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In questo podcast, Nona Mikhelidze, senior researcher dello IAI, racconta il suo viaggio in Ucraina, invitata dall'associazione internazionale Pen Ukraine e Ukrainian Institute.Da Kyiv a Irpin, passando per Bucha e Borodyanka, Mikhelidze si sofferma sulle conseguenze della guerra e degli attacchi russi sulla popolazione ucraina. Dal sotterraneo della scuola di Yahidne, dove i russi imprigionarono 377 civili per 27 giorni, arriva la voce di Ivan, sopravvissuto alla prigionia. “Sono partita con tante domande sulla società civile ucraina, li ho trovati, come nel 2019, ancora più motivati a proseguire il cammino tortuoso e pieno di sangue verso l'Europa”, afferma Mikhelidze.
This week on Brazen Presents, we're going back to Borodyanka, Ukraine. Laurel Chor travelled there for the first time last year when she was hosting our podcast “Resistance: Stories from Ukraine.” The series documented how ordinary Ukrainians have been resisting the Russian invasion. Now, she brings us this story about how Borodyanka and the people she met there are doing today. If you enjoyed this episode, you can catch up on the rest of the series by searching for Resistance: Stories from Ukraine, wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening, exclusive bonus content and early access to Project Brazen podcasts, subscribe to our channel on the Apple Podcasts app. You can try the subscription free for 7 days by going to apple.co/brazen www.projectbrazen.com
A year after the small town of Borodyanka, Ukraine was liberated from Russian occupation, host Laurel Chor returns to see how the town is recovering. Laurel brings us this story about how Borodyanka and the people she met there are doing after a year of war. RESISTANCE: Stories from Ukraine is a harrowing and inspirational journey across Ukraine in the first weeks of Russia's invasion. While the military wages war on the frontlines, everyday citizens are picking up whatever weapons they can, including their smartphones, computers, sewing needles, and guitars. Photojournalist Laurel Chor travels to cities across the country, finding extraordinary stories that go beyond the headlines. RESISTANCE: Stories from Ukraine is a Project Brazen production. Subscribe to Brazen+ on Apple Podcasts or at brazen.fm/plus and get exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening and early access to new podcasts. For more fearless storytelling visit brazen.fm, home to all our podcasts, documentaries and newsletters. At Brazen, we show you how the world really works – from espionage and corruption to deal-making and organised crime, we'll take you inside stories from hidden worlds.
This week on Brazen Presents, we're revisiting our series Resistance: Stories from Ukraine. The show, hosted by photojournalist Laurel Chor, documented how ordinary Ukrainians have been resisting the Russian invasion — whether that meant taking up arms, or supporting the war effort in other ways. Now, nearly one year after Russia launched its full-scale invasion, Ukrainians are still fighting for their freedom. So we're re-sharing one of the episodes, ‘Defending Borodyanka', about four men who fought the Russian occupation of their small town, despite being impossibly outnumbered and outgunned. If you enjoyed this episode, you can catch up on the rest of the series by searching for Resistance: Stories from Ukraine, wherever you get your podcasts.
One year after Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine, Vladislav Davidzon, European culture correspondent for Tablet Magazine, shares what he's witnessed as a war correspondent on the frontlines, and predicts the future for his beloved country and the Jewish community he's proud to call home. We last spoke to Davidzon hours before the Russia-Ukraine war began, when he was on the ground in Kyiv – listen now to his dispatch a year on, as he joins us live from our New York studio. *The views and opinions expressed by guests do not necessarily reflect the views or position of AJC. ___ Episode Lineup: (0:40) Vladislav Davidzon ____ Show Notes: Read: What You Need to Know About the Wagner Group's Role in Russia's War Against Ukraine Preorder: Jewish-Ukrainian Relations and the Birth of a Political Nation Watch: Kiyv Jewish Forum: Ted Deutch, AJC CEO, Addresses Kyiv Jewish Forum 2023 Panel: Ukraine as the Israel of Europe with Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, Managing Director of AJC Europe, Bernard Henry Levi, philosopher, and Josef Joffe, Stanford University Listen: Podcast episode with Vladislav Davidzon, recorded February 23, 2022: Live from Kyiv: The Future of Ukraine and its Large Jewish Community Our most recent podcast episode: How Rising Antisemitism Impacts Jews on College Campuses Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org If you've enjoyed this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, tag us on social media with #PeopleofthePod, and hop onto Apple Podcasts to rate us and write a review, to help more listeners find us. ______ Transcript of Interview with Vladislav Davidzon: Manya: On February 24th, 2022, just hours before the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, Vladislav Davidzon, founding editor of The Odessa Review and contributor to Tablet Magazine, joined us live from Kiyv to share the mood on the ground as Russian forces were closing in. Now, one year later, Vladislav joins us again, this time in person, in our studio to share what he has seen, heard, and experienced this past year since the Russian invasion of his home. Vladislav, it is so good to see you alive and well and in person. Vladislav: Thank you so much. This is so surreal. I'm so grateful, first of all, for your interest, for your affection, for your graciousness, for your respect. But I'm grateful to be here exactly one year later. It was the last thing that I did in the workday before the war began, before the old world ended. And I went off to dinner with my friend, now of blessed memory, Dan Rappaport, who was an American Latvian born Jewish financier. It was also the last time I saw him. He died under very suspicious circumstances. He died falling out of a window in Washington, DC, or of a roof, on the seventh floor, three months later. I just have extremely intense emotions about that six hour period because…I was talking to my wife, my wife's French Ukrainian, she was back in Paris. I said, if anything happens tonight, I'll call you in the morning. Things are gonna go down tonight. And then I did this podcast with you. And so, it's really amazing to be back with you a year later. Manya: Yes. I mean, I am so grateful to see you because I really was very worried. I worried that that was going to be our last conversation, and that I would not get a chance to meet you in person after that. And in addition to everything, you've been working on a book, The Birth of a Political Nation, which we'll talk a little bit more about shortly. But, first tell me, tell our listeners how you have managed to survive and tell the stories that need to be told. Vladislav: It's not pretty. I mean, it's just, it's not elegant. I'm a Ukrainian Russian Jew, so I kind of went into primordial, bestial mode, like Russian Ukrainian, Jewish survival mode, like my grandfathers and great-grandfathers during World War II. I just, you know, something clicked and your your training and your skillset and your deep cultural characteristics click in and you just go full on Hemingway, Lord Byron, and then you just go to war. Like a lot of other people, I went to war. I burned out after about six months and I needed some months off. I was just rnning around like a madman, reporting, getting my own relatives out, helping whatever way I could, helping my family close down their businesses, helping run guns, going on t radio, you know, just collecting money, going to the front, just, going off on an adrenaline rush. And it's admixture of rage, testosterone. Adrenaline, survival, rage, all the cocktail of horrific, let's say toxic masculine character [laughs]. I know you can't, I I know. I'm ironic about that. I live in Eastern Europe, so you can, you can still make fun of all that stuff in Eastern Europe. I don't know if you can here, but, you know, jokes aside. I just went into this deeply primordial state of Ukrainian Russian civilizational structures of brutal survival and fighting. And that went on for about six months, at which point I just crashed and collapsed and needed some off time. Manya: How much of your journalistic instincts also fueled your push on, your forging ahead and surviving just to tell the story, or was it more a familial connection? Vladislav: I have skin in the game. I'm from there. I mean, my ancestors are from there, two of my grandparents were born there. My family lived there for hundreds of years. I'm married to a Ukrainian Jewish girl. I have family there. My friends are, these are my people. I'm deeply tribal. Obviously you take the opportunity as a journalist reporting on a country for 10 years and almost no one cares about it. And you're an expert on it. You know all the politicians and you know all the, all the stories and you know all the storylines. And you, you have contacts everywhere. You know, of a country like the back of your hand. And suddenly it becomes the focal point of the world's attention and it becomes the greatest story in the entire world. And of course, you're prepared in a way that all, all these other people who paratroop in are not prepared, and you have to make the best of it. And you have to tell stories from people who wouldn't otherwise have access to the media. And you have to explain, there's so much bad stuff in terms of quality of reporting coming out of Ukraine because so many amateurs went in. In any given situation, there are lots of people who come to a war zone. You know, in wars, people, they make their bones, they become rich, they become famous, they get good looking lovers. Everyone gets paid in the currency that they want. Right? But this is my country. I've been at this for 10, 12 years. I don't begrudge anyone coming to want to tell the story. Some people are opportunists in life and some people are extraordinarily generous and gracious. And it almost doesn't matter what people's motivations are. I don't care about why you came here. I care about the quality of the work. And a lot of the work was pretty bad because people didn't have local political context, didn't have language skills. And a lot of that reporting was so-so. I made the most of it, being an area expert. And also being a local, I did what I had to do. I wish I'd done more. I wish I went 500% as opposed to 250%. But everyone has their limits. Manya: What got lost? With the poor reporting, what do you think with the stories that you captured, or what do you wish you had captured, giving that additional 250%? Vladislav: Yeah. It's a great question. I wish that I had known now what I know a year ago, but that's life in general. About where the battles would be and what kinds of people and what kinds of frontline pounds would have particular problems getting out to particular places. For example, I know now a lot more about the evacuation of certain ethnic communities. The Gagauz, the Greeks. Ukraine is full of different kinds of people. It's a mosaic. I know now a lot about the way that things happened in March and April. Particular communities went in to help their own people. Which is great. It's fine. a lot of very interesting characters wound up in different places. Much of Ukrainian intelligentsia, they wound up outside the country. A lot stayed, but a lot did wind up in different places like Berlin and the Baltics. Uh, amazing stories from, uh, the volunteers like the Chechens and the Georgians and the Lithuanians and the Belarus who came to fight for Ukraine. Just, you know, I wish I'd kept up with the guys that I was drinking with the night before. I was drinking with like six officers the night before, and two of 'em are alive. Mm or three alive now. I was with the head of a Georgian Legion two nights before the war. Hang out with some American CIA guys and people from the guys from the American, actually a couple of girls, also hardcore American girls from the US Army who were operatives and people at our embassy in Kyiv who didn't get pulled out. These are our hardcore people who after the embassy left, told whoever wanted to stay on the ground to stay. I met some very interesting people. I wish I'd kept up with them. I don't, I don't know what happened with them or what, what their war experiences were like. So, you know. Yeah. Life is full of regrets. Manya: You talked a little bit about the ethnic communities coming in to save people and to get them out. How did the Jewish communities efforts to save Ukrainian Jews compare to those