The Cabinet of Ministers approved the procedure for identifying and returning children deported or forcibly displaced as a result of Russia's armed aggression against Ukraine.
The UN Committee recognized the forced imposition of Russian citizenship on Crimean residents and the transfer of Ukrainian citizens to Russia to serve their sentences as a violation of human rights.
Ukraine is considering introducing mandatory courses on international humanitarian law in secondary schools and for civil servants to raise awareness of human rights protection during armed conflicts.
The State Register of Sanctions contains data on 10,085 individuals and 7,125 legal entities subject to Ukraine's restrictive measures.
Ukraine has returned a 17-year-old Ukrainian girl illegally deported by Russia.
Maksym, a 5-year-old boy who was separated from his parents due to the Russian occupation in Zaporizhzhia region, was safely returned to his parents with the assistance of the Ministry of Reintegration and the Ukrainian Child Rights Network.
Kharkiv region has begun forced evacuation of families with children from 47 frontline settlements near the Russian border for security reasons.
Ukraine may introduce a unified electronic register for keeping personal files of students who have left and are studying abroad.
IDPs with disabilities will receive their payments retroactively, starting in March, even if their applications are processed in May.
Fraudsters create fake links under the guise of financial assistance from international donors, such as IOM Ukraine, encouraging people to enter personal and payment information, which is a fraudulent practice.
The Ministry of Reintegration's hotline, which consists of 36 operators working around the clock, has processed more than 850,000 calls from Ukrainians since mid-2012 to address crisis issues faced by internally displaced persons, including status and benefits, as well as payments to families of prisoners of war.
Oil prices rose above $85 per barrel for Brent crude and around $81 for WTI after Ukrainian drones damaged russian refineries.
An educational hub with classrooms, living quarters and recreational areas for young people from the war-affected areas of Ukraine has been opened in Lviv.
The Warrior's Home municipal institution in Ivano-Frankivsk has launched the Defender's Family Helper project, which aims to provide free assistance in minor household repairs to families of military personnel.
A mobile pharmacy has been launched in Mykolaiv Oblast to provide access to medicines, including those under the Affordable Medicines program, for residents of five frontline settlements.
Due to the security situation, forced evacuation of children was introduced in four settlements of Donetsk region. It is noted that a total of 28 children are to be evacuated with their parents or other legal representatives.
In April, Ukraine launches a training program for candidates running for public office in the territories liberated from Russian occupation.
The Ukrainian government has approved a bill to restore state power in the temporarily occupied territory of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea.
The Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine has supported a draft law that will create legal preconditions for the resumption of the work of state authorities and local self-government bodies in the temporarily occupied territory of Crimea.
Two teenage sisters have finally been reunited with their mother in Ukraine after being forced to live under Russian occupation in a village in Luhansk Oblast for almost two years.
Temporary certificates of Ukrainian citizenship will be issued to Ukrainian citizens who have lost their passports but reside in the territories occupied by Russia or in the territories where hostilities are taking place as part of a two-year pilot project.
The mother and 14-year-old sister of a recently released Ukrainian soldier were returned from the Russian-occupied Kherson region to Ukrainian-controlled territory with the assistance of the Ukrainian authorities.
Japan provides Ukraine with a $49. 4 million grant to rebuild housing infrastructure destroyed by Russia.
The Ministry of Reintegration, IOM, and regional military administrations signed memorandums to provide housing for about 6,000 war-affected people through the construction of 2,000 apartments at the expense of €72. 1 million allocated by Germany.
With the support of the European Union, housing for internally displaced persons is being arranged in Chernivtsi to meet their immediate needs.
With the help of the Ministry of Reintegration, a child who had been separated from his family for almost two years was returned to Ukraine from the occupied Zaporizhzhia region.
An international conference in Latvia discussed ways to return Ukrainian children deported by Russia with the participation of First Lady Olena Zelenska.