POPULARITY
Hemvärnet har kallats gubbdagis men faktum är att de 23 000 frivilliga soldaterna spelar en allt större roll i skyddet av Sverige. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. När man hör ordet Hemvärnet kanske ens tankar går till den klassiska filmen Repmånaden. Gubbar som hellre går på krogen än att övar strid.– Jag tror många har den här gamla bilden av Hemvärnet, att vi går omkring med grå uniformer och sliten utrustning, men det är precis tvärtom. Vi har toppmodern utrustning, säger Lars-Gunnar Lundström, ställföreträdande chef i gränsjägarbataljonen i Norrbotten. Det kanske inte är så konstigt att Hemvärnets status och utrustning uppdaterats. För Hemvärnets roll i skyddet av landet har fått en ny och större betydelse i och med Nato-inträdet. För nu kanske en stor del av de svenska förbanden behövs utomlands.– För att nu så bedömer vi att striderna kanske inte kommer att vara på svenskt territorium, utan det är ju mer österut, kanske Finland eller i de baltiska länderna, och då får vi såklart ett mycket större ansvar för territoriet hemma, säger Rikshemvärnschef Laura Swaan Wrede.Att försvaret av Sverige inte längre upphör vid riksgränsen har gjort att Hemvärnet ändrat sitt tankesätt på många olika sätt. Ett tydligt exempel är hur man nu måste omvärdera broförbindelserna över Torneälven som kommer vara viktiga för logistiken österut.– Våran tidigare uppgift med de här broarna var ju att bevaka dem och vara beredd att förstöra dem. Nu ska vi alltså hålla de här broarna till vilket pris som helst, säger Lars-Gunnar Lundström.Hemvärnet viktiga i börjanHemvärnet består till stor del av frivilliga soldater som skrivit kontrakt med försvarsmakten om att få ersättning för att öva fyra till åtta dagar per år. Om det blir krig eller krig måste dock de som gått med i Hemvärnet ställa upp - då gäller plikten.Förutom att hjälpa till vid kriser som skogsbränder är uppgiften att snabbt kunna bevaka och skydda, i strid eller på annat sätt, förutbestämda platser i ens närområde. På den punkten skiljer sig Hemvärnet från det som kallas fältarmén.– Armén rör sig över stora områden. Hemvärnet är mer lokalt och löser uppgifter där det behövs på plats, säger Johan Granholm, lärare vid Försvarshögskolan och även instruktör inom Hemvärnet.Hemvärnet har inte lika tunga vapensystem som armén och det är inte tänkt att de ska lösa lika kvalificerade uppgifter. Styrkan ligger inte i eldkraft utan i att de kan vara på plats snabbt och utföra sitt jobb.– För min del så börjar leda vår bataljon inom en timme och inom 24 timmar så ska hela vår bataljon vara ute på plats för att kunna utföra tilldelade uppgifter. Och det här ska vi ha kraft att lösa den här uppgiften i 90 dagar inledningsvis, säger Lundström.Betydelsen av att snabbt kunna vara på plats blev tydlig vid Rysslands fullskaliga invasion av Ukraina den 24:e februari 2022. En viktig nyckel i den ryska planen var att ta flygplatsen i Hostomel utanför Kiev för att snabbt kunna flyga in mängder med soldater och stridsfordon i Ukraina, men drygt 200 ukrainska soldater bjöd på hårt motstånd och grusade den ryska planen.– Det var hemvärnet i Ukraina som stoppade framryckning mot Hostomel vilket gav armén tid att tillföra andra förband som slutligen var de som kunde stoppa den stora framryckningen mot Kiev. Det var hemvärnet som stod först och stoppade de första kolonnerna, säger Johan Granholm.Text: Kalle Glas, GränsLjudklipp från: SR, YoutubeMedverkande:Laura Swaan Wrede, RikshemvärnschefLars-Gunnar Lundström, ställföreträdande chef för gränsjägarbataljonen i Norrbotten. Johan Granholm lärare vid Försvarshögskolan och instruktör inom Hemvärnet.Claes Aronsson, ProgramledareKalle Glas, Programledare & Producent
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital. (commercial at 14:36)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121
This episode is available now to Telegraph subscribers and will be available to everyone on the 17th July.In the first of The Telegraph's special podcasts on the war in Ukraine. Presenter David Knowles and Producer Adélie Pojzman-Pontay travel to Bucha and Hostomel, north of Kyiv, to hear the stories of citizens who survived Russia's brutal occupation in Spring 2022. In Hostomel they meet Roman, a young Ukrainian man who fled his new apartment as Russian forces advanced. When he returned after the liberation he discovered the disgusting ways the occupying troops had treated his home.Then, they travel to Bucha to see an old friend, Ihor Savchenko. Two years on from the occupation of Bucha, Ihor is helping his community piece their lives back together even though the war threatens to engulf him once again. We first met Ihor's daughter Katya in 2022 - listen to that episode here: https://shows.acast.com/ukraine-the-latest/episodes/658301371b4a0600176a40eeSubscribe to The Telegraph: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Anton Kudinov is an Ukranian journalist, who works as a «fixer» for foreign journalists visiting Ukraina: Translating, guiding and advicing. In Ukrainapodden he talks about why he is certain Putin is not insane, how Europe could collapse and how he woke up to war in his hometown, which ended up serving a major part in the early days of the war: Hostomel.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Leur parole est rare et exceptionnelle. Comment enquête le Parquet national anti-terroriste sur les crimes de guerre en Ukraine depuis l'invasion Russe. ? Le Pnat est saisi de 9 enquêtes pour crimes de guerre en Ukraine. Des victimes françaises. 5 personnes décédées, 3 journalistes et 2 humanitaires. Mis en place en 2019, le Pnat enquête sur des faits susceptibles d'être qualifiés de crimes de guerre portant atteinte à la vie ou à l'intégrités psychiques contre des ressortissants français à l'étranger. Parmi ces 9 enquêtes, il y a Baptiste. Un Français qui a vécu l'invasion Russe pendant deux semaines à Hostomel au Nord de Kiev (il était en vacances chez sa belle-famille). Ecoutez RTL Evènement du 22 mars 2024 avec Morad Djabari.
Zwei Jahre sind vergangen, seit Russland die gesamte Ukraine angegriffen hat. Ursprünglich wollten die Angreifer das Nachbarland in drei bis vier Tagen besiegen und in Kiew eine russlandfreundliche Marionettenregierung einsetzen. Es wäre das Ende der Ukraine als unabhängiger Staat gewesen. Herzstück dieses Plans: die schnelle Eroberung des Flughafens von Hostomel, einem Vorort von Kiew. Dass daraus nichts wurde, verdankt die Ukraine einer relativ kleinen Gruppe von Menschen, die den Flughafen gegen die personell und materiell überlegenen Angreifer verteidigten. Zwei der Kämpfer erinnern sich in dieser Sonderfolge von "Was jetzt?" an die ersten Stunden des Krieges. Zu Gast ist außerdem Olivia Kortas. Die Ukraine-Korrespondentin von ZEIT und ZEIT ONLINE hat die Schlacht um den Flughafen rekonstruiert. Im Podcast erklärt sie, warum die Verteidigung von Hostomel für die Ukraine überlebenswichtig war und was sich anhand dieser ersten 24 Stunden des Krieges über dessen Gesamtverlauf lernen lässt. Außerdem blickt sie auf die aktuelle Lage an der Front und erzählt, wie das Leben in der Ukraine zwei Jahre nach dem russischen Überfall aussieht. Moderation: Moses Fendel Redaktion: Constanze Kainz Sounddesign: Joscha Grunewald Alle Folgen unseres Podcasts finden Sie hier. Fragen, Kritik, Anregungen? Sie erreichen uns unter wasjetzt@zeit.de. [ANZEIGE] Mehr über die Angebote unserer Werbepartnerinnen und -partner finden Sie HIER. [ANZEIGE] Falls Sie uns nicht nur hören, sondern auch lesen möchten, testen Sie jetzt 4 Wochen kostenlos DIE ZEIT. Hier geht's zum Angebot.
Zwei Jahre sind vergangen, seit Russland die gesamte Ukraine angegriffen hat. Ursprünglich wollten die Angreifer das Nachbarland in drei bis vier Tagen besiegen und in Kyjiw eine russlandfreundliche Marionettenregierung einsetzen. Es wäre das Ende der Ukraine als unabhängiger Staat gewesen. Herzstück dieses Plans: Die schnelle Eroberung des Flughafens von Hostomel, einem Vorort von Kyjiw. Dass daraus nichts wurde, verdankt die Ukraine einer relativ kleinen Gruppe von Menschen, die den Flughafen gegen die personell und materiell überlegenen Angreifer verteidigten. Zwei der Kämpfer erinnern sich in dieser Sonderfolge von Was jetzt? an die ersten Stunden des Krieges. Zu Gast ist außerdem Olivia Kortas. Die Ukraine-Korrespondentin von ZEIT und ZEIT ONLINE hat die Schlacht um den Flughafen rekonstruiert. Im Podcast erklärt sie, warum die Verteidigung von Hostomel für die Ukraine überlebenswichtig war und was sich anhand dieser ersten 24 Stunden des Krieges über dessen Gesamtverlauf lernen lässt. Außerdem blickt sie auf die aktuelle Lage an der Front und erzählt, wie das Leben in der Ukraine zwei Jahre nach dem russischen Überfall aussieht. Moderation: Moses Fendel Redaktion: Constanze Kainz Sounddesign: Joscha Grunewald Alle Folgen unseres Podcasts finden Sie hier. Fragen, Kritik, Anregungen? Sie erreichen uns unter wasjetzt@zeit.de. [ANZEIGE] Mehr über die Angebote unserer Werbepartnerinnen und -partner finden Sie HIER. [ANZEIGE] Falls Sie uns nicht nur hören, sondern auch lesen möchten, testen Sie jetzt 4 Wochen kostenlos DIE ZEIT. Hier geht's zum Angebot.
Diskussion über Hilfen und Lösungen für schwächelnde Wirtschaft, Situation in Hostomel kurz vor dem zweitem Jahrestag des russischen Angriffs auf die Ukraine, Mehr als eine Million geflüchtete Ukrainer in Deutschland, Deutsche Bischofskonferenz sieht Christentum unvereinbar mit rechtsextremen Parteien wie der AfD, Die Meinung, #mittendrin aus Rostock: Gedenken an NSU-Opfer Mehmet Turgut vor bürokratischen Hindernissen, Weitere Meldungen im Überblick, Das Wetter Korrektur: Die Sendung wurde nachträglich bearbeitet.
Dmitri Alperovitch talks with Yaroslav Trofimov, a Ukrainian-born Wall Street Journal's chief foreign-affairs correspondent, about his new book "Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence." They discussed why the Russians lost any chance of capturing Kyiv in the first day of the war by failing to take Hostomel airport, why Ukrainian war preparations were quite uneven (stronger in the north than in the south), why the peace talks never had a chance, the strategic problem with the design of last year's counteroffensive and what the path to Ukrainian victory could look like. Please check out Yaroslav's book: https://www.amazon.com/Our-Enemies-Will-Vanish-Independence/dp/B0CFYPX267/ And Dmitri's upcoming book: "World on the Brink: How America Can Beat China in the Race for the Twenty-First Century" https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CF1TKHY2 Episode music: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pzsruxnYwRQ
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital.(commercial at 13:40)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5003294/advertisement
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital.(commercial at 13:40)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5080327/advertisement
John Spencer from the Urban Warfare Project joins Paul in the G-Base to discuss a 21st century version of the Battle of Thermopylae; how 200 Ukrainian Guardsmen, defending the Hostomel Airfield, saved Kiev from falling into the hands of elite Russian paratroopers on the morning of 24 February 2022. Time and again, history informs us how a few determined warriors are able to overcome insurmountable odds and defeat an overwhelming adversary.
