On 23 June 2022, the UN Connecting Business Initiative #CBI outlined humanitarian principles, engaging with local communities and how to prevent and respond to sexual exploitation and abuse (PSEA) of people affected by crises. These are my slides, which gives an idea of the PSEA efforts. My introductory remarks: Thank you for inviting me and for putting the need for safe humanitarian operations for all on the agenda today. I feel for everyone who suffers the consequences of war in your country. It is impressive how people, businesses, authorities and civil society in Ukraine have stepped up to assist victims and to adapt their activities to a new and challenging reality. This is my second time to work in beautiful Ukraine. I was election observer in Cherkasy during two months in 2015 and fell for your people and country. Last week I arrived in Lviv and my job is coordinate efforts of national and international entities to prevent and respond to sexual exploitation and abuse of people seeking humanitarian assistance, committed by those who are tasked to assist. Helpers abusing those they are meant to help sounds like a contradiction of terms, and it is. Yet it happens, and more often than we know, because globally, around 80 percent of survivors of gender-based violence do not report the acts. Aid workers, whether they are from an international organization, civil society, private companies or government entities, are expected to show the highest standards of behavior. We have job contracts, staff rules and codes of conduct that everyone must sign in order to be taken on. Abuse of power is a no-no. Aid workers meet people who might be destitute, or who have lost family members, who have health issues such as a disability after attacks or disasters, or they have lost their homes, their jobs, access to school or studies or the support of their family and community networks. Media have covered how some aid workers take advantage of their position distributing assistance or recruiting staff to demand sex from particularly women and children under 18. Most of the perpetrators are men, but there are examples of women who take advantage of vulnerable groups as well. In 2016, a Norwegian woman in her 50s who worked at a centre for asylum seekers demanded sex in return for helping a male Syrian refugee who was 22 years old with job applications and money for clothes and trips. She offered him a room at her house where she lived with her husband and cajoled the young man to have sex with her when her husband was not home. The refugee and other male asylum seekers told journalists and showed text messages that proved that several female employees and volunteers at emergency shelters for refugees had propositioned them. I feel sick to my stomach when I read about such exploitation, no matter who commits it. We can all learn from the Ukrainian writer, feminist, activist and polyglot Nataliya Kobrynska. She was born in 1851 in Beleluia.