People across the UK have been finding ways to help Ukrainians - both those who have fled the war and those who remain in the country. Here are a few examples we've picked up on.
A fleet of seven ambulances, stocked with medical supplies, will soon leave for Ukraine, from Cheltenham, in south-west England. They have been arranged by Khaled El Mayet, who raised £70,000 to purchase the former NHS vehicles. El Mayet and a team of volunteers will drive the vehicles to the Poland-Ukranian border, where they will be handed over to medical professionals for use in Ukraine.
The Tyne and Wear Fire and Rescue Service, in the north-east of England, has donated personal protective equipment, fire engines, thermal imaging cameras, generators, lighting, hoses and rescue equipment.
It is part of a nationwide effort by the National Fire Chiefs Council to provide support to those on the frontline.
Convoys of small vans, lorries and HGVs have travelled from Scotland to Poland, carrying essential items such as nappies, blankets and food to reception centres around the border with Ukraine.
Robert Dluzak and Piotr Dziedzic - both born in Poland, but now living in Eyemouth and Kelso - made the 1,500 mile journey to the small town of Hrubieszow, just a few miles from the Ukraine border.
Also in Scotland, pupils at Strathallan School near Perth organised a collection of beds and bedding that was transported on Friday to Grodzisk Mazowiecki, just outside Warsaw in Poland.
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2022-03-12 19:34:40Z
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