The Russia-Ukraine War Report provides comprehensive, fact-based news coverage about the war in Ukraine. Our team of journalists, researchers, and analysts are from Georgia, Israel, Finland, Poland, Ukraine, the U.S., and the U.K. We go beyond content aggregation and provide analysis and assessments on how today's stories shape the war's future. Today's podcast looks back at the events from September 16 - 22, 2023. 00:50 Kostyantynivka, What the New York Times Got Wrong 09:56 Zarina Zabrisky speaks with Donald Arleth, English language reporter for TVP World - Poland, about Polish and Ukrainian relations, upcoming elections, the grain dispute, and Poland's support of Ukraine 25:54 David Obelcz introduces new co-host, Marina Yevshan, who discusses her experiences in Donetsk in 2014 and in Hostomel on February 24, 2022 The Russian-Ukraine War Map is a great resource to use while listening to the podcast to see the geography covered in today's podcast. As independent journalists, most of our costs are covered by subscribers. Not one? For $5 a month, you can support Malcontent News and get access to our Daily Situation Reports and Flash Reports, which provide updates during the day. The Situation Report includes information not included in the podcast, including weather forecasts, soil moisture and tractability, and an analysis of Russian and Ukrainian heavy equipment losses using information from the Oryx Database. Become a Patreon today, and we now offer a seven-day free trial subscription at the Bronze support level. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Il primo atto del disegno criminale di Putin inizia qui. All'alba del 24 febbraio 2022 la fanteria aeromobile russa si paracaduta dagli elicotteri sull'aeroporto Antonov per impadronirsene.
Ucrania lanzó la semana pasada el mayor ataque con drones contra objetivos militares rusos desde que comenzó la guerra. Destruyó varias aeronaves militares en la base de Peskov al mismo tiempo que la artillería rusa efectuaba el peor bombardeo sobre Kiev de los últimos meses. El ejército ucraniano carece de misiles de largo alcance, los mismos que Rusia utiliza con frecuencia para machacar las ciudades ucranianas destruyendo centrales eléctricas, estaciones ferroviarias, puertos, hospitales y edificios residenciales, pero, a modo de compensación, los militares ucranianos han desplegado una fuerza de drones de ataque de diseño propio que pueden internarse cientos de kilómetros en territorio ruso. A eso mismo llevan desde el año pasado entregados sabiendo que es el mejor modo de ocasionar daño en la retaguardia del enemigo. Con ellos han atacado regiones distantes como la de Moscú, Peskov o Riazán y otras más cercanas a sus fronteras como la de Kaluga, Orel y Briansk. Las defensas antiaéreas rusas descuentan que casi cualquier ataque que les llegue será con drones y se han especializado en ello. En el ataque sobre la base aérea de Peskov la mayor parte de los drones ucranianos fueron derribados antes de alcanzar su objetivo, pero unos pocos consiguieron atravesar el fuego antiaéreo y las medidas de guerra electrónica y hacer blanco. Según la agencia TASS un total de cuatro aviones de Transporte Ilyushin Il-76 fueron alcanzados obligando a las autoridades a interrumpir el tráfico civil. Otras agencias elevan el número a seis. Las imágenes distribuidas por los medios rusos mostraron al menos dos aviones envueltos en llamas. Esos mismos Ilyushin Il-76, cuatrimotores a reacción que datan de la época soviética, iban a servir hace año y medio para trasladar desde la base de Peskov hasta el aeródromo de Hostomel, en las inmediaciones de Kiev, a las tropas de operaciones especiales que tomarían la capital ucraniana de forma limpia y rápida. No fue posible porque el ejército ucraniano se les adelantó y destruyó la pista de aterrizaje. Este de Peskov no fue el único ataque con drones, aunque sí el más llamativo. También se registraron ataques reconocidos por el Gobierno ruso en la ciudad de Briansk y en la de Feodosia, en la península de Crimea. El Kremlin quitó importancia los daños causados y acusó a los ucranianos de terroristas apoyados por la inteligencia occidental gracias a cuyos informes consiguen dar en el blanco. El ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores aseguró que Rusia respondería a la agresión, pero aún no han conseguido identificar desde dónde parten esos ataques en Ucrania. A falta de ese dato dirigieron su artillería contra un centro comercial en Kiev. El ataque se saldó con dos civiles muertos y 28 misiles de crucero neutralizados por las baterías antiaéreas. Pero Ucrania no quiere permanecer a la defensiva esperando el siguiente ataque. Su táctica de golpear incansablemente con drones de fabricación propia como los Morok está dando muy buenos frutos. No les mete en problemas con sus aliados occidentales y les permite trasladar el coste de la guerra a quienes la iniciaron a un coste asequible y sin exponerse a bajas. Los ataques con drones son, además, parte de la ofensiva en curso en el Donbás, que avanza muy lentamente. Los ucranianos tratan de golpear en la retaguardia fijándose como objetivos prioritarios las estaciones de abastecimiento de combustible, los polvorines y las vías por las que circulan las provisiones hacia el frente. Se están demostrando tan útiles que el Gobierno de Zelenski les ha dado prioridad presupuestaria. Rusia se ha metido en un programa similar con drones propios y de fabricación iraní. Una guerra de bajo coste, pero de alto impacto a la que Ucrania se ha encomendado más por necesidad que por convicción. 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durée : 00:03:52 - Le Reportage de la Rédaction - Dans la ville ukrainienne de Hostomel, l'une des plus détruites par les combats des premiers mois de l'invasion russe, la reconstruction tant promise aux habitants avance au ralenti : la faute à la corruption, deux maires ayant déjà été limogés pour détournement de fonds publics.
In het ene Oekraïense dorp heerst verdeeldheid en in het andere Oekraïense dorp heerst eensgezindheid. In Komar, in de oostelijke Donetsk-regio, stonden bewoners verheugd op de Russen te wachten toen vorig jaar de oorlog begon. Ze kwamen niet. De pro-Oekraïners in het dorp konden opgelucht ademhalen. In Kysjtsjentsi, in de centraal gelegen Tsjerkasy-regio, is geen twijfel aan welke kant de dorpsbewoners staan. Ze steunen de Oekraïense krijgsmacht en rouwen om hun zonen die omkomen aan het front. Geert Jan bezocht tijdens zijn Oekraïne-reis afgelopen maart Kysjtsjentsi, op ruim 700 kilometer van het oostfront. Floris was in april in Komar, op twintig kilometer van het oostfront. Wat is de impact van de oorlog in deze twee dorpen? Waarom is Komar zo verdeeld en waarom is Kysjtsjentsi dan wél zo uitgesproken pro-Oekraïens.? Te gast is Clingendael-onderzoeker Julia Soldatiuk, geboren in Oekraïne. Zij kent de Oekraïense dorpen als geen ander en geeft ook de nodige nuanceringen om te voorkomen dat journalisten te snel een zwart-witbeeld neerzetten. En ook Julia is net terug van een reis naar Oekraïne en deelt haar laatste inzichten met ons. En Joost bewijst opnieuw zijn veelzijdigheid en komt met een toepasselijke mop. Shownotes: New York, New York 1 New York, New York 2 Novgorodske, New York Irpin, Hostomel, Boetsja Hosts: Geert Jan Hahn Floris Akkerman Dorpskenner: Julia Soldatiuk Alleskunner: Joost Bosman See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
I vårt mest VDV:iga avsnitt hittills går vi – på vår Patreon Mr. Mustards begäran – igenom slaget om Hostomels flygplats från i fjol. Källäget är mycket riktigt katastrofalt.Per är den som får bita tag i den digra uppgiften att beskriva ett rörigt slag som ingen vet någonting säkert om. Detta inbegriper lågflygande ryska helikoptrar, VDV-mannen, VDV-soldater, ukrainskt hemvärn och ukrainska civila som plockar fram jaktbössan, med mera. Kanske. Ja! Det är rörigt. Mattis är också med och ger ett allmänt bakfullt intryck samt ställer en del förvirrade frågor.Stort tack till vår arbetsgivare Mr. Mustard! Det här är hans personliga expressavsnitt.Vill du också ha ett personligt expressavsnitt? Bli då vår patreon på tier Gustav II Adolfs livvaktsstyrka genom att klicka på länken nedan. Stötta oss på Patreon!Support till showen http://supporter.acast.com/krigshistoriepodden. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Joining Patrick for this week's interview is Mark Urban, the diplomatic editor for BBC Newsnight, Military Historian, and former Tank Officer. He discusses a range of topics including: the Russian airborne assault on Hostomel airport, why Infantry Fighting Vehicles are significant, and how artillery remains critically important in modern warfare. If you have any thoughts or questions, you can send them to - battlegroundukraine@gmail.com Producer: James Hodgson Twitter: @PodBattleground Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
33 Tage waren die Kiewer Vorstädte Hostomel, Butscha und Irpin zu Beginn des Krieges unter russische Okkupation geraten. Während dieser Zeit begingen russische Soldaten in Wohngebieten, auf Vorstadtstraßen, in Parks und Wäldern ungezählte Kriegsverbrechen. Verbrechen, die neben Tausenden von zivilen Opfern eine traumatisierte Bevölkerung zurückgelassen haben. Christine Hamel über die Orte des Grauens im Krieg Russlands gegen die Ukraine.
24 lutego 1582 – Papież Grzegorz XIII wydał bullę wprowadzającą kalendarz gregoriański.24 lutego 1768 – Został podpisany traktat warszawski wprowadzający tolerancję religijną.24 lutego 1818 – Odbył się pierwszy publiczny koncert 8-letniego Fryderyka Chopina.24 lutego 2022 – Wojska rosyjskie zaatakowały Ukrainę.
