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Cities4Cities: a platform for European local governments to help their Ukrainian peers


With the Cities4Cities platform, Europe’s local and regional governments can already provide assistance to Ukrainian communities and their inhabitants.

This online tool, created with the support of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe, is a coordination platform: Ukrainian local and regional governments can voice their requests and needs, while their European peers can respond with their expertise and resources.

Mayors and other local and regional leaders are the first point of contact for residents, especially in time of war and crisis. This makes it all the more important that Ukraine’s local infrastructures are maintained in place and are able to address residents’ daily challenges.

The platform aim to simplify exchanges, address the needs of Ukrainian communities and build bridges, both in the immediate and in the long term, between European and Ukrainian municipalities.

Ukrainian local and regional governments have already started to provide information on their needs on the Cities4Cities platform. Register your local government and find out how you can contribute with your material aid and know-how.

The platform is supported by the Council of European Municipalities and Regions (CEMR), its Ukrainian association (AUC) and its German association (Deutscher Städtetag).

Solidarity with Ukraine

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Lithuania’s Ukmergė district municipality sends aid to its Ukrainian partner Korosten municipality


As part of our coverage of the local and regional dimensions of Russia’s war in Ukraine, CEMR is highlighting the help given by European municipalities and regions to their Ukrainian peers. We hope these stories inspire other local and regional governments to heighten their efforts to support Ukraine.

Ukmergė district municipality, in Lithuania, was among the first municipalities in the “Bridges of Trust” Initiative to provide help to their Ukrainian partner, Korosten in Zhytomyr Region. 

Korosten was attacked on 25 February when a Russian shell hit a residential building. At the beginning of March, Russian forces fired on a TV tower and checkpoints in the city, killing and wounding at least four. This was followed by an air strike on the city.

Ukmergė is helping to address the urgent needs of its partner through “Ukmergė-Ukraine” campaign, which has found a wide support among the local people and businesses.

The humanitarian help was sent for the first time on the 7th of March. It included hygiene products and non-perishable food. On the 1st April, a second cargo left Ukmergė municipality, with food packages, flour, groats, soups, sugar, canned vegetables and meat, hygiene products, medicines, clothing and shoes. In total, Korosten already received 5 tons of humanitarian aid from Ukmergė.

“Ukmergė district municipality sent us a very substantial help and we are currently in the process of creating individual packages which will be distributed to the internally displaced people.”, said deputy mayor of Korosten, Nataliia Chyzhevska. “We sincerely thank Ukmergė district and Lithuania for their help.”

The support campaign “Ukmergė-Ukraine” continues. The municipalities are also planning to sign a partnership agreement on 29 April 2022.

The two municipalities first met in November 2021, in the framework of the “Bridges of Trust” Initiative, implemented by the Council of European Municipalities and Regions, PLATFORMA and supported by the U-LEAD with Europe programme.

Ukraine – Bucha

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The Council of European Municipalities and Regions strongly condemns the atrocities committed in Bucha


The Council of European Municipalities and Regions (CEMR) has continuously expressed its full and unconditional support to the Ukrainian people and their local and regional elected representatives since the beginning of the Russian-led war in Ukraine. 

CEMR is horrified by the scenes of desolation and the atrocities that were witnessed following the liberation of the Kyiv region by the Ukrainian army and expresses its deepest condolences to the families of the victims. 

CEMR strongly condemns what could amount to war crimes committed by the Russian Federation, notably in the town of Bucha, North-East of Kyiv, where more than 410 Ukrainian civilians were killed. These abuses are part of a wider context of human rights violations committed by the Russian Federation army, including rape, summary executions, and unlawful use of violence against Ukrainian citizens. According to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, 1,417 civilians, including 121 children, have been officially killed in Ukraine – figures that are probably much higher in reality, according to the Office. 

Iryna Yarmolenko – Local elected Councillor of the City of Bucha, member of the CEMR Policy Committee, and a member of the CEMR Standing Committee for Gender Equality as a representative of the Association of Ukrainian Cities: 

“The massacre of peaceful civilians, rape of women, and brutal murders in Bucha, Irpin, and in many cities in Ukraine, are continually denied by the Russian military. I fled the war and I live in Poland now, I lost everything my house, my career, my dreams. It is hard to even imagine such horrific things happening in my own city where I used to organise events and training to promote green cities, gender equality, and strengthen young women’s rights.
With my colleagues, we continue to collect humanitarian aid and we count on the international community’s strong support.”

