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World

More than 140,000 flee Ukraine in 24 hours: UN

Newly arrived refugees seek assistance from Polish army soldiers after crossing the border from Ukraine into Poland at the Medyka border crossing, eastern Poland, on Wednesday. (Photo: AFP)

The number of refugees fleeing Ukraine increased by more than 140,000 in 24 hours, according to United Nations figures issued Wednesday, with more than 2.15 million now having fled since Russia invaded on Feb 24.

- 2,155,271 refugees -

UNHCR, the UN's refugee agency, recorded 2,155,271 refugees on its dedicated website -- 143,959 more than the previous count on Tuesday.

"Behind the monolithic statistics are two million stories of separation, anguish, and loss," UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi said.

Families have been "senselessly ripped apart", plunged into "despair and unimaginable suffering" by the "brutal war", he said.

Authorities and the UN expect the flow to intensify as the Russian army advances deeper into Ukraine, particularly as it approaches the capital, Kyiv.

Before Russia invaded, more than 37 million people lived in Ukrainian territory under the control of the central government.

Besides those who have left, an unknown number have been displaced from their homes within the country.

Here is a breakdown of where refugees from Ukraine are, according to the UN Refugee Agency:

- Poland -

More than half of those who have fled Ukraine are now in Poland, with the UNHCR saying 1,294,903 refugees are now in the country.

Poland has championed the cause of Ukrainian refugees. The government has set up reception centres and charities have mobilised in a massive aid effort, helped by the estimated 1.5 million Ukrainians already living in the EU member state.

- Elsewhere in Europe -

Some 235,745 people who have fled Ukraine have now moved beyond neighbouring states to other European countries, according to the UNHCR.

- Hungary -

Some 203,222 refugees are now in Hungary -- nearly 10 percent of the total who have fled Ukraine. The number was up 11,874 on Tuesday's figure.

The country has five border crossings with Ukraine and several border towns, including Zahony, have turned public buildings into relief centres, where Hungarian civilians are offering food or assistance.

- Slovakia -

Across Ukraine's shortest border, some 153,303 refugees are now in Slovakia.

- Russia -

The UNHCR says the number of refugees who have crossed Ukraine's longest border into Russia since the invasion is 99,300.

An additional 96,000 people moved to Russia from the separatist eastern Donetsk and Lugansk regions between February 18 and 23, in the days before the Russian invasion, according to the UN refugee agency.

- Romania -

Some 85,444 refugees from Ukraine are now in Romania. Two camps have been set up, one in Sighetu Marmatiei and the other in Siret.

- Moldova -

Some 82,762 refugees were now in Moldova, according to figures updated to the end of Sunday, though many thousands more have passed through the non-EU state on their way to other countries.

By the end of Sunday, Moldova had welcomed 259,000 refugees coming from Ukraine, including 230,000 Ukrainians.

"Over 147,000 Ukrainian refugees have since then proceeded to Romania," UNHCR said.

- Belarus -

Some 592 refugees had made it to Belarus, according to UNCHR.

- Germany -

Some 80,035 Ukrainian refugees have been registered in Germany as of Wednesday, a German interior ministry spokesperson said

- Enerhodar -

A convoy of evacuees left the Ukrainian city of Enerhodar through a "humanitarian corridor" on Wednesday after a temporary ceasefire was agreed with Russian forces, Enerhodar Mayor Dmytro Orlov said in a statement on social media.

The city is the site of Europe's largest nuclear power station of its kind. The Russian assault on the area raised alarm bells last week when parts of the plant's facility were set ablaze. The plant remains under Russian control.

The mayor said mostly women and children, the elderly, left the city."

- Kherson -

Members of Russia's National Guard have detained more than 400 people in Ukraine's Kherson oblast who protested the occupation of their hometowns by Russian forces, Ukraine’s military high command said on Wednesday.

"Due to the furious resistance of the residents of Kherson, the occupiers are attempting to introduce an administrative-police regime," it said in a statement.

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