Aurélien Martinez, originaire du sud de la France, est témoin d'un des moments clés du début de la guerre en Ukraine, en février 2022. Réfugié dans une maison d'un quartier conquis par les militaires russes, il va mettre près de 3 semaines à s'extraire de la zone de combat et regagner la France. Récit. Ce matin du 24 février, il est 1 heure du matin à Hostomel, quand un SMS réveille le jeune couple, hébergé par l'oncle et la tante de l'épouse d'Aurélien Martinez. L'Ambassade de France lui demande de quitter de toute urgence l'Ukraine. Il n'y a plus d'avion depuis quelques jours, Hostomel est à une trentaine de kilomètres de Kiev, près de la frontière biélorusse. Décision est prise de se rendormir. Mais à 4 heures et demie, les sirènes retentissent, les premières bombes explosent. Plus de doute, la guerre a commencé. « C'est un choc, on ne s'y attendait pas du tout » avoue Aurélien, qui regarde une des vidéos qu'il a tournée à 9 heures. C'est un ballet incessant d'hélicoptères qui opèrent à basse altitude. En ce premier jour de guerre, le quartier situé à un kilomètre et demi de l'aéroport entend les bombardements, mais ne voit pas encore les combats. Dès la nuit suivante, soldats et chars russes font leur apparition. Ils avancent vers Kiev. La guerre est désormais aux portes de la maison où réside Aurélien. Le jeune homme voit un hélicoptère russe se faire abattre. Un char situé à 150 mètres est bombardé. « La moindre sortie c'était risquer de se faire tirer dessus. Les civils étaient même visés par des tanks. Chaque jour, il y avait 2 ou 3 maisons qui brûlaient ». « Fuir au risque de mourir » « Mais impossible de fuir à moins de vouloir mourir » raconte Aurélien. « Des familles ont voulu quitter Hostomel en voiture, mais leurs véhicules ont été mitraillés. Rien n'y faisait, ni le drapeau blanc ni l'inscription à la peinture blanche indiquant la présence d'enfants à bord ». Aurélien et Iryna Martinez décident qu'ils partiront en convoi, solution qui paraît la plus sûre. Il leur faudra patienter jusqu'à la mi-mars. Face à l'impossibilité de fuir, il faut s'organiser pour survivre à Hostomel. « Au troisième jour, il n'y a déjà plus ni électricité, ni gaz, ni d'eau au robinet. Les pompes sur les puits de forage fonctionnent à l'électricité ». Certes, la famille a fait des réserves, mais il faut bientôt aller chercher l'eau au puits, au risque de se faire repérer par les militaires russes. « Pour la nourriture, c'était compliqué », se souvient Aurélien. Les premiers jours, les traditionnelles réserves dans les sous-sols des maisons ukrainiennes sont très utiles, mais très rapidement les conserves s'épuisent. « Il nous restait un peu de riz et des cornichons ». Iryna sourit à cette évocation, car depuis son départ d'Ukraine, Aurélien avoue ne plus pouvoir manger de cornichons. La maison sous les bombes Si trouver à manger devient problématique, encore faut-il avoir un toit. Le 1er mars, en pleine nuit, la maison familiale est bombardée. « On a été réveillés par un gros bombardement avec des vibrations énormes ». Tout le monde descend au sous-sol. Une deuxième bombe tombe à côté de la maison. Aurélien montre son portable, quand le troisième tir vise à nouveau le bâtiment. L'étage s'effondre. Deux autres projectiles frappent la maison. « La nuit est très difficile. Les bombardements sont incessants. Il fait -20°C . On se demande si on va pouvoir survivre à tout ça ». Au petit matin, la neige fait son apparition, il faut trouver un autre refuge. Ce sera une maison en construction, brute de décoffrage. Plusieurs autres familles y élisent domicile. C'est un refuge de fortune pour 17 personnes, dont il faut calfeutrer les ouvertures pour ne pas être repérés. Tous partagent le peu de nourriture qui leur reste. Le propriétaire du groupe électrogène permet à chacun de recharger son portable 20 minutes par jour. Il faut rassurer la famille, rester en contact avec l'ambassade de France à Kiev. Cette solidarité a marqué Aurélien. « L'entraide c'est ce qui fait tenir les Ukrainiens depuis le début et qui les fera tenir jusqu'au bout. S'il n'y avait pas eu cette entraide, l'Ukraine serait perdue depuis longtemps. C'est leur moyen de survie ». La guerre, les privations, n'empêchent pas le souvenir de la vie d'avant. Des roses récoltées dans un jardin voisin fleurissent la table du refuge, le 8 mars 2022, Journée internationale de la femme. ► À lire aussi : Guerre en Ukraine: «Les besoins des civils concernent l'électricité et la construction» La brutalité des soldats russes À l'étage de cet abri de fortune, à tour de rôle, il faut surveiller les environs et donner l'alerte quand des soldats russes approchent. Cela se produit une fois. Des militaires russes débarquent. Tout le monde est à terre. Les portables sont confisqués et détruits. Les militaires mettent en garde : d'autres soldats pourraient être moins bien disposés qu'eux. « Ils sont repartis au bout de cinq minutes. On a eu beaucoup de chance, car parfois les soldats russes rentraient chez les gens, les tuaient et s'installaient dans leur maison, car ce sont aussi des êtres humains. Ils avaient froid comme nous et voulaient trouver où se loger ». L'ampleur des exactions n'apparaît que début avril 2022 après le retrait de la région de Kiev et la libération des villages de Boutcha ou d'Irpin. « Mais dès les deux ou trois premiers jours de la guerre, on savait très bien que ça n'allait pas rester une guerre propre. Ça n'existe pas. Quand on les voyait rentrer dans une maison alors qu'il y avait des gens dedans, on savait très bien ce qui se passait à l'intérieur. On n'était pas dupe ». ► À écouter aussi : Guerre en Ukraine: à Boutcha, des enquêtes pour documenter les possibles crimes de guerre Enfin, le départ pour Kiev La première vraie opportunité de quitter Hostomel se présente, le 11 mars. Aurélien et Iryna se rendent au point de départ. Le jeune Français se souvient des milliers de personnes, dont 300 ou 400 enfants en file indienne, attendant les instructions ; certains pour monter dans les bus qui doivent arriver, d'autres pour suivre le convoi en voiture. Mais ce sont des tanks et des hélicoptères russes qui débarquent. C'est la panique, tout le monde s'enfuit et les bus n'arriveront jamais. Le lendemain, 12 mars, c'est le jour de l'exfiltration. Des voisins proposent à Aurélien et Iryna de leur prêter leur voiture à condition qu'ils déposent en lieu sûr à Kiev leurs grands-parents. Pourtant les doutes assaillent les esprits pendant plusieurs heures. La décision de partir est-elle le bon choix ? Finalement, la voiture s'insère dans la file de véhicules qui quitte Hostomel. Le jeune couple est sidéré par les destructions. « Le centre de Hostomel est détruit, il n'y a plus rien, les habitations sont en ruine. Dans des voitures où des familles ont pris place, on aperçoit des corps de civils calcinés. On évitait de trop regarder. On ne parlait pas encore de crime de guerre. Mais on savait déjà que ce serait une boucherie parce que c'est bien le mot ». La peur s'installe quand le convoi croise des troupes russes. Parcourir les trente kilomètres qui séparent Hostomel de Kiev prend la journée. Le convoi passe par Irpin, Boutcha. Sur la route, ce qui frappe Aurélien et Iryna c'est aussi les dizaines de chars russes détruits. « On a réalisé que les Ukrainiens avaient résisté face à une armée 10 fois plus puissante qu'eux, bien mieux équipée ». À 19 heures, Aurélien passe ce qu'il appelle une frontière. « Ce n'est pas une vraie frontière, c'était un check-point ukrainien. Là on s'est dit qu'on avait réussi ». Les barrages s'enchaînent, car les forces de sécurité ukrainiennes veulent empêcher toute infiltration dans la ville. Le maillage est très serré pour éviter toute infiltration russe. « Les Russes n'auraient pas pu entrer dans Kiev », dit Aurélien. Arrivés dans la capitale, le jeune couple dépose en lieu sûr les grands-parents et stationne la voiture à l'endroit convenu. Le 13 au matin, le jeune couple est pris en charge par une personne mandatée par l'ambassade de France. Direction Lviv, puis la frontière polonaise, qu'Aurélien franchit le 14 mars. Côté polonais, sa mère l'attend. Elle a quitté la France le 25 février, pour lui venir en aide. Elle repart au volant d'un camion, dans lequel elle ramène en France, son fils, sa belle-fille, ainsi que deux familles ukrainiennes avec quatre enfants. Quitter l'Ukraine pour mieux aider La frontière franchie, le soulagement s'installe, mais il n'est pas total. « Dès qu'on a passé la frontière, on voulait faire demi-tour. On avait le sentiment d'abandonner l'Ukraine, car on se dirigeait vers la France, on allait retrouver notre vie de tous les jours, un travail, un toit. Ça a été compliqué à gérer ». Revenus en France, Aurélien et son épouse décident de créer une association pour évacuer un maximum d'Ukrainiens et les placer dans des familles d'accueil ou des centres d'hébergement, en France. « Avec d'autres associations, on a pu sortir une centaine de personnes ». Aujourd'hui, Aurélien et Iryna organisent le départ d'un convoi humanitaire une fois par mois pour acheminer de la nourriture, des vêtements, des médicaments. « Mais l'élan de générosité des Français s'est atténué », reconnaît Aurélien Martinez. « Au début les caddies auprès des grandes enseignes se remplissaient en 2 jours, maintenant ce sont surtout les Ukrainiens installés récemment ou de longue date en France qui entretiennent cette solidarité. Ils donnent le peu qu'ils ont pour ceux qui sont restés en Ukraine ». ► À écouter aussi : À bord d'un convoi humanitaire vers la frontière ukrainienne Plainte pour crimes de guerre Aurélien Martinez est l'un des trois Français qui ont porté plainte pour crime de guerre contre la Russie. L'objectif est d'identifier la compagnie qui a bombardé la maison, le 1er mars 2022. Pour le trentenaire, « une erreur ça arrive, mais cinq tirs sur une maison, ça devient un crime de guerre ». Il espère un jugement dans quelques mois, voire quelques années, mais regrette le manque de soutien des autorités françaises. « Pour l'enquête, on a été aidé, mais au niveau soutien, un petit coup de téléphone par-ci, par-là, mais pas de suivi. On s'est débrouillés seuls du début à la fin. On fait avec ». Il ne connaît pas les deux autres personnes qui ont déposé plainte. Il va prendre un avocat à ses frais, en espérant obtenir justice un jour. Tout au long de l'entretien, à l'évocation d'un souvenir douloureux, Iryna se glisse derrière son mari, la main sur son épaule, solidaire. Elle deviendra maman début mai et conclut cette rencontre par ces quelques mots d'espoirs en anglais, « My dreams is victory for Ukraine* ». * « Je rêve d'une victoire de l'Ukraine »
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital.(commercial at 14:36)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121
Mateusz RUDY Kubiak pojechał z transportem humanitarnym do Kijowa. Przy okazji odwiedził Irpień, Buczę i Hostomel. Wraz z miejscowym aktywistą odwiedzili najważniejsze miejsca, które zatrzymały rosyjskie natarcie na stolicę Ukrainy.
narrated by Edward Serotta That is what Maks Levin said when he went off to cover the Russian invasion of eastern Ukraine in 2014. Once the Russians invaded in February, 2022, Maks had but 17 days to live. He was embedded with Ukrainian fighting units and covered the war on the front. On 11 March, his drone went down near the Hostomel airport. Maks went to retrieve it. The Russians were already there.
Adrian Goldberg gets the latest update on Russia's invasion of Ukraine from Zarina Zabrisky, who has been to the site of a massacre in Bucha, as well Irpin and Hostomel, and other areas close to the capital Kyiv.Produced in Birmingham by Adrian Goldberg and Harvey White.Funded by subscriptions to Byline Times.Originally broadcast via Twitter Spaces @bylineradio See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Adrian Goldberg gets the latest update on Russia's invasion of Ukraine from Zarina Zabrisky, who has been to the site of a massacre in Bucha, as well Irpin and Hostomel, and other areas close to the capital Kyiv. Produced in Birmingham by Adrian Goldberg and Harvey White. Funded by subscriptions to Byline Times. Originally broadcast via Twitter Spaces @bylineradio
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital.(commercial at 14:14)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital.(commercial at 14:14)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121
L'Antonov AN-225. Mriya, sogno in lingua ucraina. Era l'aereo più grande del mondo. Una leggenda mondiale, dalle dimensioni veramente mastodontiche. Le immagini del velivolo distrutto nel corso della battaglia che si è svolta attorno all'aeroporto di Hostomel rimarranno per sempre un ricordo indelebile e triste per gli appassionati di aviazione di tutto il mondo e non solo. Progettato alla fine della Guerra Fredda, il suo scopo era quello di trasportare la navetta spaziale sovietica “Buran”. Lorenzo Moro giornalista specializzato nel settore automotive e aviazione, fondatore e direttore del sito rollingsteel.it e Gregory Alegi, consigliere scientifico Fondazione ICSA, condirettore di Aeronautica ci parlano del sogno che non decollerà più.
