Ayo, Angelina Jolie is not here for the world tuning out Ukraine. The actress and humanitarian activist teamed up with photographer Giles Duley this week to mark more than four years of war in Ukraine. Their joint statement, posted to Duley’s Instagram, doesn’t pull any punches.
Four years is a long time to keep a crisis in the global conversation. This post is trying to do exactly that.
The numbers they’re laying out are staggering. Ten-point-eight million people in Ukraine still need humanitarian assistance right now. Nearly six million have been forced to flee the country. Five million more are living under occupation. Tens of thousands of children have reportedly been forcibly transferred or deported.
The infrastructure damage has been relentless. Drones are reaching into homes and neighborhoods. Schools and hospitals keep getting struck. More than 2,500 attacks on healthcare facilities have been recorded. That includes 1,389 hospitals damaged or destroyed.
2025 alone was brutal. Two thousand two hundred and forty-eight civilians were killed. Another 12,493 were injured. Civilian casualties from explosive weapons surged 26% compared to the prior period. Rolling blackouts hit communities during a brutal winter. Temperatures plunged as low as -25 degrees Celsius (-13 degrees Fahrenheit).
“Civilians continue to face far too little protection,” the statement says. “Drones reach into homes and neighbourhoods. Infrastructure, schools and hospitals are repeatedly struck. Families are killed or displaced.”
The post also honors Duley’s documentary photography work in Ukraine. His images, the statement says, capture “the spirit of its people – their warmth, courage and resilience, despite everything.”
Giles Duley is not some influencer looking for a cause to attach himself to. He’s a British documentarian. He survived losing both legs and his right arm to a landmine in Afghanistan in 2011. He kept working. He’s since documented crises in Ukraine, Lebanon, Bangladesh, and South Sudan. The man has earned the right to speak on this.
Jolie’s humanitarian record runs just as deep. She served as UNHCR Special Envoy for over two decades. She’s visited more than 60 countries and refugee camps around the world. Ukraine has been a consistent focus for her. Russia launched the full-scale invasion in February 2022.
The post pulled more than 109,000 likes on Instagram. The message is pure war statistics and grief, with no entertainment hook attached. That kind of reach says something. These two still carry weight.
Aid organizations have been warning for some time that global attention on Ukraine is fragmenting. Other conflicts keep pulling focus away. Both Jolie and Duley have spent real time on the ground in Ukraine. Publicly attaching their names to these numbers is exactly the spotlight the crisis still needs.
The statement closes with four words: “Four Years. Ukraine.”
That’s it. And it lands.