CEMR calls for an international investigation into the alleged war crimes committed in Ukraine in order to bring those responsible to justice and hold them accountable. Further sanctions must be taken as soon as possible.

CEMR reiterates its call on the Russian Federation to withdraw from the entire sovereign territory of Ukraine, including the Donbass region and Crimea.

Solidarity with Ukraine

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Clothing, medicine, food and other aid were sent to Novohuyvinske municipality


As part of our coverage of the local and regional dimensions of Russia’s war in Ukraine, CEMR is highlighting the help given by European municipalities and regions to their Ukrainian peers. We hope these stories inspire other local and regional governments to heighten their efforts to support Ukraine.

Lazdijai District Municipality (Lithuania) has provided humanitarian aid to Novohuyvinske, a municipality in northern Ukraine.  The Lithuanian partner sent 183 thermal clothes, 100 shoes and 100 sleeping bags, as well as medicines, non-perishable foods and hygiene products.

Novohuyvinske Village Council thanked Lazdijai District saying: “In this difficult time, we felt a reliable shoulder of help and support. It is in trials that strong and reliable relationships are born. Thank you partners, friends, colleagues! Our Victory is your Victory!”

The two partners first met in November 2021, in the framework of the “Bridges of Trust” Initiative, implemented by CEMR and PLATFORMA with the support of the U-LEAD with Europe Programme.

Solidarity with Ukraine

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Lithuania’s Šiauliai district municipality sends 11 tonnes of aid to the city of Dolyna


As part of our coverage of the local and regional dimensions of Russia’s war in Ukraine, CEMR is highlighting the help given by European municipalities and regions to their Ukrainian peers. We hope these stories inspire other local and regional governments to heighten their efforts to support Ukraine.

Šiauliai district municipality in Lithuania has given over 11 tonnes of humanitarian and material aid, worth around 100,000 euros, to its Ukrainian partner, the city of Dolyna in southwest Ukraine.

The fully loaded lorry included long-lasting and nutritious food, high-quality overalls, knee pads, shoes, chainsaws and various tools. The shipment also included equipment for Ukraine’s soldiers, such as optical devices, radios, batteries, flashlights, medicines, bandages and first aid equipment.

“We are sincerely grateful to our Lithuanian friends from Šiauliai district, our brothers and sisters, for the significant help we received”, said Ivan Dyriv, mayor of Dolyna. “This is an invaluable contribution of our friends, of the Lithuanian people, to our common victory, the victory of Ukraine.”

In addition, as a gesture of support for Ukraine, Šiauliai district municipality terminated all cooperation agreements with partner municipalities in Russia and Belarus in the first days of the war.

The two municipalities first met in November 2021, in the framework of the “Bridges of Trust” Initiative, implemented by CEMR, PLATFORMA and supported by the U-LEAD with Europe programme.

Ukraine Joint Call

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Joint Call of European Mayors


On the initiative of the mayor of Gdansk, who is also CEMR’s executive president, 100 mayors of European cities launched a joint call to European governments and the European Commission. They ask them to increase their efforts to end the war against Ukraine.
They call on the mayors of European cities to join their call by filling in this form.

Support Ukraine

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Local governments across Europe mobilise to support Ukrainians


700 mayors and local or regional leaders from across Europe have united around Ukraine by signing the Council of European Municipalities and Regions’ (CEMR) call condemning the Russian invasion and pledging to support Ukraine and the Ukrainian people.

The moral and political condemnation of Russia’s aggression has been overwhelming. Signatories include the mayors of Lisbon, Paris, Tbilisi, Cologne, Cluj-Napoca, Gdańsk and Reading as well as the chairs and vice-chairs of 25 national associations of local and regional governments.

While towns, cities and regions across Europe are symbolically lighting up their public buildings blue and yellow in solidarity with Ukraine, they are also providing concrete support by hosting Ukrainian refugees and giving financial, humanitarian and material aid to Ukrainian local and regional governments. CEMR is coordinating this response with its 60 member associations from 40 European countries.

Stefano Bonaccini, president of CEMR and of the Emilia-Romagna Region, said: “Faced with the reality of war, municipalities and regions across Europe must scale up their financial, humanitarian and material support in response to the growing needs of Ukraine’s people and local governments. This mobilisation demands greater coordination between European, national and local levels to ensure optimal efficiency and to avoid scattering our efforts.”