Luigi Alfieri"Da Leopoli a Kiev"in viaggio nella guerra tra Putin e ZelenskyCinquesensi Editorehttps://www.cinquesensi.it/Un instant book ibrido, a mezza strada tra un libro di viaggi comune e un reportage di guerra. Il racconto della quotidianità unito al racconto della devastazione monumentale, alla vita dei profughi. Osservazioni su paesaggi fisici e morali per raccontare cosa è diventato uno dei più bei percorsi turistici europei al tempo della guerra.Da Leopoli, patrimonio mondiale Unesco, capitale della Galizia asburgica, già perla del regno di Polonia, città universitaria per eccellenza, a Kiev la città più antica e più “russa” della stessa Mosca, oggi devastata dalle bombe. E oltre.Dal 3 al 15 maggio 2022 l'autore è passato da Leopoli a Kiev raccogliendo storie e scrivendo in diretta.Viaggiare dentro la guerra con l'elmetto in testa e l'insopportabile giubbotto addosso, sentire l'urlo orribile delle sirene, fermarsi davanti a palazzi un tempo belli ed eleganti ora neri di fumo e ridotti in macerie, vedere le fosse comuni, i ponti crollati, le buche lasciate dalle bombe per le strade, pensare che il prossimo passo potrebbe essere su una mina, che la morte ti sta a fianco, beffarda, ogni giorno, invisibile, ma non astratta, guardare il cielo che è azzurro come a Firenze, a Venezia, a Timbuctù o a Samarcanda, dico azzurro, pacifico, ma tra un attimo potrebbe arrivare un missile a solcarlo, vedere il freddo di una fossa comune, visitare un cimitero pieno di bandiere e ogni bandiera indica un ragazzo di vent'anni morto, stare sulla porta della chiesa e cercare di capire se quella signora che soffre di un dolore senza fondo ma tiene alto uno sguardo fiero, stringe le rose rosse tra le braccia come se fosse il corpo del suo bambino… beh, tutto questo è diverso dalla vita di tutti i giorni in Europa. È diverso da stare in un pub di Londra o in un dehor di Torino o in un bistrot di Parigi, a tremila chilometri dalla guerra, davanti al tuo giornale, semplicemente leggendo di cose lontane, senza sentire gli odori, senza vedere i colori, senza udire i rumori, senza provare ansie e paure che ti fanno assorbire la presenza della morte come una cosa sicura, che esiste, sta lì e ti può portare nel buio freddo di una tomba anonima in qualsiasi momento. Quando la sicurezza quotidiana di vivere protetti dalla normalità, come la marmotta in letargo vive protetta dalla sua tana, scompare, allora il pensiero si spinge oltre, varca nuovi confini, affronta nuove domande.Ti chiedi davvero cosa sia la vita.Luigi AlfieriGià giornalista della Stampa di Torino e caporedattore della Gazzetta di Parma è autore di 12 libri di carattere storico, letterario e di viaggio, pubblicati con editori quali Guanda e Mazzotta e di diversi lungometraggi.In questi mesi difficili ha organizzato due spedizioni umanitarie a Leopoli, recandosi di persona a vivere e condividere la tremenda realtà dell'invasione russa dell'Ucraina. Il primo frutto di questa sua esperienza immersiva sono stati alcuni apprezzati servizi giornalistici dal taglio inedito. In maggio ha realizzato un lungo viaggio attraverso le città martire dell'Ucraina, Bucha, Irpin, Makar'ev, Chernihiv, Chernobyl, Hostomel. Questo libro è la somma delle tre esperienze in questa nazione, un fiore calpestato dalla storia.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.it/
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
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has left Ukraine after a 12-hour visit to the war-torn towns of Irpin, Hostomel and Bucha devastated by Russian troops, bodies strewn across streets, homes now a pile of rubble. Mr Albanese also visited Kyiv, announcing a further $100 million in military aid, including 20 bushmaster vehicles, promising to stand against Russia's invasion.
In un museo di Kiev, a tempo di record, è stata allestita una esposizione che mostra il volto più duro del conflitto: testimonianze dell'aggressione e della difesa del popolo ucraino.
L'offensive-éclair lancée par Vladimir Poutine qui prévoyait une chute de Kiev et du pouvoir ukrainien en trois jours est un échec acté. Pour autant, ce conflit, d'une sidérante intensité, est dans un entre-deux. Se dirige-t-on vers une guerre d'usure ? Ce qui est certain, c'est que plus de trois mois après le début de l'invasion russe, le conflit est dans un clair-obscur sans vainqueur ni vaincu, où l'Ouest de l'Ukraine, comme la capitale Kiev, sont déjà dans une sorte de situation d'après-guerre, où la vie sociale et professionnelle tente, coûte que coûte, de reprendre ses droits, à marche forcée, le formidable élan de résistance collective début mars qui a stoppé l'offensive russe, s'étant mué en résilience et en volonté de reconstruction. La région de Kiev, ses villes périphériques martyres comme Boutcha, Hostomel et Irpin jusqu'à la frontière biélorusse, où des milliers d'Ukrainiens ont vécu des semaines sous une occupation sanglante, tente malgré tout de panser ses plaies et d'aller de l'avant. ► À lire aussi : Ukraine: l'enfer d'un front à l'autre • Mais à l'Est, c'est encore la guerre et c'est presque la guerre totale ? Aujourd'hui, l'avenir du conflit se joue dans la partie orientale de l'Ukraine. Le président Volodymyr Zelensky ne s'y est pas trompé, lui, qui vient de prendre de gros risques personnels pour se rendre, il y a quelques jours, près de la ligne de front à l'est du Donbass, exhortant, une fois encore, la communauté internationale à s'engager davantage alors que de son propre aveu et en dépit de la guerre informationnelle que se livrent Moscou et Kiev, près de cent soldats ukrainiens meurent chaque jour à l'est du pays. Des pertes colossales qui n'ont d'égales que celles de la Seconde Guerre mondiale et qui pèseront sur des générations et des générations. C'est cela, la guerre d'usure, où les villes sont rasées par le chaudron russe et où la violence sur le terrain semblent appartenir à un autre temps alors que l'élan de compassion mondial, les millions de réfugiés ukrainiens l'ont bien compris, s'essouffle avec le temps… • Existe-t-il encore une voie pour la médiation et pour la paix ? Sur la même ligne que le président Macron, le chef d'état-major français s'est entretenu avec son homologue russe cette semaine afin de « garder le canal ouvert ». Et c'est bien là la polémique qui agite toute l'Ukraine et qui divise la communauté internationale : comment garder le contact avec Moscou alors que la seule visite des dizaines de villes ukrainiennes ravagées glacent le sang comme les récits, par centaines, de viols, d'exactions et d'horreurs qui ont ponctué le quotidien d'un pays agressé et qui continue de l'être, sur près de 20% de son territoire. La visite, très attendue, du chef de l'État français à Kiev sera certainement l'occasion pour les dirigeants ukrainiens de rappeler aussi cette réalité qui peut s'imposer face aux impératifs diplomatiques et, surtout, face à l'histoire.
Ilyas old life and his new normal collide when he tries to sources toys for his sons birthdays.Oksana continues to come to terms with a Russian home invasion in Hostomel.And Seva receives a letter of gratitude from the front line after using online crowd funding to secure vital military equipment.BACKGROUNDIlyas is an IT specialist and married father who fled from Kyiv to Lviv shortly after the war started. Right now his wife and two young sons are taking refuge in Poland.As of May 2022, Ilyas is back living in the family apartment in Kyiv and working, in part, for the Ukrainian government on specialist projects.Oksana, 34, works in overseas education. She lives with her husband, Seva, in an apartment complex in central Kyiv and has remained in the Ukrainian capital since the war started. Many of Oksana's closest friends have left the country to begin new lives in Europe. Some may never return. She's determined to stay.Seva, 40, is a company CEO and husband to Oksana. Before the war, he travelled across Europe for business. Now, he makes regular supply drops of medical aid and rations to Ukrainian troops on the front line in Eastern Ukraine. He's originally from a small village near Dnipro.Ukraine War Diaries uses first-person audio, recorded on the ground in Ukraine, to give an intimate day-to-day perspective of life in a war zone.Week 9 diary entries were recorded using Wats App voice note and first published on the Ukraine War Diaries podcast feed. To follow this series when it broadcasts, on weekdays, subscribe to Ukraine War Diaries wherever you get your podcasts.From the producers of Sky News' multi-award winning series – StoryCast.CREDITSSeries Producer - Rob MulhernProduction Support/Editing - Paul Stanworth
Ilyas old life and his new normal collide when he tries to sources toys for his sons birthdays.Oksana continues to come to terms with a Russian home invasion in Hostomel.And Seva receives a letter of gratitude from the front line after using online crowd funding to secure vital military equipment.BACKGROUNDIlyas is an IT specialist and married father who fled from Kyiv to Lviv shortly after the war started. Right now his wife and two young sons are taking refuge in Poland.As of May 2022, Ilyas is back living in the family apartment in Kyiv and working, in part, for the Ukrainian government on specialist projects.Oksana, 34, works in overseas education. She lives with her husband, Seva, in an apartment complex in central Kyiv and has remained in the Ukrainian capital since the war started. Many of Oksana's closest friends have left the country to begin new lives in Europe. Some may never return. She's determined to stay.Seva, 40, is a company CEO and husband to Oksana. Before the war, he travelled across Europe for business. Now, he makes regular supply drops of medical aid and rations to Ukrainian troops on the front line in Eastern Ukraine. He's originally from a small village near Dnipro.Ukraine War Diaries uses first-person audio, recorded on the ground in Ukraine, to give an intimate day-to-day perspective of life in a war zone.Week 9 diary entries were recorded using Wats App voice note and first published on the Ukraine War Diaries podcast feed. To follow this series when it broadcasts, on weekdays, subscribe to Ukraine War Diaries wherever you get your podcasts.From the producers of Sky News' multi-award winning series – StoryCast.CREDITSSeries Producer - Rob MulhernProduction Support/Editing - Paul Stanworth
Oksana begins the painful process of trying to salvage what she can from her dream life in Hostomel, near Kyiv. Here, just weeks ago, Russian soldiers used residential properties to wage war against their Ukrainian counterparts.Ukraine War Diaries uses first-person audio, recorded on the ground in Ukraine, to give an intimate day-to-day perspective of life in a war zone.BACKGROUNDOksana, 34, works in overseas education. She lives with her husband, Seva, in an apartment complex in central Kyiv and has remained in the Ukrainian capital since the war started. Many of Oksana's closest friends have left the country to begin new lives in Europe. Some may never return. She's determined to stay.Episode 24 was recorded using WhatsApp voice notes.From the producers of Sky News' multi-award winning series – StoryCast.CREDITS Series Producer - Rob MulhernProduction Support - Paul Stanworth
Washington vil ha krig med Russland. Det er den uhyggelige sannhet vi står overfor. Amerikanerne har de to siste ukene foretatt mange trekk som bare kan tolkes på en måte: -Vi vil beseire dere. Det er noen dager siden sendingen ble spilt inn. Men den er ikke blitt mindre aktuell, snarere tvert om. Tjenestemenn har lekket at de sto bak da ukrainerne skjøt ned et troppetransportfly med flere hundre soldater som skulle ta Hostomel-flyplassen. De var også instrumentelle da flaggskipet «Moskva» ble senket, og de har levert sanntidsinfo som gjorde det mulig for ukrainerne å ta ut 12 russiske generaler. Hva tenker Putin? Hvis du setter pris på sendingene: Vipps oss på 63 89 41. Alle bidrag hjelper. Lag en konto på Odysee her! – Odysee vil da gi oss poeng som hjelper oss å klatre i algoritmene! Følg oss på Rumble. Følg oss også på PodBean, iTunes og alle steder der podcasts finnes. Husk å rate oss med 5 stjerner, så flere likesinnede sannhetssøkere finner oss der! De som ønsker daglige varsler om Dagsordens sendetid på e-mail, kan skrive til dan@document.no Kjøp Alf R. Jacobsens politiske bombe «Stalins svøpe: KGB, AP og kommunismens medløpere» her!