efforts? Did you keep tabs on that? Movement as well. Vladislav: Oh, yeah. Oh, in fact, I worked on that actually, to certainly to a smaller extent than other people or whatever. I certainly helped whatever I could. It was such a mad scramble and it was so chaotic in the beginning of a war. The first two weeks I would be getting calls from all over the world. They would call me and they would say this and this and this person, I know this person needs to get out. There were signal groups of volunteers, exfiltration organizations, special services people, my people in the Ukrainian Jewish community who were all doing different things to get Jews out. Tens of thousands of people were on these lists. And I would figure out to the extent possible with about 50 people, 40 to 50 people, what their risk level was. And I would give 'em advice. I have a gay friend, one of my wife's business partners, who was the head of a major television station. And he would, he would've been on the Kill list because he was in part of intelligentsia and he was gay. I gave him particular advice on where to go. I said, go to this village–and men aren't allowed of the country, and he wasn't the kind of guy who was gonna fight. I said, go to a particular place. I told him, go to this village and sit here and don't go anywhere for two months. And he did this. Other people needed to be gotten out. Holocaust survivors, especially. We have horrific incidents of people who survived Stalin's war and Hitler's war and who died of heart attacks under their beds, hiding from Russian missiles. There were many stories of Holocaust survivors. Typically, it's old women by this point. It's not it's not gentleman. Women do live longer. Older women in their nineties expiring in a bunker, in an underground metro station or under their bed hiding from missiles, you know. Horrific stories. but people who survived Auschwitz did get killed by the missiles. We have stories like that. And so to continue, there were many people working on getting elderly Jews out. Getting Jewish women out. Jewish kids out. There were, in fact, there were people working on getting all sorts of people out. And that's still going on. And I met a Jewish member of the Ukrainian parliament last night who did this for two months. Uh, I saw, I saw my acquaintance who I hadn't seen in two years. Yeah. There are a lot of people I haven't seen in a year, obviously, for the obvious reasons. I saw an acquaintance who's an Israeli educated Ukrainian member of parliament. He spent the first three months just evacuating Jews, driving convoys of special forces guys, former Mossad guys, special operatives into cities like Mariupol, Chernigev to get Jews out. Literally driving through minefields at a certain point with buses full of elderly Jews. And he told me last night that they got 26,000 Jews out. Just in his organization, which was Special Forces guys, Ukrainian police volunteers, Ukrainian Jewish guys who came back from Israel with IDF training, a motley collection of people. But they set up an organization and they went in, and they got people out. Manya: That's amazing. So I know before, when we spoke before you were splitting your time between Ukraine and France, because your wife is of French descent as well. For your most recent piece for Tablet, the most recent one that I've read, you were in Tel Aviv doing an interview. So where have you spent most of your time, in this past year? Vladislav: In my head. Manya: Yeah. Understandable. Vladislav: I've spent, if I had to count up the dates of my passport, 40 to 50% of my time in Ukraine, over the last, less than the last three months for various family reasons and, you know, working on my book But half the time in Ukraine, in and out. I've been all over, spent a lot of time on the front. That was intense. That was really intense. Manya: You mean as a war correspondent on the front lines? Vladislav: Yeah,I was in Sievierodonetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, Lysychansk, Mykolaiv. I was all over the front. I was with the commanding general of the Southern front in a car, driving back from the battle of Kherson, and we got stripped by a Russian sniper three times and they hit our car. They just missed by like a couple of centimeters, side of a thing. And the guy actually usually drove around in an armored Hummer. But the armored Hummer was actually in the shop getting repaired that day and was the one day he had an unarmored Hummer. And we were just in an unarmed car, in an unarmed command car, black Mercedes, leaving the war zone a couple of kilometers out, just a Russian reconnaissance sniper advanced group just, you know, ambushed us. They were waiting for us to, maybe they were just taking pot shots at a command car, but they were waiting for us as we were leaving. Took three shots at us and the car behind us with our bodyguards radioed, they're shooting, they're shooting. I heard three whooshes and three pings behind it. Ping, ping, ping. And we all thought in the car that it was just rocks popping off the the wheels. But actually it was a sniper. So, you know, there, there was a lot of that. It was very intense. Manya: Did you wear flak jackets? Vladislav: Yeah, well, we took 'em off in the car. When, when you're on the front line, you wear everything, but when you get out of the front line, and you're just driving back, you don't wanna drive around with it, so you just take it off in the car. And that's exactly when they started shooting us. Yeah. They would've gotten us, if they'd been a little bit luckier. Manya: Well, you moderated a panel at the Kiev Jewish Forum last week. Our CEO, Ted Deutch and AJC Europe Director Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, were also there. Your panel focused on the new Ukraine. What does that mean, the new Ukraine? What does that look like? Vladislav: Thank you for asking about that. Let me start with talking a little bit about that conference. Along with Mr. Boris Lozhkin, the head of Ukrainian Jewish Confederation. I put together with Tablet where I'm the European culture correspondent, wonderful, wonderful conference. It is the fourth annual Kiyv Jewish Forum. It took place in Kiyv for the last three years, but today, obviously this year, it won't be for the obvious reason and we put together a conference so that people understand the issues at stake, understand the position of Ukrainian Jewish community, understand the myriad issues involved with this war. Just a wonderful, wonderful conference that I really enjoyed working on with remarkable speakers. Running the gamut from Leon Panetta, Boris Johnson. Your own Mr. Deutch. Just wonderful, wonderful speakers. And, six really great panels, and 20 wonderful one-on-one interviews with really interesting people. So please go to the website of the Kiev Jewish Forum or Tablet Magazine and/or YouTube, and you'll find some really interesting content, some really interesting conversations, dialogues about the state of war, the state of Ukrainian Jewry, the state of Ukrainian political identity and the new Ukraine. Manya: I should tell our listeners, we'll put a link to the Kiyv Jewish Forum in our show notes so that they can easily access it. But yeah, if you don't mind just kinda elaborating a little bit about what, what does the new Ukraine look like? Vladislav: Well, we're gonna see what the new Ukraine will look like after the Russians are driven out of the country. It's gonna look completely different. The demographic changes, the political changes, the cultural changes will play out for decades and maybe a hundred years. These are historical events, which will have created traumatic changes to the country and to Eastern Europe, not just to Ukraine, but all of eastern Europe. From along the entire crescent, from Baltics to Poland, down to Hungary, through Moldova, Belarus. Everything will be changed by this war. This is a world historical situation that will have radically, radically changed everything. And so Ukraine as a political nation has changed dramatically over the last seven years since the Maidan revolution. And it's obviously changed a lot since the start of the war a year ago. It's a completely different country in many ways. Now, the seeds of that change were put into place by the political process of the last couple of years, by civil society, by a deep desire of the resilient Ukrainian political nation to change, to become better, to transform the country. But for the most part, the war is the thing that will change everything. And that means creating a new political nation. What that will look like at the end of this, that's hard to say. A lot of these values are deeply embedded. I know it's unfashionably essentialist to talk about national character traits, but you know, again, I'm an Eastern European, so I can get away with a lot of things that people can't here. And there are such things as national character traits. A nation is a collection of people who live together in a particular way and have particular ways of life and particular values. Different countries live in different ways and different nations, different people have different traits. Just like every person has a different trait and some are good and some are bad, and some are good in certain situations, bad in other situations. And everyone has positive traits and negative traits. And you know, Ukraine like everyone else, every other nation has positive traits. Those traits of: loving freedom, being resilient, wanting to survive, coming together in the times of war are incredibly generative in the middle of this conflict. One of the interesting things about this conflict that is shown, the way that all the different minorities in the country, and it's a country full of all kinds of people, all sorts of minorities. Not just Jews, but Greeks and Crimean Tatars, Muslims, Gagauz, Turkish speaking Christians in my own Odessa region, Poles on the Polish border, Lithuanian Belarus speakers on the Belarusian border. People who are of German descent, though there are a lot fewer of them since World War II. All sorts of different people live in Ukraine and they've come together as a political nation in order to fight together, in a liberal and democratic way. Whereas Russia's also an empire of many different kinds of people, And it's also been brought together through autocratic violence and authoritarian, centralized control. This is a war of minorities in many ways, and so a lot of the men dying from the Russian side are taken from the minority regions like Dagestan, Borodyanka, Chechnya. Disproportionate number of the men dying from the Russian side are also minorities, disproportionate to their share of the Russian Federation's population. In some circles it's a well known fact, one of the military hospitals on the Russian side, at a certain point, the most popular name amongst wounded soldiers, was Mohammed. They were Muslim minorities, from Dagestan, other places. There are a lot of Muslims in Russia. Manya: That is truly a heartbreaking detail. Vladislav: And they're the ones that are the poorest and they're the ones who are being mobilized to fight Ukrainians. Manya: So you're saying that literally the face of Ukraine, and the personality, the priorities of the nation have been changed by this war. Ukrainians have become, what, more patriotic, more militant? Militant sounds … I'm afraid that has a bad connotation. Vladislav: No, militant's great. You know, Marshall virtues. . . that's good. Militant is, you know, that's an aggressive word. Marshall virtues is a good word. Surviving virtues. It's amazing the way Ukrainian flags have encapsulated a kind of patriotism in the western world, which was in many ways unthinkable for large swaths of the advanced population. I mean, you see people who would never in a million years wave an American or British or French flag in Paris, London, and New York and Washington, wave around Ukrainian flags. Patriotism, nationalism have very bad connotations now in our decadent post-industrial West, and, Ukrainians have somehow threaded that needle of standing up for remarkable values, for our civilization, for our security alliances after the war, for the democratic world order that we, that we as Americans and Western Europeans have brought large swaths of the world, while also not becoming really unpleasantly, jingoistic. While not going into, racism for the most part, while not going into, for the most part into unnecessary prejudices. They fight and they have the best of traditional conservative values, but they're also quite liberal in a way that no one else in eastern Europe is. It's very attractive. Manya: They really are unified for one cause. You mentioned being shot at on the front lines of this war. This war has not only changed the nation, it has changed you. You've become a war