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Ursula von der Leyen: More than 10 billion euros raised for Ukraine at a donors’ conference

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Donors’ conference on Ukraine raises 10.1 billion euros in support of Russian-invaded country, European Commission president says in Warsaw Ursula von der Leyen.

“The people have finally promised 9.1 billion euros in the campaign (Stand up for Ukraine). In addition, the Commission, in cooperation with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (BERD), is adding another billion to the displaced in Ukraine. “So 10.1 billion euros,” said Ursula von der Leyen.

“Six hundred million will be given to Ukraine, to the Ukrainian authorities and partly to the United Nations,” von der Leyen said at a fundraising event for Ukraine in Warsaw.

“And 400 million euros will go to the front line countries that are doing such an excellent job and helping the refugees who are coming,” he added.

Poland today hosted a donors’ conference to help the more than 11 million people forced to flee their homes in Ukraine due to the Russian invasion and seek refuge in neighboring countries or internally displaced persons.

Full speed for war crimes tribunal

Earlier today, returning from Ukraine, Ursula von der Leyen stated that the atrocities revealed in Bouka are evidence of war crimes.

The commission’s president visited Ukraine on Friday to see the aftermath of Russian bombings in cities such as Bukhara.

“My instinct is, ‘If this is not a war crime, what is a war crime?’ “But I am a doctor and the lawyers must investigate it carefully,” von der Leyen told reporters on the train leaving Ukraine.

“I saw the photos, the Ukrainian prime minister showed them to me. To kill people while walking. We could also see with our own eyes that the disaster in the city is targeting the lives of citizens. The houses are not military targets, she said, referring to Boukas.

Yesterday, a team of medical examiners began the exhumation mass grave in Bouka.

The EU and other Western allies are helping Ukraine gather information on future war crimes prosecutions.

German Chancellor Olaf Solz went on the same wavelength, saying that “those who committed civilian deaths in Buca are guilty of war crimes and must be held accountable.”

“It’s something we can not forget,” he said, referring to civilian deaths in the city northwest of Kiev.

“We can not ignore the fact that this is a crime. “These are war crimes that we will not accept … those who committed them must be held accountable.”

After Russian troops withdrew from Bukha last week, Ukrainian officials say hundreds of civilians have been found dead.

A similar statement was made yesterday by the President of Germany, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who speaking to the German magazine Der Spiegel called for the establishment of a war crimes tribunal against Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

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