Wer in den letzten Wochen die Ukraine-Kriegsberichterstattung im TV mitverfolgte, wird sich nicht wundern, warum Steffen Schwarzkopfs Reporterpodcast „Inside USA“ kurzfristig pausieren musste. Seine Live-Schalten als Kriegsreporter aus der Ukraine sind Momente, die hängen bleiben. Nun heißt es für den US-Korrespondenten „back to Washington, D.C.“ – aber nur für kurze Zeit. Gelegentlich scherzte Steffen Schwarzkopf in früheren Folgen von „Inside USA“ darüber, dass die Smalltalk-Runden im Weißen Haus für ihn anstrengender seien als so mancher Reporter-Einsatz im Krisengebiet. Tatsächlich ist der US-Korrespondent nicht nur Leiter des WELT-Studios in Washington, sondern auch erfahrener Kriegsreporter. Als Russlands Panzer im Februar in die Ukraine rollten, tauschte er Hemd und Anzug wieder gegen die schusssichere Weste. Seine Berichte und TV-Schalten aus Kramatorsk, Kiew, Irpin, Hostomel, Butscha wurden für ein Millionen-Publikum zum Fenster in das Kriegsgeschehen. Zurück in Washington ist es für ihn “ungewohnt, wieder ganz normal am Schreibtisch zu sitzen.” Jetzt muss sein Reporterhaushalt aber schon wieder in Umzugskartons verschwinden. Denn die nächste große Veränderung steht an. Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutzerklärung: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html
Ben is once again joined by Fifdom's resident Ukraine expert, Adrian Bonenberger, to discuss all manner of things Ukraine! Topics include: we were right god dammit (with a few exceptions), Russia's stupidity in Hostomel and Chernobyl, the impact of atrocities being on TikTok, where nuclear weapons would be used (if they are), and more. Adrian's work has been published in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Foreign Policy, Deadspin, Forbes, and all of the other places. Follow him on Twitter @AdrianBonenber1.
Hostomel, Irpiń, Bucza - te miejscowości przed wojną były uznawane za wyjątkowo piękną, wypoczynkową okolicę Kijowa. Przeprowadzały się tam rodziny z małymi dziećmi, by znaleźć wytchnienie od zgiełku wielkiego miasta. Dziś, jadąc na północny-wschód od stolicy Ukrainy, można zobaczyć głównie ruiny. Ołeksandr Markuszyn, mer Irpinia, powiadomił, że skala zniszczeń wojennych w jego mieście opiewa na ponad miliard dolarów, a Rosjanie spustoszyli około 70 proc. budynków, w tym szkół, przychodni, szpitali. Władze apelują, żeby mieszkańcy podkijowskich miejscowości poczekali z powrotem do swoich domów, gdyż nie nadają się jeszcze do zamieszkania. Dziesiątki wolontariuszy z Kijowa ruszyły z pomocą, aby posprzątać budynki i ulice. "Nie byłam do końca przygotowana na to, co zobaczyłam" - wyznaje Olga Rusina, ukraińska dziennikarka, autorka książek dla dzieci, tłumaczka z języka polskiego, która niedawno wróciła ze zrujnowanego Hostomla, w którym udzielała się jako wolontariuszka. Na podcast zaprasza Urszula Pieczek. Więcej podcastów na https://wyborcza.pl/podcast. Piszcie do nas w każdej sprawie na listy@wyborcz
For the last couple of days, we have been shocked by what happened in Bucha. Bucha, Irpin, Hostomel, Motyzhyn and other towns and cities where Russian soldiers stayed have been destroyed and robbed. Should we remind how those cities were happy, self-sufficient and peaceful until the 24th of February? But the war continues and many other cities continue to suffer from the russians. In this episode, Oksana from Mariupol and Sasha from Kyiv are talking about their life, hometowns and emotions. You can support Podcast UA: The day that we survived here: https://www.patreon.com/UAThedaythatwesurvived
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
For the last couple of days, we have been shocked by what happened in Bucha. Bucha, Irpin, Hostomel, Motyzhyn and other towns and cities where Russian soldiers stayed have been destroyed and robbed. Should we remind how those cities were happy, self-sufficient and peaceful until the 24th of February? But the war continues and many other cities continue to suffer from the russians. In this episode, Oksana from Mariupol and Sasha from Kyiv are talking about their life, hometowns and emotions. You can support Podcast UA:The day that we survived here: https://www.patreon.com/UAThedaythatwesurvived
For the last couple of days, we have been shocked by what happened in Bucha. Bucha, Irpin, Hostomel, Motyzhyn and other towns and cities where Russian soldiers stayed have been destroyed and robbed. Should we remind how those cities were happy, self-sufficient and peaceful until the 24th of February? But the war continues and many other cities continue to suffer from the russians. In this episode, Oksana from Mariupol and Sasha from Kyiv are talking about their life, hometowns and emotions. You can support Podcast UA:The day that we survived here: https://www.patreon.com/UAThedaythatwesurvived
W tym tygodniu będę mówił tylko o jednej sprawie, bo cała reszta niknie w jej cieniu. Otwierałem go stwierdzeniem, że Bucza, Irpień, Hostomel, Motyzin tworzą mapę ludobójstwa w Europie XXI wieku. I dziś chcę to z całą mocą powtórzyć.
Die Kämpfe im Osten der Ukraine rund um die Region Luhansk intensivieren sich. Die Regruppierung der russischen Soldaten und Truppen scheint dort kurz vor dem Abschluss zu stehen. Derweil hat die Regierung in Kiew die Menschen in den Gebieten Luhansk, Donezk und Charkiw zur Flucht aufgerufen - solange es noch geht. Im Kiewer Vorort Hostomel sind nach dem Abzug russischer Truppen die Leichen von elf getöteten Zivilisten gefunden worden. Grieß, Thielkowww.deutschlandfunk.de, Informationen am MorgenDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Photo: AN-225 Mirya ablaze in its hangar on February 27, 2002, after being attacked by Russian forces at the Hostomel Airport. #Ukraine: Remains of the battle for Hostomel Airfield. Mohammed al-Kassim @foreignfocus @TheMediaLine, The Media Line News Agency. https://theaviationist.com/2022/04/01/drone-footage-hostomel/ .. .. .. Permissions AN-225 Mirya ablaze in its hangar on February 27, 2002, after being attacked by Russian forces at the Hostomel Airport. Date | 26 February 2022 Source | Ukrainian Foreign Ministry Press Release Author | Ukrainian Military Drone 56-15 This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license. | You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the workUnder the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
Ukraine's deputy prime minister, Iryna Vereshchuk, has called on people living in the eastern regions of Kharkiv, Luhansk and Donetsk to evacuate while they have the chance. Also on the programme: Russian mercenaries along with the country's military stand accused of the mass killing of civilians in the west African state of Mali; and a breakthrough in the emerging field of biological engineering. (Picture: Parts of destroyed church lay on the road in the small city of Hostomel. Credit: EPA / Petrashyuk)
In deze aflevering: nieuwe sancties van Europa, en in Nederland wordt eindelijk een jacht in beslag genomen. In de Russische media: een bericht uit Hostomel, naast Bucha gelegen. Verder: in Bucha zijn soldaten van Ramzan Kadyrov bezig geweest. Wie is deze man?
Rundt 400 innbyggere i Kyiv-forstaden Hostomel er savnet etter 35 dager med russisk okkupasjon, i følge lederen for den lokale militæradministrasjonen. Tre av fire ordførarar meiner kapasiteten i kommunane sine helsetjenester er god nok til å ta vare på flyktningane som kommer - samtidig mangler 150 000 personer fastlege her til lands. Delstatsforsamlingen i Oklahoma har stemt for en lov som vil gjøre det forbudt for leger å utføre abort. Brudd på loven kan medføre opptil ti års fengsel. Hør episoden i appen NRK Radio
Boetsja, Irpin, Borodjanka, Hostomel. Het is een greep uit de voorsteden van Kiev vanwaaruit Russische troepen zich hebben teruggetrokken en waar Oekraïense ooggetuigen nu vertellen over extreem geweld. Dit weekend doken beelden op die de wereld hebben geschokt. Volgens de Oekraïense regering is het nog maar het topje van de ijsberg. Russische militairen lijken zich op veel meer plekken schuldig te maken aan oorlogsmisdaden. Dat is ook de waarneming van Nieuwsuur-verslaggever Gert-Jan Dennekamp, zegt hij in podcast De Dag. Hij sprak afgelopen dagen op verschillende plaatsen met ooggetuigen en was ook bij opgravingen van slachtoffers. Zo zag hij met eigen ogen hoe deze mensen aan hun einde zijn gekomen. "Dan blijkt dat deze mensen zijn geëxecuteerd," vertelt Dennekamp over het onderzoek waar hij bij was. "Dan blijkt dat ze schotwonden aan het hoofd hebben. Van één slachtoffer was de keel doorgesneden en is er met een mes in het hart gestoken. Deze mensen zijn geëxecuteerd, nadat ze door het Russische leger van straat zijn geplukt." Reageren? Mail dedag@radio1.nl
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/yd4mz64b Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com Ukraine: bodies of their neighbors buried by the remains of the massacre. An Úcráin: coirp a gcomharsan curtha ag fuíoll an áir. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has called Russian soldiers "murderers, torturers, rapists and predators" in the wake of scores of bodies found in three towns near the capital Kiev. "Dúnmharfóirí, céastúnaigh, éigneoirí agus creachadóirí" atá tugtha ag Uachtarán na hÚcráine Volodymyr Zelensky ar shaighdiúirí Rúiseacha i bhfianaise na scórtha corp a bheith faighte i dtrí bhaile in aice leis an bpríomhchathair Cív. To date, more than 400 bodies - mostly civilians - have been found so far in the towns of Bucha, Irpin and Hostomel northwest of Kiev. Tuairiscítear go bhfuarthas os cionn 400 corp go dtí seo - sibhialtaigh a mbunáite - i mbailte Bucha, Irpin agus Hostomel siar ó thuaidh ó Chív. Local authorities in those towns reported that many of the dead had their hands tied, their bodies thrown on the street and had to be buried together in mass graves. Thug na húdaráis áitiúla sna bailte sin le fios go raibh a lámha ceangailte ag go leor de na mairbh, go raibh na coirp caite ar an tsráid agus go mb'éigean iad a adhlacadh in éineacht in olluaigheanna. Bucha mayor said the bodies could not be buried in the town cemetery as she was too close to the Russian firing range. Dúirt méara Bucha nach bhféadfaí na coirp a chur i reilig an bhaile mar go raibh sí róghar do raon lámhaigh na Rúiseach. 280 of the bodies were found in that town. Is sa bhaile sin a fuarthas 280 de na coirp. One of the villagers pointed out that Russian soldiers had ordered the remains of the massacre not to bury the bodies while it was freezing hard. Thug duine de mhuintir an bhaile le fios gur ordaigh saighdiúirí Rúiseacha d'fhuíoll an áir gan na coirp a adhlacadh fad is a bhí sé ag sioc go crua. Finally, he said, they dug a big hole with a tractor and buried the bodies with no dignity. Ar deireadh, a duirt sé, thochail siad poll mór le tarracóir agus cuireadh na coirp ann gan aon dínit. The Russians were subsequently routed by Ukrainian troops and the situation is reported to be calm - but depressing. Chuir saighdiúirí Úcránacha an ruaig ar na Rúisigh ina dhiaidh sin agus tuairiscítear go bhfuil cúrsaí socair - ach dubhach dólásach - ansin faoi láthair. Western countries and the United Nations have strongly criticized the scandal but the Russians have denied any involvement. Tá an t-uafás cáinte go láidir ag tíortha an Iarthair agus na Náisiúin Aontaithe ach tá sé séanta ag na Rúisigh nach raibh aon bhaint acu leis an scéal. The United Nations has pointed out, however, that while the weaving of the hand of the Russians in the atrocities, it is not possible to be certain that all those killed were civilians. Thug na Náisiúin Aontaithe le fios, áfach, cé go bhfuil inneach lámh na Rúiseach sa drochobair nach bhféadfaí a bheith cinnte ar shibhialtaigh iad na daoine ar fad a maraíodh. Western countries have indicated that Russia will be further sanctioned by the massacre. Tá sé tugtha le tuiscint ag tíortha an Iarthair go gcuirfear tuilleadh smachtbhannaí ar an Rúis mar gheall ar an sléacht. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has argued that the importation of gas from Russia could be completely banned in the face of recent brutality. Mhaígh Seansailéir na Gearmáine Olaf Scholz go bhféadfaí cosc iomlán a chur iompórtáil gáis ón Rúis i bhfianaise na brúidiúlachta is deireanaí. Nearly 4.2 million people have fled Ukraine since the Russian Army invaded the country on February 24 and the United Nations says 40,000 of them fled yesterday. Tá beagnach 4.2 milliún duine teite as an Ucráin ó rinne Arm na Rúise ionradh ar an tír ar an 24 Feabhra agus deir na Náisiúin Aontaithe gur díreach inné a theith 40,000 acu. Bucha now occupied by Ukrainian soldiers
David, español atrapado en Hostomel, cuenta en 'Más de uno' su experiencia durante el asedio del Ejército ruso y relata las condiciones en las que sobrevive la población del lugar.