Ukrainian Mayors at the forefront

Ukrainian mayors and local workers are continuing to provide essential services to residents in an extremely dangerous environment. This includes distributing food and medicine, evacuation of women and children and urgent repairs to basic infrastructure damaged by Russian bombs.

The local government continues to safeguard functioning of the critical infrastructure of our city”, said Vitali Klitschko, the mayor of Kyiv and the president of the Association of Ukrainian Cities (AUC). “Public service workers are helping the humanitarian coordination centre, distributing food and delivering send and blocks for territorial defence.

video (with English subtitles) of comments from the mayors of Kyiv, Kharkiv and Mykolayiv gives a glimpse of the extraordinary challenges Ukrainian municipalities and their residents face today. These threats to mayors include outright kidnapping by the Russian occupiers, as has occurred to Ivan Federov, the mayor of Melitopol, and Yevhen Matveyev, the mayor of Dniprorudne.

CEMR wholly condemns the kidnapping of democratically elected Ukrainian mayors”, said CEMR President Stefano Bonaccini. “This is part of an attempt to establish illegitimate alternative government structures in a sovereign country. All kidnapped Ukrainian elected officials must be released immediately.

European municipalities provide financial, humanitarian and material aid

Local and regional governments across Europe are mobilising resources for their peers in Ukraine, often in collaboration with their national associations. Municipalities like Przemyśl (Poland), Tampere (Finland) and Šiauliai District (Lithuania) are together donating millions of euros either financially or in the form of direct aid. The city of Kielce (Poland) has for its part provided helmets, bulletproof vests, thermal underwear and medical supplies to its partner town Vinnitsa. These examples only scratch the surface of local action being taken.

European municipalities host Ukrainian refugees

European municipalities and regions are welcoming Ukrainian refugees. In border regions, the scale of human movement is massive with an estimated 1.5 million refugees in Poland alone. These territories will require support to host refugees in the best possible conditions.

Further afield, countless municipalities across Europe are taking action. For example, in Gent a city platform has been created for residents to register their flat to host refugees. The city of Paris is offering free transport and crèche spaces for refugees. Coordination with the national government is often taking place through our national associations.

Local government associations are crucial for mobilising and coordinating action

Associations of local and regional governments are emerging as important players in coordinating the actions of municipalities and regions. The Association of Ukrainian Cities has been sharing information on the needs of the country’s municipalities. Meanwhile, the local government associations of several European countries have donated funds to AUC. Other associations, such as in Austria and Latvia, are mobilising their networks to participate in the Operation Snowflake. This operation consists in writing to Russian mayors and council chairs to call on them to stop the war.

Coordination between local, regional and national governments is crucial to identifying and sharing the needs of people in Ukraine and maximising our impact. CEMR is mobilising and exchanging with its members on how European municipalities and regions can best respond to the war’s impact. We are working on, among other issues, support for Ukrainian municipalities and the hosting of refugees fleeing Ukraine.

War on Ukraine

Mayors in Ukraine - News 2023

Russia’s war on Ukraine: the response of Local and Regional Governments


It has been two weeks since Vladimir Putin launched Russia’s war against Ukraine. The Ukrainian people are the first victims. Ukraine’s mayors are on the front line mitigating the damage: organising shelters and evacuations, providing food and water and sharing essential information with residents. The European Union’s sanctions and the withdrawal of Western corporations are isolating Russia, but on the ground the bombs and battles roll on, neighbourhood by neighbourhood.

Mayors are coping with this situation with their residents and organised groups of military and territorial defence, where possible. The news we receive town by town is very hard to hear, each one becoming a fortress, while remaining connected to each other where possible through the associations of local and regional governments and the national government.

Local and regional governments bordering Ukraine are welcoming refugees in the best possible conditions. Further afield, countless municipalities across Europe are taking action. In Gent, a city platform has been created for residents to register their flat to host refugees. Meanwhile, the city of Paris is offering free transport and crèche spaces for refugees. Coordination with the national government is often taking place through our national associations.

Many questions continue to be asked about how to continue to support peers in Russia who oppose Putin’s regime and how to support the Russian population demonstrating against the war every day, while at the same time putting maximal pressure on Russia, and its Belarusian ally, to withdraw their troops from Ukraine immediately.

