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UK announces $31 million social recovery aid package for Ukraine

UK announces $31 million social recovery aid package for Ukraine

Yahoo08-02-2025

The UK is allocating 25 million pounds ($31 million) to launch a social recovery initiative in Ukraine called the SPIRIT program, the British government announced on Feb. 8.
Announced during Foreign Secretary David Lammy's visit to Kyiv, the program is a collaboration between the UK, Ukraine's government, UNICEF, and the World Bank.
Through the funding, the support will 'help Ukraine to meet the varied needs of the population, and accelerate Ukraine's Euro-Atlantic pathway,' the statement read.
The SPIRIT initiative will concentrate on three key priorities: expanding access to quality social services, with at least 10,000 families in ten regions benefiting; establishing an Office of Social Recovery under Ukraine's Ministry of Social Policy to coordinate reforms and international partnerships; and launching cross-sectoral initiatives in health, economy, and social services to support vulnerable groups.
The program will also provide small grants and training for 100 civil society and local community representatives to expand service delivery and create a sustainable social support system.
With a focus on women, families with children, people with disabilities, the elderly, and veterans, SPIRIT aims to strengthen Ukraine's institutional capacity to manage the social and economic challenges caused by the war.
'Investing in Ukraine's social systems is an investment in Ukraine's people - and we know that Ukraine's people are its greatest resource,' Martin Harris, UK Ambassador to Ukraine, said of the program.
Read also: Ukraine expecting important decisions at Ramstein meeting, Foreign Ministry says
We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.

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Royal letters, famous golfers and rehearsed pitches: The tips and tricks to a successful Trump meeting
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Royal letters, famous golfers and rehearsed pitches: The tips and tricks to a successful Trump meeting

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'What Zelenskyy went through was a huge lesson learned for other world leaders. Without a doubt, everyone's been studying that really closely,' said another American who engages with the Ukrainian government on how to manage U.S. ties. Japan's new prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, the second head of state invited to the White House after Trump's inauguration, prepared for his early February visit by studying graphics showing Japan as the top foreign investor in the U.S. and brainstorming with aides about what demands Trump might make, Ishiba's aides said at the time. When asked by reporters during his Oval Office sit-down what he thought of the president, Ishiba said, through a translator, that Trump's television career made him 'intimidating' but that he was 'powerful' and 'sincere' in person. 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It proved effective in lowering the temperature: Trump complimented Carney's initial statement and, shortly after the prime minister left the White House, described the conversation as a 'great meeting' with 'no tension.' The person said they gave the same advice to Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre before his White House visit in late April.'The reason the Zelenskyy meeting went so badly was Zelenskyy was trying to spar like an equal,' they said. 'That is not allowed in the meeting.' The risk of entering Trump's lion's den can be worth the reward for world leaders. Trump pared back his musings of acquiring Canada as a 51st state after the meeting with Carney. Finnish President Alexander Stubb, who traveled to Mar-a-Lago in late March just to play a round of golf with Trump, later convinced the U.S. president to reverse a decision on building icebreakers and purchase those ships from Finland. 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