stood amid piles of home-made camouflage nets, packs of mineral water, tactical boots, flags and a couple of boxed chainsaws for combatants to build hideouts.
When the army needs something, she says, she and fellow volunteers fundraise on social media, collect the supplies, and then make sure they are delivered.
"I need to help. This is my country," she said, as beside her two young men packed up bags.
Earlier the same day, she had learned that a close friend due to celebrate his wedding this summer had been deployed very close to the Russian frontier.
"I just don't have the possibility to do nothing," said the 26-year-old, who used to work in the IT sector.
Being a woman has also been an asset.
Ukrainian men of fighting age are not allowed to leave Ukraine, but women can drive back and forth across the nearby Polish border, ferrying in donated goods and equipment.
"I go there because I'm a woman, and I can just go abroad," she said.
- Theatre turned shelter -
But it is not only scouts helping behind the frontlines.
When a huge wave of families escaping fighting arrived in Lviv at the start of the conflict, everybody pitched in however they could.
At the Les Kurbas Theatre in the city centre, actress and singer Natalia Rybka-Parkhomenko organised bedding for more than a dozen displaced people from her home city of Kharkiv to sleep on stage.
At another make-shift shelter housing hundreds of evacuees, veterinary student Dasha Bondarenko, 19, has for weeks been helping to check in new arrivals and find them fresh clothes.
When wedding organiser and taxi business owner Pavlo Bodnar, 29, could not get into the army, he headed out to volunteer at the train station.
He obtained a rare permit to drive his car during night-time curfew, and now offers free rides to people fleeing war, or even returning from abroad, when they arrive on the platform after 10 pm.
"I organised people who have cars because I'm in the car business," he said.
Now "I have my own fleet of people who can transport people during curfew."
Ch.P.Lewis--AT