correspondent in addition to the arts and culture correspondent you've been for so many years. And you've continued to report on the arts throughout this horrific year. How has this war shaped Ukrainian artists, its literary community, its performing arts, sports? Vladislav: First of all, unlike in the west, in, in Eastern Europe. I mean, these are broad statements, but for the most part, in advanced western democracies, the ruling classes have developed different lifestyles and value systems from much of the population. We're not gonna get into why that is the case, but I, as a insider-outsider, I see that. It's not the case in Eastern Europe yet, and certainly not in Ukraine. The people who rule the country and are its elites, they are the same culturally, identity wise as the people that they rule over. So the entire, let's say ruling elite and intelligentsia, artistic class. They have kids or sons or husbands or nephews at war. If we went to war now in America, much of the urban population would not have a relative who died. If a hundred thousand Americans died right now would not be, you would probably not know 10 people who died, or 15 people who died. Manya: It's not the same class system. Vladislav: Correct. America and the western world, let's say western European world from Canada down to the old, let's say Soviet borders or Polish borders, they have developed a class system, a caste system that we don't have. You could be a billionaire, and still hang out with your best friend from high school who was a worker or a bus driver. That doesn't happen here so often, for various reasons. And so a larger proportion of the intelligentsia and the artistic classes went to fight than you would expect. I know so many writers and artists and painters, filmmakers who have gone off to fight. A lot, in fact, I'd say swabs of the artist elite went off to fight. And that's very different from here. And this will shape the arts when they come back. Already you have some really remarkable, interesting things happening in, in painting. Not cinema because cinema's expensive and they're not really making movies in the middle of a war. Certain minor exceptions. There's going to be a lot, a lot of influence on the arts for a very long time. A lot of very interesting art will come out of it and the intelligentsia will be strengthened in some ways, but the country's losing some of its best people. Some of its very, very, very best people across the professions are being killed. You know, dozens of athletes who would've been competing next year in the ‘24 Olympics in Paris are dead on the front lines. Every week I open up my Twitter on my Facebook or my social media and I see another athlete, you know, pro skater or a skier or Cross Country runner or someone who is this brilliant 19, 20 year old athlete who's supposed to compete next year, has just been killed outside of Bakhmut or just been killed outside of Kherson or just been killed outside of Sloviansk or something like this. You read continuously and there's a picture of this beautiful, lovely, young person. who will never compete next year for a gold medal at the Olympics. You see continuously people with economics degrees, people who went to art school being killed at the front. So just as the army, as the Ukrainian army has lost a lot of its best men, a lot of its most experienced soldiers have been killed recently in Bakhmut and in other places, the intelligentsia is taking a wide scale hit. Imagine like 20-30% of America's writers, artists, people who went to art school getting killed at the front or something like that. I don't have statistics, but 10 to 15, 20%. Can you imagine that? What would that do to the society over the long term, If some of its best writers, people who won Pulitzer prizes, people who won national book awards wound up going to the army and getting killed? Manya: When this war ends… Vladislav: When we win, when we win. Manya: When you win, will there be a Ukrainian Jewish community like there was before? What do you see as the future of the Ukrainian Jewish community and how do you think the trauma of this conflict will impact that community? Vladislav: There will be a Jewish Ukrainian community, whether there will be a Russian Jewish community remains to be seen. There will be survivors of the community. A lot of people will go back, we'll rebuild. We will get our demographics back. A lot of people in Ukraine will have already stayed where they're going. There are already a lot of people who have left and after a year their kids got into a school somewhere in the Czech Republic or France or Germany. They're not coming back. There will be a lot of people who will have roots somewhere else. Within the community, certain cities, Jewish life will die out. What was left of the Lugansk, Donetsk Jewish communities is gone now. What was left of Donetsk Jewry is gone. There were a lot of Jews in Mariupol, thousands of Jews. Many of them who survived World War II. Certainly the Mariupol Jewish community has no future. None. Absolutely none. For the obvious reasons. The demographics of the Jewish communities have all changed and we're gonna see over time how all this plays out and sorts itself out. A lot of Jews from Odessa went into Moldova and they will come back. A lot of Jews from Dnipro have been displaced, although the city has not been touched. And they had the biggest Jewish community of like 65-70,000 Jews in Dnipro, and the wealthiest Jewish community and the best financed, the most synagogues. I actually went, before the battle of Sievierodonetsk, I went and I asked the rabbi of Dnipro for his blessing, cause I knew it was going to be a bloodbath. I didn't really want to die, so, you know, I'll try anything once. and it worked. Proofs in the pudding. I'm still here. He's done tremendous work in order to help Jewish communities there. One of the interesting parts of this is that little Jewish communities that had been ethnically cleansed by the Holocaust, which were on their way to dying, which did not have enough Jews in order to reproduce on a long timeline in Western Ukraine. Now because of the influx of Jews from other parts of the country, from the south especially and from the east, now have enough Jews in order for them to continue on. I don't know if anyone knows the numbers and it's too early to say. Places like Lviv had a couple of hundred Jews. They now have several thousand. There are at least three or four minor towns that I can think of in Western Ukraine, which were historically Jewish towns. which did not after the Holocaust, after, Soviet and Post-soviet immigration have enough of a Jewish population in order to have a robust community a hundred years from now, they now do. Now that is a mixed blessing. But the demographics of Jews inside Ukraine have changed tremendously. Just that the demographics of everything in Ukraine has changed tremendously when 40% of a population have moved from one place to another. 8 million refugees, something like 25- 40% of the country are IDPs. Lots of Jews from my part of Ukraine, from the South, have moved to West Ukraine. And those communities, now they're temporary, but nothing is permanent as a temporary solution, as the saying goes. I think Chernowitz, which never had the opportunity, I really love their Jewish community and they're great. And the rabbi and the head of community is a wonderful man. It did not seem to me, the three or four times that I'd visited before the war, Chernowitz, where my family's from, that this is a city that has enough Jews or Jewish institutional life to continue in 50 years. It does now. Is that a good thing, I don't know. That's a different question, but it's certainly changed some things, for those cities. Manya: Vladislav, thank you. Thank you for your moving reports and for joining us here in the studio. It has been such a privilege to speak with you. Please stay safe. Vladislav: Thank you so much for having me. I really appreciate it. It's really great to check in with you again one year after the last time we spoke.
REPORTAGE - Le président ukrainien Volodymyr Zelensky a fait état mardi d'une situation "extrêmement difficile" dans l'Est face aux troupes russes, qui ont grignoté du terrain ces dernières semaines notamment près de Bakhmout. Dans les villes au nord de Kiev, occupées par les forces russes dès le début de la guerre comme Irpin, Butcha ou encore Borodyanka, on redoute l'offensive de Moscou. "Tout est possible, mais je préfère me dire que ça n'arrivera pas. On vit déjà tellement dans l'angoisse. Si ça arrive, j'ai déjà prévu de m'enfuir vers l'ouest de l'Ukraine, puis de rejoindre ma fille qui est en Pologne. Pas question de rester ici", témoigne au micro de RTL Tatiana une habitante. C'est le cas de la majorité des Ukrainiens qui sont revenus dans ces villes martyres. Si les Russes reviennent, pas question de rester une seconde de plus. Il faudra partir loin et vite. Une fébrilité qui n'ébranle toutefois en rien la détermination du peuple ukrainien après un an de guerre.
REPORTAGE - Dès les premières heures de la guerre, la ville de Borodyanka est bombardée par l'armée russe. Les hommes de Vladimir Poutine pensent alors prendre Kiev en passant par cette ville de 13.000 habitants.
Comprehensive coverage of the day's news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice. Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky meets with President Biden and addresses Congress. The high profile trip is his first known visit outside Ukraine since Russia's invasion. President Biden and Congress responded by promising new military aid, including the delivery of highly sophisticated surface to air Patriot missiles. One thousand U.S. religious and peace leaders urge a Christmas truce in the war. The January 6th committee delays release of its final 800 page report by a day. With temperatures plunging, thousands of asylum seekers wait on the Mexican side of the border with Texas to see if the Supreme Court will give the green light for them to enter the U.S. to press their claims. The city of Oakland votes to reinstate a mask mandate inside city facilities in the face of high numbers of cases of COVID and other diseases. And a blast of Arctic air threatens to upend holiday travel plans and endanger the lives of homeless people throughout much of the country. Power was restored today for tens of thousands of residents across Humboldt County hit by the deadly 6.4 magnitude earthquake that injured at least seventeen, destroyed or damaged dozens of homes and buildings, and resulted in two deaths due to medical emergencies in the aftermath. Image: A Ukrainian soldier stands near an apartment ruined from Russian shelling in Borodyanka, Ukraine, Wednesday, Apr. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky) via Flickr The post Ukrainian President welcomed to Washington, Biden promises new military aid to fight Russia; Jan 6 committee delays release of final report; Power restored across Humbolt County in aftermath of 6.4m earthquake appeared first on KPFA.
Comprehensive coverage of the day's news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice. Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky meets with President Biden and addresses Congress. The high profile trip is his first known visit outside Ukraine since Russia's invasion. President Biden and Congress responded by promising new military aid, including the delivery of highly sophisticated surface to air Patriot missiles. One thousand U.S. religious and peace leaders urge a Christmas truce in the war. The January 6th committee delays release of its final 800 page report by a day. With temperatures plunging, thousands of asylum seekers wait on the Mexican side of the border with Texas to see if the Supreme Court will give the green light for them to enter the U.S. to press their claims. The city of Oakland votes to reinstate a mask mandate inside city facilities in the face of high numbers of cases of COVID and other diseases. And a blast of Arctic air threatens to upend holiday travel plans and endanger the lives of homeless people throughout much of the country. Power was restored today for tens of thousands of residents across Humboldt County hit by the deadly 6.4 magnitude earthquake that injured at least seventeen, destroyed or damaged dozens of homes and buildings, and resulted in two deaths due to medical emergencies in the aftermath. Image: A Ukrainian soldier stands near an apartment ruined from Russian shelling in Borodyanka, Ukraine, Wednesday, Apr. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky) via Flickr The post Ukrainian President welcomed to Washington, Biden promises new military aid to fight Russia; Jan 6 committee delays release of final report; Power restored across Humbolt County in aftermath of 6.4m earthquake appeared first on KPFA.
