- Malala Yousafzai 'overwhelmed and happy' to be back in Pakistan
- 'Education apartheid': schooling in crisis in Pakistan
- Smart glasses enter new era with sleeker designs, lower prices
- Supreme Court looks poised to uphold TikTok ban
- 2024 hottest recorded year, crossed global warming limit
- Germany reports foot-and-mouth disease in water buffalo
- US hikes reward for Maduro arrest after 'illegitimate' swearing-in
- Robots set to move beyond factory as AI advances
- Pro-Russian disinformation makes its Bluesky debut
- UK gas reserves 'concerningly low', warns biggest supplier
- 2024 warmest year on record for mainland US: agency
- Meta policy reversal puts question mark on future of fact-checking
- Meta policy reversal puts question mark on furure of fact-checking
- Strong US jobs report sends stocks sliding, dollar rising
- US hiring beats expectations in December to cap solid year
- UK gas reserves 'concerningly low': Biggest supplier
- Global stocks mostly fall before US jobs data
- Ubisoft: the 'Assassin's Creed' maker targeted by suitors
- Stock markets drift lower as US jobs data looms
- Pakistan flight departs for Paris after EU ban lifted
- Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai to visit native Pakistan for girls' summit
- AI comes down from the cloud as chips get smarter
- Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
- Uruguay bucks 2024 global warming trend
- Last 2 years crossed 1.5C global warming limit: EU monitor
- Japan 'poop master' gives back to nature
- US Supreme Court to hear TikTok ban case
- US Fed's December rate cut should be its last for now: official
- Paris Hilton among celebrities to lose homes in LA fires
- Airbus boosts plane deliveries in 2024
- Ubisoft reviews restructuring options, postpones new Assassin's Creed
- Lamborghini sets new sales record amidst hybrid push
- Lebanon army chief Aoun becomes president after two-year vacancy
- US emissions stagnated in 2024, challenging climate goals: study
- Lebanon army chief short of required majority in first round of president vote
- Global stock markets mixed tracking US rates outlook
- Lebanon meets to finally elect president after two-year vacancy
- Celebrities flee Los Angeles fires, lose houses as Hollywood events scrapped
- Japan startup hopeful ahead of second moon launch
- Ukraine allies to hold last defence meet before Trump takes office
- Myanmar military adopts anti-junta fighters' drone tactics
- CES tech looks to help world's aging population
- Rubber tappers forge sustainable future in Amazon
- US astronauts upbeat seven months into eight-day mission
- Extreme weather, suburban sprawl fuel LA's wildfires
- Political chess or true beliefs? Zuckerberg's surprise Trump pivot
- US Fed officials concerned over 'stalled' disinflation, tariffs: minutes
- Celebrities flee Los Angeles fires as Hollywood events scrapped
- Several US Fed officials concerned over 'stalled' disinflation: minutes
- US tech titans ramp up pressure on EU
RBGPF | 100% | 60.49 | $ | |
NGG | -3.3% | 56.13 | $ | |
RIO | 0.36% | 58.84 | $ | |
GSK | -1.99% | 33.09 | $ | |
BCE | -2.92% | 22.96 | $ | |
BCC | -1.31% | 115.88 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.65% | 23.25 | $ | |
SCS | -3.01% | 10.97 | $ | |
AZN | 0.64% | 67.01 | $ | |
RELX | -0.86% | 46.37 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.42% | 7.07 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.79% | 22.92 | $ | |
BTI | -2.34% | 35.9 | $ | |
VOD | -1.99% | 8.05 | $ | |
BP | 0.54% | 31.29 | $ | |
JRI | -1.16% | 12.08 | $ |
Lviv's Art Palace turns Aid HQ for Ukrainians under the bombs
Lviv's imposing Art Palace buzzes from dawn to curfew with volunteers sorting through donations from Europe that are flooding into this west Ukrainian city.
A 36-tonne red lorry pulls into the car park, navigating the mounds of boxes and occasional electricity generator.
In the space of a few minutes, a human chain has formed to unload bags of garments from the truck: men's trousers, women's jackets, baby clothes.
Where is this mountain of goodwill going to?
"All over the place!" says Art Palace director Yuri Vyzniak.
The army and self-defence brigades manning the region's checkpoints will, of course, get a good proportion of the food.
But many ordinary Ukrainians also urgently need aid, including the tens of thousands who have flocked to this city near the border with Poland, some hoping to cross into the European Union.
"For example yesterday we sent out about 50 busloads of aid. We also sent out 40 tonnes of essential supplies to Odessa and, I think, about 10 tonnes to Kherson and Kyiv," says Vyniak, who remains dapper and dynamic despite fatigue.
The Aid HQ, as he calls it, was his idea. He set it up on the morning of February 24 -- "ie, two or three hours after the Russian occupation forces started bombing".
He sounds tired rather than proud.
- 'Independence first' -
The vast hall of the 9,000-square-metre (97,000-square-foot) building hums with volunteers bustling back and forth, occasionally refuelling en route from the vats of "vareniki" -- Ukranian ravioli -- doing the rounds among the workers.
Anyone who stops for a breather is instantly chastised.
Vyzniak commandeers Iryna Dudko to show us round.
In her past life -- before February 24 -- she was a shop assistant.
Now she has her hair scraped back in a ponytail and a bit of paper with "Volunteer" scrawled on it taped hastily to her chest.
"My job is the last thing on my mind at the moment. What we need most is our health. And our independence," she says.
Aid HQ -- a palatial faux Art Nouveau exhibition and cultural centre -- runs like clockwork.
Basement: medicines. Ground floor: food and a stand where displaced people can register their needs. First floor concert hall: children's clothes and toys. Second floor: supplies for newborn babies.
In the newborn section, a dozen women and a handful of men carefully fill black bin bags with packets of nappies, sorted by size. Behind them is a wall of nappies, two metres (6.5 feet) high.
Work slows when the curfew kicks in at 10 pm but it doesn't stop.
"People who have the right passes carry on through the night," Vyzniak says.
- Churches and hipsters -
Similar initiatives are popping up all over Lviv, a gutsy city which sees itself as the country's cultural capital.
Instead of drum and bass gigs and modern art displays, one arts venue in the city centre now houses a refugee reception centre. Some of the displaced sleep in the hipster barber's shop down the road.
"We've got 11 people her just now but we're expecting more from Kharkiv today," says coordinator Stepok. He returned to Lviv in 2020 after seven years in Vietnam and didn't expect then to be manning an emergency shelter for fellow Ukranians.
Help isn't just on hand for people fleeing the bombs. An elderly lady makes her way down the street on her way to the chemist's. A teenager stops her. "We've ordered your pills. They're there," she tells her.
In the Greek-Catholic church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, military chaplain Roman Mentukh is also fielding gifts of aid.
"It's very moving, especially when elderly people come in and you realise they're bringing us the only things they have left," the young man says.
Donations brought to the historic garrison church are destined for the country's soldiers and Mentukh accepts "everything but weapons".
A corner of the nave under the 17th-century oil paintings is piled with camouflage uniforms ready to dispatch to the front.
Mentukh's chokes up when he recounts how he celebrated mass with weeping parishioners on the morning of February 24 and says how proud of them he feels.
"Of course people panicked at first but now they're getting organised... They understand that we all need to be in this together to win this war."
Ch.Lefebvre--CPN