The U.S. provided another $1.7 billion to ensure the Ukrainian government can continue to provide essential services such as health care.

Also Tuesday, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said a $1 billion EU contribution should reach Ukraine this month.

The U.S. contribution was made possible by “generous bipartisan support” from Congress, the U.S. Agency for International Development said. To date, USAID has provided $4 billion in direct budgetary support to the Ukraine government for core functions such as keeping electricity on for hospitals, schools and other critical infrastructure, as well as paying for humanitarian supplies and the salaries of health care workers, civil servants and teachers.

“$1.7 billion is not just yet another financial support, it is an investment that makes us a step closer to victory,” Viktor Liashko, Ukraine’s minister of health, said in a statement.

Latest developments

►The European Space Agency is officially terminating its cooperation with Russia on a mission to launch the first planetary rover from Europe, a mission aimed at exploring the surface of Mars, according to a tweet from ESA’s Director General Josef Aschbacher.

►Ukraine’s military reported destroying a Russian ammunition depot outside the Russian-held city of Kherson. Russia dismissed the claim, saying a fertilizer factory was hit.

►About 80% of the population in the Ukrainian-controlled part of Donetsk province have fled, the Ukraine government estimates. About 340,000 civilians remain. Russia controls about half the province and almost all of Luhansk. The two provinces make up the industrial Donbas region that Russia seeks to control.

US doctors helping Ukraine medical teams via telehealth

An American health care network is taking an innovative approach to medical care in Ukraine, providing the expertise of its vast roster of specialists to several Ukraine medical centers while also donating hundreds of thousands of dollars in supplies.

Northwell Health, the largest health care provider in New York state, is incorporating the telemedicine system it developed through the COVID pandemic to offer free consultations to medical workers in Ukraine on a 24/7 basis.

Whether they are medics in battlefields, clinicians in war zones or providers caring for wounded soldiers and civilians elsewhere, they can reach Northwell’s experts through a number of web-based platforms, including Whatsapp and Telegram.

Read more here.

– Jorge Ortiz, USA TODAY

Sanctions pressure squeezes Russian car industry

Sales of new passenger cars in Russia are expected to decline 28% in 2022 and could drop as much as 50%, according to a report in the state-run media outlet Tass. The Trust Technologies auditing firm blamed increased sanctions pressure, declining imports and a “massive departure of players” as foreign firms leave Russia. Sales were forecast to include 227,000 cars from Russian brands, 688,000 foreign cars assembled in Russia and 175,000 imported cars. About 1.5 million new cars were sold in Russia last year.