Amid the ruins of war, the flowerings of art. A delicate painting of a gymnast doing a handstand has popped up on the wall of a wrecked building outside of Kyiv and appears to be the work of the British graffiti artist known as Banksy. Banksy posted photos on his Instagram page of the artwork in Borodyanka, northwest of Ukraine's capital. The town was the target of shelling and fighting in the early stages of the Russian invasion, which turned apartment buildings into charred, bombed-out hulks. The mural of the gymnast is in black and white and is painted so she looks like she is doing her handstand on the crumpled remains of concrete blocks that poke out of the blackened wall. Towering above her are the gutted, blown-apart innards of what were once apartments. Another mural in the town — of a small boy doing a judo throw on a man — also looked like it might be Banksy's, although that wasn't posted on his Instagram page. President Vladimir Putin of Russia is a judo practitioner. A Banksy-like painting, also in black and white and again not confirmed as his by Banksy himself, also appeared on the wall of a war-damaged building in the town of Irpin, on Kyiv's northwestern outskirts. It shows a rhythmic gymnast doing a pirouette with a ribbon, over a gaping hole in the wall. This article was provided by The Associated Press.
In episode 156 of The Just Checking In Podcast we checked back in with conflict journalist and Founder of Popular Front, Jake Hanrahan. Since we last spoke, Jake has been busy covering more underreported conflicts across the globe, particularly in Ukraine in its war against Russia, French-controlled Corsica, the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the Karabakh region and the continued rise of illegal 3D printed guns across Europe. In this episode we do a deep dive on his latest film ‘Frontline Hooligan: Ukraine's Anti-Fascist Football Ultras Fighting Russian Invasion' which focuses on the Hoods Hoods Klan and the various characters within it that make the group unique. We also discuss the wider situation that millions of Ukrainians are facing right now and the massacres that have taken place by the hands of Russian soldiers including at Borodyanka near Bucha. As always, #itsokaytovent Find out more about Popular Front here and how to support it here: www.popularfront.co/ You can watch Frontline Hooligan here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsodbPkjO3c&ab_channel=PopularFront You can follow Popular Front on social media below: Twitter: https://twitter.com/PopularFront_ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/popular.front/ Subscribe to Popular Front on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/c/PopularFront You can follow Jake on social media below: Twitter: twitter.com/Jake_Hanrahan You can donate to Hoods Hoods Klan and their war effort in Ukraine directly below: PayPal: xkemanx@gmail.com Support Us: Patreon: www.patreon.com/venthelpuk GoFundMe: www.gofundme.com/f/help-vent-supp…ir-mental-health Merchandise: www.redbubble.com/people/VentUK/sh…unt-nav-dropdown Music: @patawawa - Strange: www.youtube.com/watch?v=d70wfeJSEvk
When Ukrainian troops liberated the town of Borodyanka from Russian occupation in early April, 2022 they discovered the damage done to its Taras Shevchenko monument. Bullets had hit the great poet's forehead. The pillar holding him up had been damaged by shells. The symbolism of the Russian attack on the monument was obvious. Taras Shevchenko is not just the founder of the modern Ukrainian literary language, he is also the most important symbol of modern Ukrainian nationhood. Written by Stephen M. Norris. Narration by Dr. Nicholas B. Breyfogle. A textual version of this video is available at https://origins.osu.edu/read/taras-sh.... This is a production of Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective at the Goldberg Center in the Department of History at The Ohio State University and the Department of History at Miami University. Be sure to subscribe to our channel to receive updates about our videos and podcasts. For more information about Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective, please visit origins.osu.edu.
Khi binh lính Nga chiếm Borodyanka vào tháng 3, cụ Halyna Derevyanko, 80 tuổi đã cố thủ trong căn hộ của mình. Những người hàng xóm của cụ di tản khi quân Nga không kích thị trấn, nhưng cụ vẫn ở lại với người con trai trong tòa nhà năm tầng vì cụ không còn sức lực cũng như cơ hội để rời khỏi nhà.
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/2nldgfzk Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com The Taoiseach sees with his eyes a part of the depopulation of Ukraine. Cuid de bhánú na hÚcráine feicthe ag an Taoiseach lena dhá shúil. Taoiseach Micheál Martin had a meeting with Ukrainian President Voldomyr Zelensky in the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, today. Bhí cruinniú ag an Taoiseach Micheál Martin le hUachtarán na hUcráine Voldomyr Zelensky i bpríomhchathair na hÚcráine, Cív, inniu. Micheál Martin promised President Zelensky that Ireland and the European Union as a whole would continue to support Ukraine in times of need. Gheall Micheál Martin don Uachtarán Zelensky go leanfadh Éire agus an tAontas Eorpach trí chéile, go leanfaidís orthu ag tacú leis an Úcráin in am an ghátair. The Taoiseach is on an official visit to Ukraine at the invitation of President Zelensky. Tá an Taoiseach ar cuairt oifigiúil chun na hÚcráine ar chuireadh an Uachtaráin Zelensky. Micheál Martin spent a morning in the town of Borodyanka northwest of Kiev. Chaith Micheál Martin seal ar maidin i mbaile Borodyanka siar ó thuaidh ó Chív. The Russians raided the town vigorously when they invaded Ukraine four months ago. Thuairgneáil na Rúisigh an baile go tréan nuair a rinne siad ionradh ar an Úcráin ceithre mhí ó shin. The Russians at the time intended to go as far as Kiev and did much damage to Borodyanka's infrastructure before withdrawing. Bhí rún ag na Rúisigh ag an am dul chomh fada le Cív agus rinne siad an-damáiste do bhonneagar Borodyanka sular tharraing siad siar. The Taoiseach saw the remains of the bridge near Hostomel airport, as well as warehouses, shopping centers and petrol stations that have been damaged by the bombing. Chonaic an Taoiseach a bhfuil fanta den droichead in aice le haerfort Hostomel, chomh maith le trádstórais, ionaid siopadóireachta agus stáisiúin pheitril a ndearnadh múr díobh de bharr na buamála. The mayor of the city took the Taoiseach to an apartment block that had been burnt down and inhabited again. Thug méara na cathrach an Taoiseach go bloc árasán a dódh agus nach bhféadfadh daoine cónaí ann arís. Southeast of the town of Bucha followed by the Taoiseach, where Russian forces killed hundreds of civilians in early March, according to reports. Soir ó dheas go baile Bucha leis an Taoiseach ina dhiaidh sin, áit ar mharaigh fórsaí Rúiseacha na céadta sibhialtach i dtús an Mhárta, de réir tuairiscí. He saw the mass grave where many of those people are buried. Chonaic sé an olluaigh ina bhfuil go leor de daoine sin adhlactha. From there, Micheál Martin went to Irpin's town, where he saw even more damage, before heading for Kiev. As sin, chuaigh Micheál Martin go baile Irpin, mar a a bhfaca sé tuilleadh damáiste fós, sular thug sé aghaidh ar Chív. Taoiseach Micheál Martin and Ukrainian President Voldomyr Zelensky in Kiev today An Taoiseach Micheál Martin agus Uachtarán na hUcráine Voldomyr Zelensky i gCív inniu
Warar iyo Barnaamijyo Af Soomali ah Horyaallada kubadda cagta haweenka ee qaramada Yurub ayaa bilaabanaya Arbacada, Kooxda mataleysa Iswiidhen ayaa ciyaarteeda ugu horreysa la ciyaari doonta Netherlands 9-ka Luulyo oo ku aaddan maalinta sabtida.Ra'isul wasaaraha Iswiidhen Magdalena Andersson ayaa maanta booqasho qarsoodi ah ugu safartay dalka Ukraine, waxayna booqatay magaalooyinka Butja iyo Borodyanka, oo labaduba ay dagaalladu si xun u saameeyeen. Iyo warar kale.
The team at the Explaining Ukraine podcast is traveling through the villages in towns around Kyiv which heavily suffered from the battles in March. We describe our impressions and share the stories told to us by people who lived through the war. Here is the story of Borodyanka, a town near Kyiv. Hosts: Volodymyr Yermolenko, Ukrainian philosopher, chief editor of UkraineWorld.org, and Tetyana Ogarkova, Ukrainian scholar and journalist in charge of international outreach at the Ukraine Crisis Media Centre. Support us on patreon.com/ukraineworld Video version: https://youtu.be/lurmbOJYOb4
Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said June 1 his country is improving its transport infrastructure to ease the export of grain and other key products from neighboring Ukraine that has been severely restricted by Russia's invasion. Morawiecki spoke in the Ukrainian town of Borodyanka, near Kyiv, that was heavily damaged by Russian shelling. He was there to inaugurate container houses, provided by Poland, for people left homeless by the fighting. Morawiecki said Poland, a European Union member, is working on expanding its transport infrastructure and the flow capacity to facilitate the export of millions of tons of Ukrainian grain and other agricultural products to the world. Poland is receiving EU funds for the purpose, Morawiecki said. He said North African and Middle Eastern countries rely heavily on Ukraine grain and could face problems feeding their populations without it. Poland is currently a key route for Ukraine exports, but border bottlenecks — among other difficulties — are restricting the flow of goods. Poland and Ukraine are also discussing Poland's assistance in rebuilding Ukraine after the war, as well as stronger cooperation in defense, security and infrastructure. The prospective deals will “on one hand help Ukraine, on the other hand will give an economic impulse to Poland," Morawiecki said. Morawiecki was joined in Kyiv by Poland's most powerful politician, Deputy Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski, for talks on Ukraine's recovery with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal. This article was provided by The Associated Press.