The whole world is looking at atrocities of Russian army in Kyiv suburbs: Bucha, Irpin', Hostomel, villages on the Zhytomyr route and others. We try to explain why these atrocities could have happened and how this genocide has been made possible. Photos: https://twitter.com/ukraine_world/status/1510694608166129665 -- We continue our “Explaining Ukraine” podcast. Hosts: Volodymyr Yermolenko, Ukrainian philosopher and journalist, analytics director at Internews Ukraine, and Tetyana Ogarkova, Ukrainian scholar and journalist who is in charge of international outreach at the Ukraine Crisis Media Centre. The “Explaining Ukraine” podcast is a product by UkraineWorld.org. Support us at patreon.com/ukraineworld.
Warning: Contains graphic accountsBodies with bound hands, close-range gunshot wounds, and signs of torture lay scattered in a city on the outskirts of Kyiv after Russian soldiers withdrew from the area.Ukrainian authorities on Sunday accused the departing forces of committing war crimes and leaving behind a "scene from a horror movie".As images of the bodies — of people whom residents said were killed indiscriminately — began to emerge from Bucha, a slew of European leaders condemned the atrocities and called for tougher sanctions against Moscow.Associated Press journalists saw the bodies of at least 21 people in various spots around Bucha, northwest of the capital. One group of nine, all in civilian clothes, were scattered around a site that residents said Russian troops used as a base. They appeared to have been killed at close range. At least two had their hands tied behind their backs and one of those was shot in the head; another's legs were bound.Ukrainian officials laid the blame for the killings — which they said happened in Bucha and other Kyiv suburbs — squarely at the feet of Russian troops, with the President calling them evidence of genocide. But Russia's Defence Ministry rejected the accusations as "provocation".The discoveries followed the Russian retreat from the area around the capital, territory that has seen heavy fighting since troops invaded Ukraine from three directions on February 24.Troops who swept in from Belarus to the north spent weeks trying to clear a path to Kyiv, but their advance stalled in the face of resolute defense from Ukraine's forces.Moscow now says it is focusing its offensive on the country's east, but it also pressed a siege on a city in the north and continued to strike cities elsewhere in a war that has already forced more than 4 million Ukrainians to flee their country and many more to leave their homes.Russian troops rolled into Bucha in the early days of the invasion and stayed up until March 30. With those forces gone, residents gave harrowing accounts Sunday, saying soldiers shot and killed civilians without any apparent reason.One resident, who refused to give his name fearing for his safety, said that Russian troops went building to building and took people out of the basements where they were hiding, checking their phones for any evidence of anti-Russian activity and taking them away or shooting them.Hanna Herega, a resident of Bucha, said Russian troops shot a neighbour who had gone out to gather wood for heating."He went to get some wood when all of a sudden [Russians] started shooting. They hit him a bit above the heel, crushing the bone, and he fell down," Herega said. "Then they shot off his left leg completely, with the boot. Then they shot him all over [the chest]. And another shot went slightly below the temple. It was a controlled shot to the head."The AP also saw two bodies, that of a man and a woman, wrapped in plastic that residents said they had covered and placed in a shaft until a proper funeral could be arranged.The resident who refused to be identified said the man was killed as he left a home."He put his hands up, and they shot him."Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said scores of residents were found slain on the streets of the suburbs of Irpin and Hostomel as well as Bucha, in what looked like a "scene from a horror movie".He alleged that some of the women found dead had been raped before being killed and the Russians then burned the bodies."This is genocide," Zelenskyy told CBS' Face the Nation on Sunday.But Russia's Defence Ministry said in a statement that the photos and videos of dead bodies "have been stage managed by the Kyiv regime for the Western media". It noted that Bucha's mayor did not mention any abuses a day after Russian troops left.The ministry charged said "not a single...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On Tuesday, March 15, the world learned of the deaths of two more journalists in Ukraine. Their car was shot at on March 14 in the village of Horenka, near Hostomel. Original Article: https://meduza.io/en/feature/2022/03/18/three-weeks-in
TESTO DELL'ARTICOLO ➜ www.bastabugie.it/it/articoli.php?id=6928LO ''STRANO'' FANATISMO BELLICO DEL CORRIERE DELLA SERA NELLA GUERRA IN UCRAINA di Antonio SocciCome ha scritto Tomaso Montanari, un intellettuale di sinistra, è tragicomico vedere "ex comunisti, operaisti, esponenti di Lotta Continua" che, per far dimenticare il loro passato, oggi sull'Ucraina sono "passati all'occidentalismo fanatico". Sembrano Luttwak.La devozione alla Casa Bianca, per alcuni ex, è granitica come ieri quella del Pci verso il Cremlino rosso.Non pensano all'interesse degli europei (italiani compresi) i quali non vogliono sprofondare in un guerra duratura e nella catastrofe economica. Loro sognano di abbattere Putin (come vorrebbe Biden).Un esempio? Il Corriere della sera. Da un po' è diventato "l'Unità del terzo millennio": vengono infatti dall'Unità sia il direttore, sia i principali editorialisti come Walter Veltroni e Antonio Polito (Paolo Mieli viene addirittura da "Potere operaio"…).L'editoriale di ieri, firmato da Polito, aveva un titolo militaresco: "Il fronte interno". Calzato gagliardamente l'elmetto degli artiglieri da salotto, Polito inizia stentoreo: "Il 'partito della resa' ha gettato la maschera. È ancora minoritario, ma punta ormai al bersaglio grosso: portare l'Italia nel campo di Mosca, confermando così l'antico pregiudizio per cui non finiamo mai una guerra dalla parte in cui l'abbiamo cominciata".Qualcuno dovrebbe informare Polito che l'Italia non è entrata in guerra (un piccolo dettaglio). Ma il virile richiamo politesco fa ricordare un triste passato (che speriamo non torni).Era il giugno 1940 e la prima pagina del "Corriere della sera" quel giorno tuonava: "Popolo italiano corri alle armi! Folgorante annunzio del Duce: la guerra alla Gran Bretagna e alla Francia. Dalle Alpi all'Oceano Indiano un solo grido di fede e di passione: Duce! Vinceremo!".Fu una catastrofe. Si dirà che c'era il fascismo e i giornali dovevano allinearsi. Certo, ma è un'aggravante: quando si beneficia dell'eredità di un'antica testata bisogna anche ricordarne la storia e i drammi (onori e oneri).MANDARE ARMI PER FERMARE ARMI NON HA SENSOE bisogna pensarci quattro volte, oggi che siamo liberi, prima di carezzare di nuovo l'idea della guerra con leggerezza, gettando benzina sulla follia incendiaria di Putin. Invece il Corriere se la prende con i panciafichisti.È grottesco che uno che viene dall'Unità, su un giornale diretto da un collega che viene anch'egli dall'Unità, accusi chi invita Zelensky a trattare e cedere qualcosa, per mettere fine alla strage, di voler "portare l'Italia nel campo di Mosca".Siccome Vittorio Feltri è stato il primo a prospettare (su queste colonne) tale idea, ne deriva che Feltri sarebbe uno che vuol "portare l'Italia nel campo di Mosca".Il concetto fa già ridere così. Ma appare surreale se si pensa che è espresso da un collega che viene dall'Unità, giornale che, per la morte di Stalin, aveva titolato: "Stalin è morto. Gloria eterna all'uomo che più di tutti ha fatto per la liberazione e per il progresso dell'umanità".Forse un minimo senso del ridicolo e del tragico aiuterebbe Polito e i colleghi del Corriere a ritrovare quella saggia moderazione che si addice a un giornale liberale e borghese.Ieri anche il premier israeliano Bennet, a quanto pare, ha suggerito al leader ucraino ciò che Feltri ha scritto giorni fa: trattare e cedere qualcosa per salvare la vita della sua gente e risparmiare loro tante sofferenze. Anche il suo è da ritenere un "sostegno esplicito al tiranno"?Sempre sul Corriere della sera, Paolo Mieli se l'è presa con chi dice che non bisogna prolungare la carneficina mandando armi all'Ucraina, ma sarebbe meglio trattare con Putin. Per lui questo è "pacifismo cinico". Però anche una testimone della Shoah come Edith Bruck ha detto: "Mandare armi per fermare armi non ha senso".Mieli e compagni propongono di mandare armi pure in decine di conflitti che ci sono nel mondo? O quei morti valgono meno? Certi bollori umanitari (a intermittenza) indicano nobiltà o fanatismo guerrafondaio? Perché sono cinici quelli che vorrebbero trattare salvando vite?NON È MORALE IL MORALISMO DELL'AVVENTURAC'è una famosa pagina di Joseph Ratzinger che dice il contrario facendo proprio l'elogio del compromesso: "essere sobri ed attuare ciò che è possibile, e non reclamare con il cuore in fiamme l'impossibile, è sempre stato difficile; la voce della ragione non è mai così forte come il grido irrazionale. Il grido che reclama le grandi cose ha la vibrazione del moralismo, limitarsi al possibile sembra invece una rinuncia alla passione morale, sembra il pragmatismo dei meschini. Ma la verità è che la morale politica consiste precisamente nella resistenza alla seduzione delle grandi parole con cui ci si fa gioco dell'umanità dell'uomo. Non è morale il moralismo dell'avventura… Non l'assenza di ogni compromesso, ma il compromesso stesso è la vera morale dell'attività politica".Gesù stesso nel Vangelo fa un esempio: "quale re, partendo in guerra contro un altro re, non siede prima a esaminare se può affrontare con diecimila uomini chi gli viene incontro con ventimila? Se no, mentre l'altro è ancora lontano, gli manda un'ambasceria per la pace" (Lc 14, 31-32).Se il leader ucraino avesse fatto subito così avrebbe scongiurato una tragedia. Ora più passano i giorni (più sono i morti) e più dovrà concedere. Il suo imperativo dovrebbe essere anzitutto salvare vite di ucraini, evitare ulteriori distruzioni e risparmiare sofferenze ad altri popoli, come il nostro. Le ricadute economiche di questo conflitto infatti sono già disastrose e in seguito saranno addirittura catastrofiche.Ma ovviamente colpiscono soprattutto la gente comune già provata da due anni di pandemia. Assai meno gli editorialisti del Corriere che infatti giudicano meschini