At our level, CEMR is doing what it can to support the Ukrainian people, Ukrainian local and regional governments, and all those affected by the war. In 14 days, over 700 mayors and local or regional elected officials have already condemned the Russian attack and expressed their solidarity with their peers in Ukraine by signing CEMR’s political declaration.

In addition, we are:

  • Maintaining daily contacts with our members in Ukraine
  • Sharing information on the humanitarian needs of Ukrainian municipalities with our 60 national associations
  • Maintaining contacts with our 20 partner Ukrainian and European cities involved in the Bridges of Trust project
  • Responding to requests from our members on how to help

In the future we want to see how EU funds can be used to cope with the effects of the war in Ukraine and bordering countries and municipalities. The kinds of support needed must still be determined.

Looking ahead, CEMR is organising a task force with our members to exchange and coordinate on how to best support Ukrainian municipalities and the people of Ukraine. We will continue to provide regular updates on European local and regional governments’ actions in this crisis.

European social partners with Ukraine 

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Social partners offer solidarity and support in response to the Russian invasion


The European social partners for local and regional governments, CEMR and EPSU, have jointly expressed their strong condemnation of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, calling it a grave violation of international law and a direct threat to democracy and peace in Europe. 

In a statement released through the European Social Dialogue Committee, the two organisations extended full support to the Ukrainian people, especially to workers in cities, municipalities, and local public services, who continue to serve their communities under attack. 

“Our thoughts are with first responders, emergency services workers and municipal staff who are ensuring the delivery of basic services, despite the ongoing destruction,” the statement reads. 

CEMR and EPSU pledged to mobilise both material assistance and technical expertise to support their peers in Ukraine and urged the EU and international community to provide shelter and asylum for those fleeing the war. 

As municipalities across Europe begin to welcome displaced persons, the statement also highlights the importance of supporting local migration services and coordinating with national governments to ensure dignified reception and integration. 

Read the declaration here 

For more information, contact: 

Solidarity for Ukraine

European local and regional governments stand in support and solidarity with their peers in Ukraine


In a statement issued by the CEMR on 24 February 2022, local and regional leaders across Europe, strongly condemn the multiple attacks and violations of the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine. They express their full support and solidarity to the Ukrainian people and their peers in local and regional government.

Expressing their views on the situation, CEMR President Stefano Bonaccini, CEMR Spokesperson on International Affairs Carola Gunnarsson and CEMR Executive President Jan van Zanen said: “We will not accept that our European values and integrity be attacked again by the Russian Federation after the violation of Georgian territories by Russia in 2008. We are firmly opposed to the dismemberment of a free and democratic state in Europe.”

They call on local and regional governments throughout Europe to endorse the statement by filling out this form.

To date, CEMR collected 795 signatures from 23 European countries.

The full statement:

We, local and regional leaders across Europe, strongly condemn the multiple attacks and violations of the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine. We express our full support and solidarity to the Ukrainian people and our peers in local and regional government. We will not accept that our European values and integrity be attacked again by the Russian Federation after the violation of Georgian territories by Russia in 2008. We are firmly opposed to the dismemberment of a free and democratic state in Europe.

The escalation of violence, repeated bombings and attacks on Ukrainian cities and territories are a serious threat to the preservation of peace and democracy across Europe. We call on the Federation of Russia to cease its attack, to leave the national territory of Ukraine, to respect all international treaties and fundamental principles of international law and to recognise the full sovereignty of Ukraine over all its territories, including Donbas and Crimea.

Firmly convinced of local democracy and city diplomacy, based on the values of peace that unite our municipalities across Europe since 1951, we stand by the Ukrainian municipalities, cities, hromadas, districts, raions and their representative associations. They are in the front line to protect the population and provide basic services to offer them good quality living conditions and daily survival. The destruction of infrastructure by the belligerents jeopardises the efficient and safe maintenance of basic public services provided by Ukrainian local and regional governments to their citizens.

As European local and regional governments, representing 60 national associations across 40 European countries, including Ukraine, we will continue to work to support them in their efforts. Not only are we ready to support our peers in the country with the materials and expertise they may need in the days and weeks to come. Municipalities and regions will probably have to face soon the human consequences of such a tragedy for Europe, probably resulting in a flow of humanitarian refugees. Coordination with our national governments will be essential. 

As the European section of UCLG, let us hope that city diplomacy will soon unite us all again!