War stories from four neighbors who fought the Russian occupation despite being impossibly outnumbered and outgunned. The adrenaline from the battle has barely worn off and this is the first time they share what they lived through. With the war still raging, most people fighting in Ukraine haven't had the chance to tell their stories yet. But Russian forces have retreated from the small town of Borodyanka, so we hear from four of the town's defenders. ~ “RESISTANCE: Stories from Ukraine” is a harrowing and inspirational journey across Ukraine in the first weeks of Russia's invasion. While the military wages war on the frontlines, everyday citizens are picking up whatever weapons they can, including their smartphones, computers, sewing needles, and guitars. Photojournalist Laurel Chor travels to cities across the country, finding extraordinary stories that go beyond the headlines. For more reporting, and a complete transcript of this episode, please visit: https://projectbrazen.com/resistance
War stories from four neighbors who fought the Russian occupation despite being impossibly outnumbered and outgunned. The adrenaline from the explosions of battle has barely worn off and this is the first time they share what they lived through. With the war still raging, most people fighting in Ukraine haven't had the chance to tell their stories yet. But Russian forces have retreated from the small town of Borodyanka, along with nearby Bucha and Irpin, so we hear from four of this town's defenders. ~ “RESISTANCE: Stories from Ukraine” is a harrowing and inspirational journey across Ukraine in the first weeks of Russia's invasion. While the military wages war on the frontlines, everyday citizens are picking up whatever weapons they can, including their smartphones, computers, sewing needles, and guitars. Photojournalist Laurel Chor travels to cities across the country, finding extraordinary stories that go beyond the headlines. For more news, and a complete transcript of this episode, please visit: https://projectbrazen.com/resistance
Riccardo Magi, deputato e presidente di +Europa, insieme alla deputata del PD Lia Quartapelle è stato il primo parlamentare italiano a recarsi in Ucraina. “Abbiamo visto la distruzione totale. A Bucha, Irpin e Borodyanka non è rimasto più nulla. Non c'è un edificio che non è stato colpito dall'artiglieria russa e sono state ritrovate diverse fosse comuni con centinaia di cadaveri. Cadaveri che avevano le mani legate dietro la schiena".
A new film puts a face to the devastation and resilience of everyday Ukranians finding life in the midst of war. Announcing “RESISTANCE: Returning Home”, a documentary film that gives a visual connection to the gripping stories we've been hearing across this podcast series. In the film, Laurel Chor travels to the liberated towns outside Kyiv in the days following Russia's withdrawal. It was a raw, difficult time. We witness the heartrending images of Bucha, travel with a couple from Irpin as they return home to their neighborhood for the first time, and we see the absolute destruction caused by the aerial bombardment of Borodyanka. To see the full film, visit: www.projectbrazen.com/resistance ~ “RESISTANCE: Stories from Ukraine” is a harrowing and inspirational journey across Ukraine in the first weeks of Russia's invasion. While the military wages war on the frontlines, everyday citizens are picking up whatever weapons they can, including their smartphones, computers, sewing needles, and guitars. Photojournalist Laurel Chor travels to cities across the country, finding extraordinary stories that go beyond the headlines.
A new film puts a face to the devastation and resilience of everyday Ukranians finding life in the midst of war. Announcing “RESISTANCE: Returning Home”, a documentary film that gives a visual connection to the gripping stories we've been hearing across this podcast series. In the film, Laurel Chor travels to the liberated towns outside Kyiv in the days following Russia's withdrawal. It was a raw, difficult time. We witness the heartrending images of Bucha, travel with a couple from Irpin as they return home to their neighborhood for the first time, and we see the absolute destruction caused by the aerial bombardment of Borodyanka. To see the full film, visit: www.projectbrazen.com/resistance ~ “RESISTANCE: Stories from Ukraine” is a harrowing and inspirational journey across Ukraine in the first weeks of Russia's invasion. While the military wages war on the frontlines, everyday citizens are picking up whatever weapons they can, including their smartphones, computers, sewing needles, and guitars. Photojournalist Laurel Chor travels to cities across the country, finding extraordinary stories that go beyond the headlines.
Ryssland firar segerdagen efter andra världskriget samtidigt som kriget i Ukraina pågår. Vid firandet påstod Vladimir Putin att väst trappat upp militärt och därför provocerat fram Rysslands invasion. Den 9 maj är en helgdag i Ryssland eftersom segern i andra världskriget hyllas, eller det stora fosterländska krigetsom det beskrivs i Ryssland. Traditionellt hålls enorma militärparader med stridsfordon, flyguppvisning och marschorkestrar i Moskva. Men i år är den ryska armén framför allt upptagen med striderna i Ukraina där Ryssland lidit stora förluster. Hör hur den ryske presidenten Vladimir Putin nu försöker rättfärdiga invasionen av Ukraina. Putin sa i ett tal vid militärparaden att ryska styrkor strider i Ukraina för att försvara moderlandet och la skulden för kriget på västvärlden och Nato. Segerdagens historia genom årenRadiokorrespondenterna Ryssland berättar också om segerdagens historia och hur Vladimir Putin förändrat traditionen för sina syften och gjort det till en uppvisning av militär styrka. Årets firande var dock nedtonat jämfört med tidigare och president Putin såg trött ut. Hör också vad Ukrainas president Volodymyr Zelenskyj sa när Ukraina höll sin minnesdag efter andra världskriget den 8 maj. Medan Putin höll tal inför en traditionell militärparad i den ryska huvudstaden talade Zelenskyj klädd i t-shirt framför utbombade ruiner i Borodyanka. Båda presidenterna kopplade ihop det som händer idag med historien och andra världskriget.Medverkande: Maria Persson Löfgren och Johanna Melén, RysslandskorrespondenterProgramledare: Fredrik WadströmProducent: Katja MagnussonTekniker: Behzad Mehrnoosh
QUAND MOSCOU AGITE... LA "3e GUERRE MONDIALE" – 26/04/22 Invités GÉNÉRAL VINCENT DESPORTES Ancien directeur de l'École de guerre Professeur de stratégie à Sciences Po FRANÇOIS CLEMENCEAU Rédacteur en chef international - « Le Journal du Dimanche » ELENA VOLOCHINE Grand reporter – « France 24 » NICOLE BACHARAN Politologue spécialiste des États-Unis Le risque d'une Troisième guerre mondiale « est réel, il ne faut pas le sous-estimer ». C'est l'avertissement lancé par le ministre russe des Affaires étrangères Sergueï Lavrov. Pour le patron de la diplomatie russe, l'Otan mène déjà une guerre par procuration avec la Russie en livrant des armes aux Ukrainiens. Cette mise en garde à peine voilée a été faite quelques heures avant une réunion ce mardi en Allemagne entre les Américains et leurs alliés pour renforcer la défense de l'Ukraine qui, selon le ministre américain de la Défense « peut gagner » face à la Russie, si on lui en donne les moyens. L'un des principaux objectifs des discussions est donc de synchroniser et de coordonner entre une quarantaine de pays l'aide militaire croissante apporté à Kiev comprenant des armes lourdes ainsi que des drones armés et des munitions alors que sur le terrain les combats se poursuivent dans l'est et le sud du pays. Parallèlement, la Moldavie a décidé de convoquer son conseil de sécurité sur fond de crainte de débordement du conflit après des explosions dans sa région prorusse de Transnistrie. Faut-il craindre l'escalade ? Après deux mois de guerre, le bilan ne cesse de s'alourdir. Le Haut-Commissariat de l'ONU pour les réfugiés estime qu'il y aurait plus de cinq millions de réfugiés ukrainiens. Plus de 7,7 millions de personnes sont déplacées à l'intérieur de l'Ukraine, soit un Ukrainien sur six. Dans les territoires près de Kiev où les forces russes se sont retirées, les policiers ukrainiens ainsi que des enquêteurs de la Cour pénale internationale et de plusieurs ONG enquêtent pour documenter les crimes de guerre. À Borodyanka, où le bilan est « bien plus horrible » qu'à Boutcha, selon le président Zelensky, chaque jour des corps de civils continuent d'être exhumés, abattus voire torturés. « Il y a des preuves des crimes de guerre des forces russes à chaque tournant » de la ville a déclaré la procureure générale ukrainienne. Iryna Venediktova accuse les soldats russes de s'être livrés à « des meurtres, des tortures et des passages à tabac » de civils, ainsi qu'à des viols, et souligne que les forces de l'ordre recueillent des preuves pour les tribunaux locaux et internationaux. Alors quelle est la situation en Ukraine ? Le risque d'extension du conflit est-il réel ? Peut-on vraiment entrer dans une 3ème guerre mondiale ? Et que se passe-t-il en Asie ? Le dirigeant Kim Jong Un a annoncé son intention de « renforcer et développer » l'armement nucléaire de son pays. En dépit de sévères sanctions internationales, la Corée du Nord redouble d'efforts pour moderniser son armée et depuis le début de l'année a testé des armes interdites. Des analystes redoutent une possible reprise de ses essais nucléaires. DIFFUSION : du lundi au samedi à 17h45 FORMAT : 65 minutes PRÉSENTATION : Caroline Roux - Axel de Tarlé REDIFFUSION : du lundi au vendredi vers 23h40 RÉALISATION : Nicolas Ferraro, Bruno Piney, Franck Broqua, Alexandre Langeard, Corentin Son PRODUCTION : France Télévisions / Maximal Productions Retrouvez C DANS L'AIR sur internet & les réseaux : INTERNET : francetv.fr FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/Cdanslairf5 TWITTER : https://twitter.com/cdanslair INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/cdanslair/
调查人员正在费力地从乱坟岗中挖掘尸体,以收集据称是俄罗斯军队所犯暴行的证据。DW记者Mathias Bölinger访问了基辅附近的博罗江卡镇(Borodyanka)——遇到了一位儿子从未回家的母亲。
