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Nottingham building firm boss downs tools to drive aid to refugees fleeing war-torn Ukraine

Atomic Developments founder Jon Granger felt he had to do something following Russian invasion

Polina Shulga, 27, from Kyiv, and three-year-old daughter Aria, en route to Budapest, in the Hungarian border town of Zahony

The boss of a Nottingham building firm is driving across Europe to take aid to refugees fleeing from war-torn Ukraine.

John Granger, who owns Atomic Developments, said he couldn’t continue to watch news of human suffering following Russia’s invasion without doing something to help.

So he asked his team to help him research the best way of collecting aid and delivering it directly to those who need it.

He said that within 24 hours he was inundated with offers of cash, sleeping bags, thermal blankets, nappies, dried foods, sanitary products and medical supplies to take with him.

On Friday morning (March 11), he and seven others will take turns driving four Vauxhall Vivaro work vans through France, Belgium, Holland and Germany to reach their destination at an aid drop-off point in the Polish city of Lublin, Poland, 60 miles from the Ukrainian border.

The convoy hopes to arrive at a centre run by Caritas, a Polish aid organisation similar to Red Cross, on Saturday morning.

The team will stay overnight at accommodation owned by one of John’s employees, Polish-born painter Pawel Lewaneowski, before beginning the 22-hour journey home on Sunday.

John said: “I always watch the news and I was watching more and more scenes of the terrible atrocities in the Ukraine.