Hem
Johan, frivillig i Ukraina. Arkivbild. (Christine Olsson/TT)

Johan i Ukraina: ”Nästan ingenting kommer in”

Att stödet till Ukraina minskat märks tydligt, säger svenske Johan, som levererar materiel till fronten som frivillig.

– Nästan ingenting kommer in. Det har minskat med 90 procent, tror jag, säger han till TT.

Enligt Johan kan en frivilligorganisation som vid krigets början förmedlade en halv miljon kronor i månaden i dag få in så lite som 50 000 under samma tid. Trots det är omvärldens civila stöd och frivilligarbete fortsatt viktigt för de stridande i Ukraina, säger han.

– Jag vet att jag släcker skogsbränder med brandsläckare och sätter plåster på stora sår. Men hälften av det man levererar är att de blir sedda och får en kram av någon som åkt från ett annat land. Just där och då gör det skillnad.

Ryska frivillga uppges ha gått över till Ukraina
bakgrund
 
Ukrainska frivilligförband
Wikipedia (en)
Ukrainian volunteer battalions (Ukrainian: Добровольчі батальйони, romanized: Dobrovolchi bataliony, more formally Добровольчі військові формування України, Dobrovolchi viiskovi formuvannia Ukrainy, 'Volunteer military formations of Ukraine', or abbreviated Добробати, Dobrobaty) were militias and paramilitary groups mobilized as a response to the perceived state of weakness and unwillingness of the regular Armed Forces to counter rising separatism in spring 2014. They trace their origins to the "Maidan Self-Defense" militias formed during the Euromaidan in 2013. The earliest of these volunteer units were later formalized into military, special police and paramilitary formations in a response to the Russian military intervention in Ukraine. Most of the formations were formed or placed under command of the Ministry of Internal Affairs — as "Special Tasks Patrol Police" — and Ministry of Defence — as "Territorial defence battalions". A minority of battalions were independent of state control. Most of the battalions initially didn't receive money from the government and were self-funded; some were backed by Ukrainian oligarchs while others received donations or started internet crowdfunding campaigns.As of September 2014, 37 volunteer battalions had taken an active part in the battles of the war in Donbas. Some of the battalion fighters are former Euromaidan activists, but their social background are highly diverse. They included students and military officers. They enjoyed a high level of support in Ukrainian society, ranked second among the most respected institutions in the country. However, their close ties with oligarchs raised fears of the volunteer formations becoming politicized or turning into private armies. Ordered to leave the front lines in 2015, the volunteer battalion phenomenon was largely over within a year of its beginning. Most units continued as fully integrated as units of either the Ukrainian Army or the National Guard of Ukraine.
Omni är politiskt obundna och oberoende. Vi strävar efter att ge fler perspektiv på nyheterna. Har du frågor eller synpunkter kring vår rapportering? Kontakta redaktionen