The roads of eastern Ukraine are littered with shrapnel and shell craters. For drivers of the few remaining civilian buses, every journey is a gamble with death. They navigate routes that the United Nations has labelled among the most dangerous on earth, ferrying pensioners, mothers, and children through active war zones. Now, British charities are stepping in with an unlikely lifeline: armoured transports.
The Donetsk region, once a bustling industrial heartland, is now a graveyard of burnt-out vehicles. Bus drivers here earn the equivalent of £300 a month, a paltry sum for a profession where a single missile strike can wipe out a whole family. “I have driven through HIMARS strikes and mortar fire,” says Oleg, a driver of 20 years who now works the Pokrovsk-Kostiantynivka route. “The windows are gone. The seats are torn. But people have no choice. They need to get to the nearest town for food, medicine, or to evacuate.”
According to the Institute for the Study of War, the frontline in Donetsk has seen a 40% increase in combat engagements this month. For civilian bus drivers, the danger is compounded by the lack of protection. Standard buses offer no defence against the shrapnel from cluster munitions or the shockwaves from artillery. The result is a grim toll: at least 14 drivers killed and dozens injured since the start of the year, according to the Ukrainian Bus Association.
Enter the British charities. The London-based “Roads to Safety” foundation, in partnership with the Ukrainian Red Cross, has raised £1.2 million to purchase and refit ten retired military armoured personnel carriers (APCs) for civilian use. These APCs, stripped of weapons but reinforced with ballistic glass and blast-proof flooring, will begin operating on the most hazardous routes from next month. The charity’s director, James Whitaker, explains the decision: “We saw driver after driver being buried. Western governments are sending missiles and tanks, but no one is funding the basics of civilian life. If you don’t have bread, you don’t have a country. These buses are the arteries of survival.”
The funding comes from a mix of individual donations and corporate sponsorship, including a major grant from a British trade union. The GMB union’s general secretary, Gary Smith, said: “Our members in the transport sector wanted to help their Ukrainian counterparts. These drivers are working class heroes, fighting for the right to move freely. We stand with them.”
However, the armoured transports are not a silver bullet. Suspension systems designed for military terrain make for a jarring ride, and the 12-person capacity is a fraction of the 50 that a standard bus can hold. The vehicles are also obvious military targets, despite being repainted in bright yellow with large red crosses. “We will be running the gauntlet every time,” admits Whitaker. “But it’s better than sending drivers out in a tin can.”
For the drivers, the armoured buses offer a sliver of hope. “I will drive one,” says Oleg. “I have a wife and a daughter in Lviv. I send them money. If I die, they starve. So if this bus can give me a 10% better chance, I will take it.”
The initiative has drawn criticism from some quarters. A spokesperson for the Ukrainian Ministry of Infrastructure warned that converting military vehicles could blur the line between civilian and combatant, potentially violating the Geneva Conventions. “We are investigating the legal framework,” the spokesperson said. “But the need is urgent. We cannot stop the charity convoys.”
On the ground, the queues for the first armoured bus are already forming. At a makeshift stop in Kostiantynivka, pensioners clutch shopping bags and children hold hands. Anna, 72, says: “I need to collect my pension. It’s 50 miles away. I have waited three weeks. If this bus is proof against bullets, then God bless the British.”
The cost of keeping these routes open is immense. Each armoured transport requires specialised maintenance and a trained crew. The charity is already fundraising for a second fleet, targeting the Kharkiv and Kherson regions. But for now, the focus is on getting the first ten buses through the rubble.
Drivers like Oleg know the risks. He has written a will and given a copy to his brother. “If I do not come back, my family gets the insurance,” he says matter-of-factly. “But I will come back. I have to. The route needs me.”