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/y6l7td5d Mariupol "redeemed" but with only some pine left. Mariupol "fuascailte" ach gan ach cuid péine fanta inti. Russian President Vladimir Putin today announced that the city of Mariupol in southeastern Ukraine has been "redeemed" after his Defense Minister informed him that the place is under his control by Russian soldiers, with the exception of the Azovstal steel giant. D'fhógair Uachtarán na Rúise Vladimir Putin inniu go bhfuil cathair Mariupol in oirdheisceart na hÚcráine "fuascailte" tar éis dá Aire Cosanta cur in iúl dó go bhfuil an áit faoina smacht nach mór ag saighdiúirí Rúiseacha, cé is moite d'ollmhonarcha cruach Azovstal. Azovstal forces, a maze that is not easy for the Russians to make their way into, are still being upheld by Ukrainian forces. Tá fórsaí Úcránacha ag seasamh an fhóid i gcónaí in Azovstal, cathair ghríobháin nach furasta do na Rúisigh a mbealach a dhéanamh isteach inti. Vladimir Putin said there would be no proximity to the Russian Army's infantry to raid the factory but indicated that they would besiege the place or that everyone in it would be left in the lurch for lack of food and water. Dúirt Vladimir Putin nach mbeadh aon ghar do chos-slua Arm na Rúise ruathar a thabhairt ar an monarcha ach thug sé le fios go gcuirfidís imshuí ar an áit nó go mbeadh gach duine inti faonlag féachta de cheal bia agus uisce. He ordered his soldiers to place such a tight siege on the factory in a position from which not so much as a fly could escape. D'ordaigh sé dá shaighdiúirí imshuí chomh teann sin a chur ar an monarcha i riocht nach bhféadfadh oiread agus cuileog éalú aisti. Hundreds of civilians - both children and the elderly - are among the factory guards living in caves and underground passages. Tá na céadta sibhialtach - idir leanaí agus sheanóirí - i measc lucht cosanta na monarchan agus iad ag cur fúthu in uaimheanna agus i gcaolphasáistí faoi thalamh. They also include infamous Azov battalion paramilitaries. Tá paraimíleataigh mhíchlúiteacha chathlán Azov ina measc chomh maith. That right-wing battalion is often cited with brutality. Luaitear an cathlán eite deise sin go minic le brúidiúlacht. Vladimir Putin urged everyone in the factory to obey the Russians, and promised to treat them well and provide medical assistance to those who needed it. Mhol Vladimir Putin do gach aon duine sa mhonarcha géilleadh do na Rúisigh, agus gheall go gcaithfí go maith leo agus go gcuirfí cúnamh leighis ar fáil don dream a mbeadh sé uathu. Mariupol has been under siege by the Russian Army since the beginning of March. Tá Mariupol faoi léigear ag Arm na Rúise ó thús an Mhárta. The Russians, however, did not care for the river to catch trout, as their artillery has meanwhile destroyed the deserted place. Ní ag tabhairt aire don abhainn go bhfaighidís breac a bhí na Rúisigh, áfach, ó tá an áit bánaithe luanscriosta ag a gcuid airtléire idir an dá linn. Not to mention the number of people killed in seven weeks - which is still innumerable - the city has been abandoned by most of the 450,000 citizens who lived there before Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Gan trácht ar an líon daoine a maraíodh le seacht seachtaine - atá gan áireamh beacht fós - tá an chathair tréighte ag formhór na 450,000 saoránach a bhí ina gcónaí inti roimh ionradh na Rúise ar an Úcráin. It is gratifying that four busloads of people were allowed to leave Mariupol yesterday, the remnants of which are unknown. Damhna sóláis gur ceadaíodh do cheithre bhus lán daoine imeacht as Mariupol inné, fuíoll an áir nach fios cad atá i ndán dóibh. In northern Ukraine, in the town of Borodyanka near the capital Kiev, the bodies of nine civilians allegedly killed by Russian soldiers have been found. I dtuaisceart na hÚcráine, i mbaile Borodyanka in aice leis an bpríomhchathair Cív,
International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Karim Khan visited the Ukrainian towns of Bucha and Borodyanka this week, where mass graves and murdered civilians were discovered in early April following the Russian withdrawal from northern Ukraine. “Ukraine is a crime scene. We're here because we have reasonable grounds to believe that crimes within the jurisdiction of the ICC are being committed. We have to pierce the fog of war to get to the truth,” Khan said after visiting Bucha. Also, the Russian warship Moskva has sunk, Russian state news agency TASS reported, citing a statement from the Russian Ministry of Defense. There have been conflicting accounts emerging about an incident involving the warship in the Black Sea on Wednesday. Retired Brigadier General Peter Zwack, a former U.S. defense attaché to Russia and retired Lieutenant General Mark Hertling talk about what this means for Russia. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
We discuss Russia's escalating attacks on civilians in Ukraine, and similar tactics used previously in Syria and Chechnya.Putin has committed crimes against humanity before. With no real repercussions from the West. If you like our content, please subscribe to our premium episodes. During the Chechen wars, the West was not as outraged as now, because the victims were predominantly Muslim and world leaders at the time still believed Putin was fighting a war “against terror”. It was proved by journalists like Anna Politkovskaya and former FSB officer turned dissident Alexander Litvinenko that was in fact Putin who planned the now infamous Moscow apartment bombings of 1999 as a pretext to start a war with Chechnya. For a more detailed account, listen to our Putin's Rise to Power – Part 2 premium episode. 1, 2 We discuss verified reports of executions, sexual assault, torture, shelling of children hospitals, maternities, and blocks of flats, as well as other horrors emerging from Bucha, Borodyanka, Mariupol, Kharkiv, Dnipro, Mykolaiv, Lviv, Irpin and Odessa. The number of civilian casualties just in Mariupol alone is estimated to exceed 20,000. They are rounding up Ukrainian civilians into camps and many people are “disappeared”. They have even killed dogs and their puppies. As Russia regroups to prepare for the Donbas battle, they are giving a new meaning to “scorched earth”. We go through a brief history of war crimes, and we will analyze the current situation, the West's reaction and what's coming next: General Alexander Dvornikov aka the Butcher of Syria and the Battle of Donbas. 3 Lviv University is the alma mater of the two lawyers who came up with the legal concepts of prosecutions at Nuremberg for genocide and crimes against humanity. Raphael Lemkin introduced the term ‘genocide' in international law and Hersch Lauterpacht coined ‘crimes against humanity' into international law. Putin is winning in Russia. He's losing internationally but he's winning at home, his popularity ratings inside Russia are 83%. On April 11, Putin arrested Vladimir Kara-Murza. The FSB has poisoned kara-Murza twice already. He's now in prison just Alexei Navalny, not likely to be released soon. A 13 km long Russian convoy is approaching Donbas. On the international scene Russia has been kicked out of the UN Human rights Council but not from the Security Council. The US is sending $750 M in military aid to Ukraine. Ukraine also has Bayraktar drones from Turkey. Finland and Sweden move closer to NATO membership. 4 1. Patrice Taddonio, What an ‘Unhinged' Meeting Reveals About Vladimir Putin's War on Ukraine, PBS, March 2022. ⇤2. Greg Myre, Russia's Wars in Chechnya Offer a Grim Warning of What Could Be in Ukraine, NPR, March 2022. ⇤3. Pjotr Sauer, Hundreds of Ukrainians Forcibly Deported to Russia, Say Mariupol Women, The Guardian, April 2022. ⇤4. Ben Arris, Editor in Chief, BNE Intellinews. ⇤
The U.S. and European allies have accused Russia of war crimes in Ukraine. The Biden administration says it's helping Ukraine investigate. How? And Russia left death and destruction in towns north of Kyiv. What is life like now in one of those towns? Our team travels to Borodyanka.
This past week, the world's attention has been focused on the death and destruction that's been discovered in Ukranian towns north of Kyiv after Russian forces withdrew. One of those towns — vistied by NPR — is Borodyanka. The carnage left behind by Russians is also a sign of what may be to come in the country's east, where a new offensive looms. NPR's Scott Detrow reported from Boyodyanka with producers Noah Caldwell and Kat Lonsdorf. Additional reporting this episode from correspondents Nathan Rott and Greg Myre.In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.
L'aggressore affila unghie e denti. Il Punto Stampa del 8/4/2022 Situazione sui vari fronti. Attuale posizione dei reparti russi https://www.uawardata.com/ Linee dei diversi fronti https://militaryland.net/ukraine/invasion-day-43-summary/ Offensiva Russa ad Est. Obiettivi russi ad est evidenti ma irrealistici rebus sic stantibus. https://twitter.com/PhillipsPOBrien/status/1512053218448183300 Lungo thread di Kamil Galeev sulla situazione nell'est e i tank russi https://twitter.com/kamilkazani/status/1511528319656755205 Aiuti Militari all'Ucraina. Jens Stoltenberg promette nuovi aiuti militari all'Ucraina https://www.dw.com/en/nato-chief-pledges-more-assistance-for-ukraine-and-neighbors/a-61394391 UK annuncerà a breve nuovi aiuti militari all'Ucraina https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/apr/07/uk-and-ukrainian-ministers-meet-to-plan-next-round-of-military-aid Finlandia e Nato: Nelle prossime settimane la Finlandia renderà chiara la propria posizione sull'adesione alla Nato. https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/finland-clarify-next-steps-possible-nato-entry-within-weeks-foreign-minister-2022-04-07/ Reazione Russa: https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russia-says-it-would-have-rebalance-if-finland-sweden-join-nato-2022-04-07/ In un'intervista per Sky News Dimitri Peskov (Press Secretary del Cremlino) ammette di aver subito perdite “significative”. https://news.sky.com/story/ukraine-war-putins-spokesman-denies-war-crimes-but-admits-significant-russian-losses-12584552 Russia sospesa da UN Human Righs Council https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/apr/07/russia-suspended-un-human-rights-council-ukraine EU Parliament votes for full embargo on imports of Russian oil, coal, nuclear fuel and gas https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20220401IPR26524/meps-demand-full-embargo-on-russian-imports-of-oil-coal-nuclear-fuel-and-gas Massacri di Bucha, Irpin, Hostomel e Borodyanka Intercettazioni di truppe russe sui massacri a Bucha https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/possible-evidence-of-russian-atrocities-german-intelligence-intercepts-radio-traffic-discussing-the-murder-of-civilians-in-bucha-a-0a191c96-634f-4d07-8c5c-c4a772315b0d Testimonianza di alcuni sopravvissuti sulle “kill list” https://twitter.com/ronzheimer/status/1512081315604021255 Situazione a Borodyanka “significativamente più disastrosa” che a Bucha https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/ukraine-zelensky-bucha-borodyanka-war-crimes-latest-b2053389.html Fonti ucraine divulgano i dati personali dei soldati russi che sarebbero stati presenti a Bucha durante l'eccidio. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-europe-61032786 A Russian default looks almost inevitable https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2022/04/06/a-russian-debt-default-looks-almost-inevitable https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russia-says-it-had-pay-roubles-holders-eurobonds-2022-04-06/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=daily-briefing FBI says it disrupted Russian hackers https://www.reuters.com/world/us-fbi-says-it-foiled-cyberattack-by-russian-hackers-2022-04-06/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=daily-briefing Intel becomes latest Western tech firm to suspend business in Russia https://www.reuters.com/technology/intel-suspends-business-operations-russia-2022-04-06/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=daily-briefing Analysis: Italy's politics, public opinion, could weaken West's anti-Putin front https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/italys-politics-public-opinion-could-weaken-wests-anti-putin-front-2022-04-07/ Analysis: China's balancing act over Ukraine offers Washington a subtle ‘win' https://www.reuters.com/world/chinas-balancing-act-over-ukraine-offers-washington-subtle-win-2022-04-07/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=daily-briefing BBC pubblica video che sembra mostrare l'uccisione di prigionieri russi da parte di truppe Ucraine. https://www.bbc.com/news/61025388
Siste nytt fra VG Nyheter.
