‘They are heroes’: 2 volunteer drivers taking donated supplies to Ukraine killed, organizer says


A pair of volunteer drivers rushing donated supplies to forces repelling the Russian invasion of Ukraine were killed, a campaign organizer said on Saturday.

Thomas Lukaszuk, former deputy premier of Alberta and an organizer of the massive United For Ukraine donation drive in Edmonton, said on social media that two volunteers driving supplies to Mariupol, Ukraine, were killed.

“Ed Stelmach and I are saddened and angered having to inform you that two drivers, believed to be Ukrainian and Polish nationals, were killed by Russians while delivering some of our United for Ukraine supplies,” Lukaszuk said.

“They are heroes.”

Stelmach, a former Alberta premier, and Lukaszuk spearheaded a fill-a-plane drive that collected more than $20 million in donations, including 35 tonnes of aid flown on a donated LOT Polish Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

Some supplies included medical and first aid equipment, stretchers, thermal blankets, sleeping bags, adult and youth diapers, and wheelchairs. Whatever donated material did not fit on the 737 was loaded into 10 sea containers to be delivered to Poland and then taken by drivers to Ukrainian forces.

Lukaszuk says supplies were sent to the Lutz, Zhytomyr, Kryvy Rigg, Kherson and Mariupol regions of Ukraine.


Located on the coast of the Sea of ​​Azov, the port city of Mariupol has been under siege for the past month, including extensive Russian bombardment.

On Saturday, Ukrainian forces fought village by village to hold back the Russian advance through the country’s east as the United Nations tried to broker a civilian evacuation of the bombed-out city.

“Russia intercepts our delivery in Ukraine, we double down,” Lukaszuk said. “Our hero volunteers’ lives were not lost in vain. More help is on its way.”


With files from The Associated Press


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