Ukraine Updates
April 26, 2024
Since just days after the war in Ukraine started in February 2022, PETA Germany and its partners have been risking it all to save animals in need. From flooding to missile strikes, Global Compassion Fund–backed teams have risked it all to help Ukraine’s animals. Meet some of the beautiful souls who now have a second chance at life because of your support.
Britney was cowering in an old barn, hiding from the intense gunfire of a new Russian assault in Eastern Ukraine, when PETA-supported rescuers swooped in to save her life. A severe condition caused by ticks had left her so frail and listless that she refused food and could barely even lift her head. Thanks to the care and rehabilitation provided by a PETA-supported clinic, Britney is now eating, walking, and well on the road to a better life—watch to see this sweet girl’s transformation!
Rescued in Ukraine: How PETA Is Helping Animals
Since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, PETA Germany and its partners have been building a robust network of animal rescuers, volunteers, and advocates to help as many animals there as they possibly can. You can support this work through PETA’s Global Compassion Fund.
Here’s how teams have moved mountains for animals in Ukraine since the onset of the war:
- They’ve created 1,300 safe spaces for housing animals in need, including dogs, cats, horses, sheep, goats, chickens, pigeons, geese, ducks, swans, and fish.
- PETA’s Global Compassion Fund helped establish a veterinary clinic in October 2022. Up to 130 seriously injured and ill animals can be operated on and given the best possible care every day.
- Every month, team members perform spay/neuter surgeries for around 150 animals to prevent thousands from being born on the streets, only to suffer and die there.
- Animals in Ukraine have received more than 3 million pounds of food and other provisions, despite conditions that often make deliveries difficult.
- All the animals in the project receive regular veterinary care. The ones who will be transported to Europe for adoption are quarantined and prepared for the journey in accordance with EU regulations. This takes 16 weeks per animal! Around 60% of the animals are reunited with their guardians who have fled, while the remaining 40% are transported to our partner shelters in Europe.
- Every day, 85 PETA-supported employees work on site to care for the animals there and rescue others.
- A total of 16,500 animals have been rescued so far!
Donate Now!
PETA’s Global Compassion Fund is supported exclusively by the contributions of kind individuals like you. Your gift is helping PETA entities and partners create positive, sustainable change in corners of the Earth where animals desperately need assistance—and may have no other hope.