Photo: #Ukraine: 2/2: Kharkiv is under siege. Borodyanka is destroyed. Mohammed al-Kassim @foreignfocus @TheMediaLine, The Media Line News Agency https://mail.google.com/mail/u/1/#inbox/WhctKKXPlqfXpGhXTLcNbqcDpPtmtMcLffdcqjzKvmwKnRJcTQVGCBdbPcnSpzZxZcrvFxv?compose=SxfkdtxbFFJhfMmZZgwFfGFPqRwrwmrlfzCPqCBNhqRPwkkDjXbtFHxPBsgJKLWnqXvFJchJsVNDkwhrtFwbVGxmbQzVhZsMDBgvQLpZMrQfCGNpdfL
Photo: #Ukraine: 1/2: Kharkiv is under siege. Borodyanka is destroyed. Mohammed al-Kassim @foreignfocus @TheMediaLine, The Media Line News Agency https://mail.google.com/mail/u/1/#inbox/WhctKKXPlqfXpGhXTLcNbqcDpPtmtMcLffdcqjzKvmwKnRJcTQVGCBdbPcnSpzZxZcrvFxv?compose=SxfkdtxbFFJhfMmZZgwFfGFPqRwrwmrlfzCPqCBNhqRPwkkDjXbtFHxPBsgJKLWnqXvFJchJsVNDkwhrtFwbVGxmbQzVhZsMDBgvQLpZMrQfCGNpdfL
Russia fuori Consiglio diritti umani. Kiev, Borodyanka orribile.
The twenty-ninth episode of the Ukraine Daily Brief from the Deep State Radio Network.Stories cited in the podcast:Poland signs deal for purchase of 250 Abrams tanksEU begins stockpiling gear, drugs against chemical, nuclear incidentsAs Ukraine regains control of Borodyanka area, more Russians' atrocities come to lightGermany is in confidential talks over Ukraine guarantees - ScholzBlocking Russian oil exports would send prices "skyrocketing," US Treasury secretary saysCountries to release an additional 60 million barrels of oil from storage, IAE saysRussia hit with new round of U.S. sanctions as Biden decries 'major war crimes'Breaking ranks with EU, Hungary says ready to pay for Russian gas in roublesRussia edges close to default on debt, puts roubles aside for bondholdersExclusive: China state refiners shun new Russian oil tradesInflation in Russia hits 7-yr high, prices jump 10% in year-to-dateEnergy Community sets up a Fund to rebuild Ukraine's war-torn energy infrastructureUSAID helps deliver 5,000 of SpaceX's satellite internet service terminals to UkraineMalta resists EU pressure to stop selling citizenshipDOJ says it disrupted a botnet run by Russian military intelligence agency See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A look at the fallout from Russian attacks in Borodyanka, a suburb of the Ukrainian capitol of Kyiv. As Becky Sullivan reports, Ukrainian officials accuse Russian forces of indiscriminately attacking civilians there. Since 2019, a lawyer named Andrew Mac has served as an adviser to Ukraine's president. He discusses the U.S. response and the assistance it's providing.
A cura di Daniele Biacchessi Una guerra di lunga durata. Così il segretario generale della Nato, Jens Stoltenberg si immagina il futuro del conflitto tra Russia e Ucraina. "Dobbiamo essere realistici e renderci conto che questo può durare a lungo, molti mesi e anche anni. Ed è per questo che dobbiamo essere preparati anche per una lunga guerra". Del resto gli indicatori militari sul campo vanno esattamente questa direzione. Il ritiro delle truppe russe è nei fatti un riposizionamento. Man mano che i russi si spostano e abbandonano le città, incalzati dalla resistenza dell'esercito ucraino, lasciano dietro una scia di orrori e di vittime civili ingiustificate. Da Irpin a Borodyanka a Bucha, emergono testimonianze terrificanti, i cui responsabili dovranno rispondere davanti alla Corte Penale Internazionale dell'Aja. Putin nega ci siano state stragi contro civili e definisce la narrazione intorno alle vittime una provocazione cinica e rozza. Il Cremlino non esclude che si arrivi alla rottura delle relazioni diplomatiche tra Mosca e l'Occidente. Contro la Russia piovono sanzioni sempre più forti. I negoziati sono fermi. Non ci sono segnali di riavvicinamento. Anzi, i timidi passi di Turchia e Cina si rivelano oggi bloccati da qualcosa di insormontabile che si chiama guerra totale. È vero, l'Italia ed altri paesi lavorano per l'unica soluzione possibile, una conferenza internazionale per la pace. Già, ma chi la dovrebbe promuovere. Se ne è accorto anche Papa Francesco che qualcosa non va nel ruolo dell'Onu. "Nell'attuale guerra in Ucraina, assistiamo all'impotenza dell'Organizzazione delle Nazioni Unite". Si può solo dargli ragione. Credits: Agenzia Fotogramma. _________________________________________ "Il Corsivo" a cura di Daniele Biacchessi non è un editoriale, ma un approfondimento sui fatti di maggiore interesse che i quotidiani spesso non raccontano. Un servizio in punta di penna che analizza con un occhio esperto quell'angolo nascosto delle notizie di politica, economia e cronaca. Per i notiziari sempre aggiornati ascoltaci sul sito: https://www.giornaleradio.fm oppure scarica la nostra App gratuita: iOS - App Store - https://apple.co/2uW01yA Android - Google Play - http://bit.ly/2vCjiW3 Resta connesso e segui i canali social di Giornale Radio: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/giornaleradio.fm/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/giornaleradio.tv/?hl=it Twitter: https://twitter.com/giornaleradiofm
A cura di Daniele Biacchessi Una guerra di lunga durata. Così il segretario generale della Nato, Jens Stoltenberg si immagina il futuro del conflitto tra Russia e Ucraina. "Dobbiamo essere realistici e renderci conto che questo può durare a lungo, molti mesi e anche anni. Ed è per questo che dobbiamo essere preparati anche per una lunga guerra". Del resto gli indicatori militari sul campo vanno esattamente questa direzione. Il ritiro delle truppe russe è nei fatti un riposizionamento. Man mano che i russi si spostano e abbandonano le città, incalzati dalla resistenza dell'esercito ucraino, lasciano dietro una scia di orrori e di vittime civili ingiustificate. Da Irpin a Borodyanka a Bucha, emergono testimonianze terrificanti, i cui responsabili dovranno rispondere davanti alla Corte Penale Internazionale dell'Aja. Putin nega ci siano state stragi contro civili e definisce la narrazione intorno alle vittime una provocazione cinica e rozza. Il Cremlino non esclude che si arrivi alla rottura delle relazioni diplomatiche tra Mosca e l'Occidente. Contro la Russia piovono sanzioni sempre più forti. I negoziati sono fermi. Non ci sono segnali di riavvicinamento. Anzi, i timidi passi di Turchia e Cina si rivelano oggi bloccati da qualcosa di insormontabile che si chiama guerra totale. È vero, l'Italia ed altri paesi lavorano per l'unica soluzione possibile, una conferenza internazionale per la pace. Già, ma chi la dovrebbe promuovere. Se ne è accorto anche Papa Francesco che qualcosa non va nel ruolo dell'Onu. "Nell'attuale guerra in Ucraina, assistiamo all'impotenza dell'Organizzazione delle Nazioni Unite". Si può solo dargli ragione. Credits: Agenzia Fotogramma. _________________________________________ "Il Corsivo" a cura di Daniele Biacchessi non è un editoriale, ma un approfondimento sui fatti di maggiore interesse che i quotidiani spesso non raccontano. Un servizio in punta di penna che analizza con un occhio esperto quell'angolo nascosto delle notizie di politica, economia e cronaca. Per i notiziari sempre aggiornati ascoltaci sul sito: https://www.giornaleradio.fm oppure scarica la nostra App gratuita: iOS - App Store - https://apple.co/2uW01yA Android - Google Play - http://bit.ly/2vCjiW3 Resta connesso e segui i canali social di Giornale Radio: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/giornaleradio.fm/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/giornaleradio.tv/?hl=it Twitter: https://twitter.com/giornaleradiofm
A cura di Daniele Biacchessi Una guerra di lunga durata. Così il segretario generale della Nato, Jens Stoltenberg si immagina il futuro del conflitto tra Russia e Ucraina. "Dobbiamo essere realistici e renderci conto che questo può durare a lungo, molti mesi e anche anni. Ed è per questo che dobbiamo essere preparati anche per una lunga guerra". Del resto gli indicatori militari sul campo vanno esattamente questa direzione. Il ritiro delle truppe russe è nei fatti un riposizionamento. Man mano che i russi si spostano e abbandonano le città, incalzati dalla resistenza dell'esercito ucraino, lasciano dietro una scia di orrori e di vittime civili ingiustificate. Da Irpin a Borodyanka a Bucha, emergono testimonianze terrificanti, i cui responsabili dovranno rispondere davanti alla Corte Penale Internazionale dell'Aja. Putin nega ci siano state stragi contro civili e definisce la narrazione intorno alle vittime una provocazione cinica e rozza. Il Cremlino non esclude che si arrivi alla rottura delle relazioni diplomatiche tra Mosca e l'Occidente. Contro la Russia piovono sanzioni sempre più forti. I negoziati sono fermi. Non ci sono segnali di riavvicinamento. Anzi, i timidi passi di Turchia e Cina si rivelano oggi bloccati da qualcosa di insormontabile che si chiama guerra totale. È vero, l'Italia ed altri paesi lavorano per l'unica soluzione possibile, una conferenza internazionale per la pace. Già, ma chi la dovrebbe promuovere. Se ne è accorto anche Papa Francesco che qualcosa non va nel ruolo dell'Onu. "Nell'attuale guerra in Ucraina, assistiamo all'impotenza dell'Organizzazione delle Nazioni Unite". Si può solo dargli ragione. Credits: Agenzia Fotogramma. _________________________________________ "Il Corsivo" a cura di Daniele Biacchessi non è un editoriale, ma un approfondimento sui fatti di maggiore interesse che i quotidiani spesso non raccontano. Un servizio in punta di penna che analizza con un occhio esperto quell'angolo nascosto delle notizie di politica, economia e cronaca. Per i notiziari sempre aggiornati ascoltaci sul sito: https://www.giornaleradio.fm oppure scarica la nostra App gratuita: iOS - App Store - https://apple.co/2uW01yA Android - Google Play - http://bit.ly/2vCjiW3 Resta connesso e segui i canali social di Giornale Radio: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/giornaleradio.fm/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/giornaleradio.tv/?hl=it Twitter: https://twitter.com/giornaleradiofm
