Andover veterans charity supports those in need in Ukraine

Veterans have been using skills gained in the military to run aid convoys and help their mental health while helping others

Author: Jonathan RichardsPublished 13th Apr 2022
Last updated 13th Apr 2022

An Andover-based charity which supports veterans who have suffered post traumatic stress has delivered around ten tons of aid to help those affected by the war in Ukraine.

Each of the four expeditions so far has been a 2000 mile round trip to the Polish border where partner organisations have made the final journey into Ukraine.

Chief operations officer Billy Macleod MBE says:

"I have to be very aware of the veterans we take out there, the last thing we want to do is take them into a war zone when they are suffering from PTSD or any other mental health condition so we want them to get a good feeling and a positive feeling by being able to help.

"We have taken all sorts out there, but the items that are really needed in the cities and where the fighting is is medical aid, so now we're concentrating on buying the specific items because they are bespoke items such as gunshot wound dressings"

The charity's mantra is 'post traumatic growth' and they run projects that offer practical and positive tasks where the veterans skills can be used to help others.

But Billy admits seeing the refugees, many of them elderly, come over the border from Ukraine was deeply moving:

"I always try not to show emotion as I'm a Glaswegian and a soldier, but it did affect me but in a positive way to say 'what can we do to help?' . The ethos behind our charity is helping yourself to help others and there's no better way to move forward than when you are helping someone else and it's the whole ethos of the veterans who are going out there to do this remarkable thing"

Each of the convoys costs around £3,500 with petrol being particularly expensive.

The team is now resting after making four trips in the past few weeks, but Billy says they'll be back on the road soon:

"We drive for 20 hours a day for 2 full days with a gap for unloading in-between so we've come back this time and we're pretty shattered if I'm honest so we're having a couple of weeks rest and plan to go back out again in 2-3 weeks time but with the right equipment and that's medical aid"

Some of the aid being delivered by Veterans in Action

Find out more about the charity here

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