i media che si concentrano "sulla benzina piuttosto che sull'Ucraina".Loro hanno sublimi ideali. Delle bollette o del prezzo dei generi alimentari che raddoppia se ne fregano e dicono agli italiani, già provatissimi, che devono sacrificarsi ancora di più. Per l'Ucraina.Ma dovrebbero dire: per le idee dei governanti ucraini. Perché l'interesse del popolo ucraino in realtà coincide con quello degli italiani: è far cessare la guerra.Nota di BastaBugie: Riccardo Cascioli nell'articolo seguente dal titolo "Le figuracce di Salvini? C'è ben di peggio" commenta la figuraccia rimediata da Salvini in Polonia, ma facendo notare che questo è solo l'ultimo episodio di una perdita totale di credibilità dell'Italia all'estero. Sull'Ucraina Draghi e Di Maio hanno subito di peggio.Ecco l'articolo completo pubblicato su La Nuova Bussola Quotidiana il 10 marzo 2022:La pessima figura di Matteo Salvini in Polonia è solo l'ultimo episodio di una saga in cui l'Italia, fuori e dentro i confini nazionali, prende schiaffi da chiunque. Salvini è stato umiliato dal sindaco di una piccola città polacca, ai confini con l'Ucraina, che ha rifiutato di riceverlo sventolandogli sotto il naso la t-shirt con l'immagine di Putin che il leader della Lega aveva indossato un tempo. Certamente quel sindaco sarà stato imbeccato dal solito giornalista o fotografo italiano militante, secondo la squallida tradizione italiana per cui si va all'estero per combattere le battaglia politiche e personali nostrane. Ma ciò non toglie la sprovvedutezza con cui un leader della maggioranza di governo prepara una missione all'estero (anche la scelta di uno staff evidentemente incapace è sua responsabilità), pensando soprattutto alla sua immagine in patria e finendo per danneggiarla insieme a quella dell'Italia tutta.Ma quello di Salvini, come dicevamo, è solo un episodio e certamente non il più grave, visto che la crisi in Ucraina ha fatto emergere con chiarezza lo stato comatoso della nostra credibilità politica all'estero. Ha cominciato colui che da noi è venerato come il Salvatore della Patria, il presidente del Consiglio Mario Draghi, sbertucciato prima da Mosca e poi da Kiev. Il 17 febbraio era stata annunciata con enfasi la sua missione a Mosca per favorire un incontro tra il presidente russo Vladimir Putin e il presidente americano Joe Biden; Putin gli aveva fatto credere di essere disposto a riceverlo ma prima che Draghi potesse salire su un aereo alla volta di Mosca, le truppe russe erano già entrate in Ucraina il 24 febbraio. Ma non bastava l'umiliazione subita da Putin, Draghi se l'è cercata poche ore dopo anche con il presidente ucraino Volodymyr Zelensky: nel suo commosso discorso alla Camera per riferire dell'invasione dell'Ucraina, il presidente del Consiglio ha concluso dicendo che aveva un appuntamento telefonico con Zelensky alle 9.30 ma lui «non era più disponibile»: una frase infelice che sembrava suggerire una mancanza o uno sgarbo del presidente ucraino. Che infatti si è subito reso disponibile su twitter: «Oggi alle 10:30 agli ingressi di Chernihiv, Hostomel e Melitopol ci sono stati pesanti combattimenti. Le persone sono morte. La prossima volta cercherò di spostare l'agenda di guerra per parlare con Mario Draghi ad un'ora precisa».E se Draghi, che pure un curriculum internazionale ce l'ha, viene trattato così, figuriamoci il ministro degli Esteri Luigi Di Maio, che nel suo curriculum può vantare al massimo le trasferte al seguito del Napoli. E infatti si è preso uno schiaffo pubblico dal ministro degli esteri russo Sergej Lavrov. Dopo che, poche ore prima dell'invasione, Di Maio ha avuto la brillante idea di dichiarare che non ci sarebbero stati nuovi incontri con i vertici russi se prima non si fosse abbassata la tensione, Lavrov ha avuto buon gioco a dichiarare che quella di Di Maio è «una strana idea di diplomazia», che «è stata creata per risolvere situazioni di conflitto e alleviare la tensione, e non per viaggi a vuoto in giro per i Paesi e degustare piatti esotici a ricevimenti di gala»
This episode is also available as a blog post: http://afghannewswire.com/2022/03/13/ukraine-war-helmet-cam-captures-russian-air-assault-troops-first-capture-of-hostomel-airport/
On day 11 since the invasion was launched, some of the heaviest fighting has been in towns to the north west of the capital Kyiv. The towns of Bucha, Hostomel and Irpin have been under heavy bombardment. Civilians trying to flee have been killed by Russian mortar fire. A second attempt to coordinate a ceasefire in the southern port city of Mariupol failed again today. The city has been under heavy Russian bombardment for several days and around 200,000 people are trapped in deteriorating conditions with no safe path to evacuate. Also in the programme: A look into the safe-haven oligarchs find for their dirty money in London; and we hear from a resident of Odesa, a critical port city and Ukraine's third-largest city. (Photo: Women look out from inside an evacuation train to the city of Kyiv, at the train station in Irpin, Ukraine on 4 March 2022. Credit: Roman Pilipey/EPA)
On day 11 of the invasion, towns to the north-west of the capital Kyiv came under relentless bombardment as Russian forces continued their attempt to break through towards the capital. There was heavy fighting with Russian forces in Bucha, Hostomel and Irpin, where barely a minute went by without an explosion, according to locals. At least four people - all from the same family - were reportedly killed as they tried to flee Irpin, after Russian mortar shells targeted a damaged bridge they were using. Russia has been striking civilian targets in Ukraine, including hospitals, nurseries and schools, the Ukrainian deputy prime minister said. Olha Stefanishyna told the BBC that, after "strong resistance" from the Ukrainian army, there had been an "enormous operation" by Russia against civilians. She accused Russia of a "terroristic plan", with attacks coming from the air and also by land --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/aziz-mustaphi/message
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital. (commercial at 14:36)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121
In one of the most critical engagements so far in the war in Ukraine, the Russian forces were repelled when attempting to take the key airfield at Hostomel. This prevented the Russian's from using to the base as a jump off point to invade Kiyv and thus caused a logistical nightmare for the Russian command and put a serious slowdown on their plans for a quick strike at the Ukrainian capital. (commercial at 14:36)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.wsj.com/articles/putin-thought-ukraine-would-fall-quickly-an-airport-battle-proved-him-wrong-11646343121
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Ukraine Situation Report 2022/03/01, published by lsusr on March 2, 2022 on LessWrong. I love Russia, I love Russian and I love Russians. My favorite physics professor was a nuclear scientist from the Soviet Union. I studied Russian in college where a classmate gave me my first copy of Foreign Affairs Journal. Catherine the Great is #4 on my list of heroes. I don't know much about Ukraine or Ukrainians, but it is hard not to love them too after the swagger and humor they have exhibited since the Russian invasion. A week ago I wrote "The Russian Armed Forces is among the three most capable militaries in the world". Since then, I have been astonished by the incompetence of the Russian Armed Forces. Russian Equipment When I found out Ukraine issued 10,000 automatic rifles to civilians my first thoughts were "Those rifles could arm an insurgency but using them in conventional battle against Russian forces would be suicide". That's because there's more to fielding an effective soldier than giving a man or woman a gun. He or she needs to know what direction to point it. Here is an interesting comment thread between people who (I assume) are mostly American infantry. Having heard over the past 18-24 months about LSCO [Large Scale Combat Operations] and russia, I have to admit they have been exposed pretty badly. Also one of my friends noted during all of the combat footage we have not seen any night infantry combat, let alone any IR lasers. Now objectively I haven't seen every single piece of combat footage and presumably there is night combat. ―regularguyofthenorth I saw a report from Ukraine that said that Russian forces wait until dawn to attack because they don't have NVGs, nor the training on using them, not sure how accurate that is. ―IllustriusDot1866 Everything I've seen has said the same. No NODs, no optics, for anyone but leadership positions in infantry units. That's insane to me. I can't imagine life in a combat zone without NODs or optics. ―bang_the_drums That was something that stuck out to me too - even for the UA. I see maybe 1:20 with anything but an iron sight and a dream. ―Roastage I've seen an AS VAL [a Soviet assault rifle] and a VSS Vintorez [a silenced Soviet sniper rifle] as "combat trophies" so far, neither one of them had optics, which basically defeats the point of a suppressed gun shooting subsonic ammo that can penetrate armor. I also saw the VDV [Russian Airborne Forces] guys at the Hostomel airport, one of them had an AK-12 with no optic, no light, no laser, nothing. "Next gen" AK with ironsights. WTF? ―xyolikesdinosaurs Yep more or less the same for me. Expected for the Ukrainian Militia but surprising to see so few amongst the Russian infantry. There is a photo on combatfootage of some SF [Special Forces] guys who were fully kitted out with MCXs [gun] and all the jewellery. Unclear if they were FOG but there was more glass in that photo than I'd seen in all the footage to date. ―Roastage ―reddit thread "IR" stands for "infrared [nightvision]". "NVG" stands for "Night Vision Goggles". "NOD" stands for "Night Observation Device". These American troops are shocked to discover their Russian counterparts cannot see at night. My bicycle has better optics than Russia's paratroopers. American door-kickers in Iraq and Afghanistan operated at night because the best time to do battle is when you can see and the enemy can't. How can Russia's frontline troops be missing such basic equipment? Because Russia has a GDP the size of Florida's. Subtract oligarchic graft and what's left is Soviet hardware. When I found out the Ukrainians were defacing signs I thought "that's the right thing to do but I expect it won't do much because Russians can navigate via GPS instead. It appears unlikely that the majority of Russian military armored vehicles are using GPS, ...
Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Ukraine Situation Report 2022/03/01, published by lsusr on March 2, 2022 on LessWrong. I love Russia, I love Russian and I love Russians. My favorite physics professor was a nuclear scientist from the Soviet Union. I studied Russian in college where a classmate gave me my first copy of Foreign Affairs Journal. Catherine the Great is #4 on my list of heroes. I don't know much about Ukraine or Ukrainians, but it is hard not to love them too after the swagger and humor they have exhibited since the Russian invasion. A week ago I wrote "The Russian Armed Forces is among the three most capable militaries in the world". Since then, I have been astonished by the incompetence of the Russian Armed Forces. Russian Equipment When I found out Ukraine issued 10,000 automatic rifles to civilians my first thoughts were "Those rifles could arm an insurgency but using them in conventional battle against Russian forces would be suicide". That's because there's more to fielding an effective soldier than giving a man or woman a gun. He or she needs to know what direction to point it. Here is an interesting comment thread between people who (I assume) are mostly American infantry. Having heard over the past 18-24 months about LSCO [Large Scale Combat Operations] and russia, I have to admit they have been exposed pretty badly. Also one of my friends noted during all of the combat footage we have not seen any night infantry combat, let alone any IR lasers. Now objectively I haven't seen every single piece of combat footage and presumably there is night combat. ―regularguyofthenorth I saw a report from Ukraine that said that Russian forces wait until dawn to attack because they don't have NVGs, nor the training on using them, not sure how accurate that is. ―IllustriusDot1866 Everything I've seen has said the same. No NODs, no optics, for anyone but leadership positions in infantry units. That's insane to me. I can't imagine life in a combat zone without NODs or optics. ―bang_the_drums That was something that stuck out to me too - even for the UA. I see maybe 1:20 with anything but an iron sight and a dream. ―Roastage I've seen an AS VAL [a Soviet assault rifle] and a VSS Vintorez [a silenced Soviet sniper rifle] as "combat trophies" so far, neither one of them had optics, which basically defeats the point of a suppressed gun shooting subsonic ammo that can penetrate armor. I also saw the VDV [Russian Airborne Forces] guys at the Hostomel airport, one of them had an AK-12 with no optic, no light, no laser, nothing. "Next gen" AK with ironsights. WTF? ―xyolikesdinosaurs Yep more or less the same for me. Expected for the Ukrainian Militia but surprising to see so few amongst the Russian infantry. There is a photo on combatfootage of some SF [Special Forces] guys who were fully kitted out with MCXs [gun] and all the jewellery. Unclear if they were FOG but there was more glass in that photo than I'd seen in all the footage to date. ―Roastage ―reddit thread "IR" stands for "infrared [nightvision]". "NVG" stands for "Night Vision Goggles". "NOD" stands for "Night Observation Device". These American troops are shocked to discover their Russian counterparts cannot see at night. My bicycle has better optics than Russia's paratroopers. American door-kickers in Iraq and Afghanistan operated at night because the best time to do battle is when you can see and the enemy can't. How can Russia's frontline troops be missing such basic equipment? Because Russia has a GDP the size of Florida's. Subtract oligarchic graft and what's left is Soviet hardware. When I found out the Ukrainians were defacing signs I thought "that's the right thing to do but I expect it won't do much because Russians can navigate via GPS instead. It appears unlikely that the majority of Russian military armored vehicles are using GPS, ...
俄乌代表团在战火中谈判|Russian, Ukrainian delegations talk as battles continueTalks between Ukraine and Russia began on Monday noon local time and were still ongoing as of press time in the Gomel region of Belarus near the border with Ukraine.当地时间2月28日中午,乌克兰和俄罗斯代表团在与乌克兰接壤的白俄罗斯戈梅利地区开始谈判。截至发稿时,谈判仍在进行。All Moscow's security concerns must be taken into account to achieve a settlement in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday during a telephone conversation with French President Emmanuel Macron.俄罗斯总统普京2月28日与法国总统马克龙通电话,表示乌克兰冲突的调解只有在无条件考虑俄在安全领域合法利益才能进行。Putin said that Russia's security concerns included "Russia's sovereignty over Crimea", as well as the country's commitment to solving the tasks of Ukraine's demilitarization and de-Nazification, and the issue of Ukraine's neutrality, the Kremlin said in a statement.据俄罗斯总统网站消息,普京表示,俄在安全领域合法利益包括承认俄罗斯对克里米亚的主权,解决乌克兰国家的非军事化和非纳粹化等问题,并确保其中立地位。Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's office had said it would seek an immediate cease-fire and the withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine at the talks.乌克兰总统办公室表示,谈判的“关键事项”是“立即停火和(俄罗斯)从乌克兰撤军”。At the start of the talks, Belarusian Foreign Minister Vladimir Makei assured the delegation members that they would "feel completely secure" during the talks.会谈开始后,白俄罗斯外长马克伊致欢迎辞,向双方保证“绝对安全”。The Russian delegation included officials from the foreign and defense ministries and Putin's office, while the Ukrainian side has sent six senior officials, including the Ukrainian defense minister.俄罗斯代表团成员包括来自外交部、国防部和总统办公室的官员,而乌方派出了包括乌克兰国防部长列兹尼科夫在内的六名高级官员。Earlier, Zelensky said he was skeptical about the talks.泽连斯基早些时候称他对这次会谈保持怀疑。Russia's Federal Air Transport Agency and the Federal Tourism Agency revealed late on Sunday that they were working with the Russian Foreign Ministry to evacuate Russian citizens from European nations as they continue to impose sanctions on Russia, cutting off Russian aircraft from their airspaces.27日晚间,俄罗斯航空运输局和旅游局表示,他们正在与俄罗斯外交部合作,从欧洲各国撤离俄罗斯公民,因为他们继续对俄罗斯实施制裁,禁止俄罗斯飞机进入其领空。Satellite images released on Sunday evening showed a large convoy of Russian ground forces in Ivankiv, which is about 64 kilometers from Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital.27日晚间,卫星图片显示,俄罗斯大规模地面部队集结在基辅西北方向64公里处的伊万基夫。The convoy extends for over 5 km and was moving in the direction of Kyiv. There are hundreds of military vehicles in the convoy, including tanks and self-propelled artillery.地面部队长约5.2公里,正在向基辅方向推进。其拥有数百辆军用车辆,包括坦克和自行火炮。Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said on Monday that Russian forces had established "total air superiority" over Ukraine.俄罗斯国防部新闻发言人科纳申科夫当地时间28日发布消息说,俄空军已夺取整个乌克兰制空权。 He said they had destroyed eight Buk M-1 air defense system vehicles, an S-300 missile system, three radars and five aircraft in the past 24 hours.科纳申科夫称,在过去的24小时里,俄军已经摧毁了8个“山毛榉-M1”防空导弹系统,1个S-300防空导弹系统,3座雷达站和5架飞机。"Since the beginning of the operation, Russian forces have hit 1,114 Ukrainian military infrastructure facilities, ... destroyed 314 tanks and other armored vehicles, 57 multiple rocket launch systems, 121 field artillery pieces and mortars," he said.“自俄罗斯开展特别军事行动以来,俄军已摧毁乌克兰军事基础设施的1114处目标,击毁了314辆乌军坦克及其他装甲车、57台多管火箭炮、121门野战炮和迫击炮。” Ukraine's military estimated some 5,300 Russian personnel losses, without saying how many of them were killed or captured.乌克兰国防部副部长马利亚尔称约有5300名俄军士兵伤亡,但并未说明死亡或被捕的俄军数字。Satellite images also reveal damage at Antonov airport in Hostomel, Ukraine, which is about 4.4 km from Kyiv.卫星图像还显示,距基辅约4.4公里、位于乌克兰霍斯托梅尔的安东诺夫机场受损。Black smoke was still billowing into the sky when the images were captured. The damage was caused by recent airstrikes and heavy fighting in and near the airport.拍摄照片时,黑烟仍在天空中滚滚升起。机场损毁是由最近的空袭和发生在机场内及附近的激烈战斗造成的。Ukrainian forces said on Sunday they had defeated a Russian incursion into Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, 500 km from east of Kyiv.乌克兰军队28日表示,他们已经击败了俄罗斯对乌克兰第二大城市哈尔科夫的入侵,该城市距离基辅以东500公里。 Oleg Sinegubov, a regional official, said Kharkiv had been brought under Ukrainian control.哈尔科夫州长奥列格·塞内古博夫表示,乌克兰军队已经重新控制了哈尔科夫。Moscow has made better progress in the south, however, and said it was besieging the cities of Kherson and Berdyansk.然而,俄罗斯军队向乌克兰南部挺进,武装力量包围了赫尔松市和别尔江斯克市。In Kyiv, many residents spent another night in shelters or cellars as Ukrainian forces said they were fighting off Russian "sabotage groups".在基辅的乌克兰军队表示他们正在与俄罗斯的“破坏组织”作战,许多居民在避难所或地窖里度过了又一个夜晚。But Sunday was relatively calm compared to the first days of fighting and the city was under a blanket curfew until Monday morning.与战斗的前几天相比,27日相对平静。截至28日早上,基辅一直处于全面宵禁状态。commitment 英 [kəˈmɪtmənt]; 美 [kəˈmɪtmənt]n.忠诚,献身;承诺,保证;奉献,投入;热情,决心;义务,责任;花费,使用(资金、时间、人力);需要定期支付的款项sanction 英 [ˈsæŋkʃn]; 美 [ˈsæŋkʃn]n.制裁;处罚,惩罚;(正式)许可,批准;(尤指基督教会的)法令,法律;(伦理学)约束力;支持,鼓励v.认可,准许;对……实施制裁,处罚convoy英 [ˈkɒnvɔɪ]; 美 [ˈkɑːnvɔɪ]n.(尤指护卫)舰队,车队v.护送,为……护航artillery英 [ɑːˈtɪləri]; 美 [ɑːrˈtɪləri]n.火炮,大炮;炮兵,炮兵部队armored 英 [ˈɑːməd]; 美 [ˈɑːrmərd]adj.装甲的curfew 英 [ˈkɜːfjuː]; 美 [ˈkɜːrfjuː]n.宵禁令,宵禁时间;(尤指儿童)晚间必须回家的时间;晚钟;打晚钟时刻
Tempesta di missili sulle città: droni, tank e artiglieria
Tentara Rusia dan tentara Ukraina terlibat dalam pertempuran sengit di sejumlah titik di dekat ibu kota Ukraina, Kiev, di tengah invasi skala besar Rusia. Pasukan Ukraina melancarkan serangan balasan terhadap pasukan udara Rusia yang mengambil kendali lapangan terbang Hostomel, hanya sekitar lima belas kilometer dari pusat kota Kiev. Tak jauh ke arah utara, pasukan Rusia yang masuk dari Belarus bertempur melawan pasukan Ukraina di dekat bekas pembangkit listrik tenaga nuklir Chernobyl. Pertempuran sengit juga terjadi di wilayah timur, di sepanjang garis depan dengan wilayah kelompok pemberontak Donetsk dan Luhansk.
Jueves, 24 de febrero de 2022, fecha que pasa a la historia por ser el día que Rusia invade y ataca a Ucrania. Los tanques rusos avanzan hacia Kiev… Están a unos 100 kilómetros de la capital ucraniana, y mientras los combates continúan en toda la línea del frente en las regiones de Donetstk y Lugansk, las tropas rusas se han hecho con el control del del aeródromo de Hostomel, a 35 kilómetros de Kiev y han invadido la zona de exclusión de la central nuclear de Chernóbil. La comunidad internacional condena la actuación de Rusia, mientras que los países -especialmente los de la Unión Europea- se preparan para la llegada de miles de refugiados. Terminamos echando un vistazo a la situación de crisis en el Partido Popular y visitando la feria ARCO que se inaugura hoy. Edición: Ismael ArranzRealización y Doblaje: Gustavo Luna See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.