Day 42.Today, we discuss the latest updates from Ukraine and speak to our Moscow correspondent on how Russian citizens see the war.Contributors:David Knowles (Host)Dom Nicholls (Defence and Security Editor)Katie O'Neill (Assistant Foreign Editor)Nataliya Vasilyeva (Moscow Correspondent) For 30 days' free access to The Telegraph: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/audio |Email: podcasts@telegraph.co.uk |See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Sanzioni alla Russia dall'Ue, nuove misure anche dagli Usa
MSB: Kefken Açıklarında Mayın Tespit Edildi, Batman'da Eren Kış-34 Operasyonu Başlatıldı, İstanbul'da Toplu Ulaşıma Yüzde 40 Zam, İstanbul Boğazı'nda Gemi Trafiği Askıya Alındı, Rusya-Ukrayna Savaşı, Borodyanka Şehri Harabeye Döndü --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/haluk-kurtuncuoglu/message
As the world responds to apparent Russian atrocities in Ukraine, more evidence of the civilian toll is emerging near the city of Bucha. Special correspondent Simon Ostrovsky and videographer Yegor Troyanovsky report from the town of Borodyanka, where the destruction wrought by Russia is near-total. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Sesión del Consejo de Seguridad de las Naciones Unidas, en la que ha intervenido el presidente de Ucrania para acusar a Rusia de crímenes de guerra en Bucha. Rusia, por su parte, se defiende e insiste en que todo es un montaje. Con nuestro enviado especial Fran Sevilla conocemos otra matanza de civiles, esta vez en la localidad de Borodyanka. Amnistía Interanacional ha presentado el informe sobre la situación de Derechos Humanos en el mundo del período 2021 y 2022. Charlamos con Erika Guevara-Rosas, directora de Amnistía Internacional para las Américas. Escuchar audio
As the world responds to apparent Russian atrocities in Ukraine, more evidence of the civilian toll is emerging near the city of Bucha. Special correspondent Simon Ostrovsky and videographer Yegor Troyanovsky report from the town of Borodyanka, where the destruction wrought by Russia is near-total. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
The European Union is working on a new package of sanctions against Russia that is likely to restrict the leasing of airplanes and the import and export of products like jet fuel, steel products and luxury goods, two sources with knowledge of the discussions have told CNBC. As new reports of atrocities emerge in Ukraine and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has accused Russia of genocide, disturbing footage has emerged on social media that appears to show dead dogs at an animal shelter in Borodyanka, Ukraine. At least 11 members of Russia's Rosgvardia National Guard in the Khakassia region have refused to participate in Russian President Vladimir Putin's Ukraine war. Moscow faced global revulsion and accusations of war crimes Monday after the Russian pullout from the outskirts of Kyiv revealed streets, buildings and yards strewn with corpses of what appeared to be civilians, many of them evidently killed at close range. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
durée : 00:20:43 - Journal de 18h - Devant le Conseil de Sécurité de l'ONU, le président ukrainien accuse une nouvelle fois la Russie de "crimes de guerre". La guerre qui a ravagé la ville de Borodyanka au nord-ouest de Kiev.
durée : 00:20:43 - Journal de 18h - Devant le Conseil de Sécurité de l'ONU, le président ukrainien accuse une nouvelle fois la Russie de "crimes de guerre". La guerre qui a ravagé la ville de Borodyanka au nord-ouest de Kiev.
Il presidente ucraino: "Sui crimini commessi dai militari russi vorrei sottolineare che siamo interessati a un'indagine più completa e trasparente possibile''.
Necelý měsíc stačí na to, aby se z evropské metropole, která patří k oblíbeným turistickým destinacím, stal vylidněný vojenský prostor s protitankovými zátarasy místo restauračních zahrádek. Zkázu Kyjeva den po dni zažíval Vojtěch Boháč. A nejen ji. Coby šéfredaktor publicistického webu Voxpot se chtěl do České republiky vrátit s autentickou výpovědí o tom, co se na Ukrajině děje. Málem se nevrátil vůbec. „V Makarivu jsme se dostali pod palbu, následně jsme zběhli do bunkru a Rusové nás bombardovali v centru města,“ říká s tím, že jeho původním cílem byla Borodyanka, jedno z prvních měst srovnaných se zemí. Reportáž z ní měla být svědectvím o tom, kam až válka může zajít. Odpověď na to, zda ruští vojáci skutečně útočí na civilisty, ale dostal dřív, než tam dojel.
We look at how the BBC's language services are reporting the war in Ukraine, and the impact in their countries and regions. Luis Fajardo of BBC Monitoring in Miami explains why there are fears in Colombia that the conflict with Venezuela could turn into a proxy war, and the impact it is having on Colombia's presidential election. Shekiba Habib of BBC Afghan tells us that the conflict has prompted praise for President Volodymyr Zelensky for staying with his people, unlike former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani. BBC Serbian editor Aleksandra Niksic explains the country's complicated approach to the current conflict, with ties to Russia, Ukraine and the EU. And she shares the story of Montenegro, which has the world's highest density of luxury second homes owned by Russians and Ukrainians. Giang Nguyen, editor of BBC Vietnamese explains Vietnam's long historical association with Russia, and looks at attitudes to the war across the region. From Bangkok, Issariya Praithongyaem says BBC Thai has been reporting on why some men are so determined to join the fight on the side of the Ukrainians. Janhavee Moole of BBC Marathi and Victoria Uwonkunda of BBC Africa Daily share stories of the many students from their areas who were trapped in Ukraine. We hear why they chose to study in Ukraine and the difficulties they faced trying to escape the war. (Photo: A residential building destroyed by shelling in Borodyanka, north west of Kyiv, Ukraine. Credit: Reuters/Maksim Levin)
Comprehensive coverage of the day's news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice. Russian troops surround Europe's largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine, ignite fire. Russia and Ukraine agree to form human corridors for people to flee war torn Ukrainian regions. United Nations says 1 million Ukranians have fled country amidst Russian invasion. Bipartisan push for ban on Russian oil and gas imports into U.S. is touted as a means to end Russian invasion of Ukraine. House passes legislation to ensure medical care and benefits for sick veterans exposed to toxins from burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan. Purdue and it's owners, the Sackler family, reach $6 billion agreement over opioid crisis. California Governor proposes “care court” to force homeless with mental illness and or drug abuse struggles into treatment. Photo of bombed out apartment building in Borodyanka, Kyiv, Ukraine, by Ukraine's Minister of Foreign Affairs 3-3-22. The post Russian troops surround Europe's largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine, ignite fire during siege; Bipartisan push for ban on Russian oil and gas imports grows; California Governor proposes “Care Court” to force some homeless into treatment – March 3, 2022 appeared first on KPFA.
Comprehensive coverage of the day's news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice. Russian troops surround Europe's largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine, ignite fire. Russia and Ukraine agree to form human corridors for people to flee war torn Ukrainian regions. United Nations says 1 million Ukranians have fled country amidst Russian invasion. Bipartisan push for ban on Russian oil and gas imports into U.S. is touted as a means to end Russian invasion of Ukraine. House passes legislation to ensure medical care and benefits for sick veterans exposed to toxins from burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan. Purdue and it's owners, the Sackler family, reach $6 billion agreement over opioid crisis. California Governor proposes “care court” to force homeless with mental illness and or drug abuse struggles into treatment. Photo of bombed out apartment building in Borodyanka, Kyiv, Ukraine, by Ukraine's Minister of Foreign Affairs 3-3-22. The post Russian troops surround Europe's largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine, ignite fire during siege; Bipartisan push for ban on Russian oil and gas imports grows; California Governor proposes “Care Court” to force some homeless into treatment – March 3, 2022 appeared first on KPFA.