Podcasts about kiyv

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Best podcasts about kiyv

Latest podcast episodes about kiyv

Radiogiornali di Radio Vaticana
Radiogiornale Italiano ore 14.00 30.04.2025

Radiogiornali di Radio Vaticana

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 10:00


I titoli: Conclave, diritto di voto per i cardinali oltre il numero di 120. La dichiarazione questa mattina della Congregazione dei porporati. Gli Stati Uniti a Mosca e Kiyv: “tregua duratura in Ucraina”. Il presidente ucraino Zelensky preme per un incremento delle sanzioni alla Russia 50 anni fa la fine della guerra in Vietnam. Un sanguinoso conflitto che scosse le coscienze dell'opinione pubblica mondiale. Conduce: Paola Simonetti In regia: Luca Rossi

Beyond The Horizon
A Window To The World: The Battle For Hostomel Airport

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2024 29:45


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

Titoloni
Ep. 115 | La Siria perduta.

Titoloni

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2024 24:52


di Massimiliano Coccia | in collaborazione con Linkiesta | Rassegna stampa del 03 12 2024 Mentre le truppe di jihadisti conquistano Aleppo e sono ad un passo dalla presa di Damasco torna con forza la questione siriana, la nazione uccisa da Assad e dalla presunta stabilizzazione voluta da Putin rischia di diventare l'ennesimo fronte cronico del Medio Oriente. Mentre Kallas, Costa e Scholz vanno a Kiyv in casa Pd, Elly Schlein redarguisce il PSE: “pensi di più alla pace”.

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
At least one million Ukrainians without power due to 'massive' Russian attack

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 3:46


Christopher Miller, Financial Times Chief Correspondent in Kiyv, reports that Russian strikes overnight have left one million Ukrainians without power.

P1 Kultur
Kulturkriget trappas upp inför valet i Georgien

P1 Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 55:09


På lördag går Georgien till val. Och det är ett ödesval i regionen. Ska landet knytas närmare till Ryssland eller ska man fortsätta den inslagna vägen mot väst. Kulturlivet spelar en viktig roll i vägvalet. Kulturredaktionens Fredrik Wadström vet mer. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. UKRAINSKA FILMARE UNDERSÖKER KORRUPTIONEN AV DET EGNA KULTURARVETSamtidigt som soldater försöker försvara ukrainska städer från att krossas av ryska missiler, pågår ett annan slags förstörelse mitt i huvudstaden Kiyv. I skuggan av kriget river ukrainska fastighetsutvecklare byggnader som anses ha konstnärligt eller historisk värde, för att ge plats åt shoppingcenter och bostadskomplex. Den här stadsomvandlingen har fått unga aktivister, konstnärer och filmare att protestera. Och det är särskilt en byggnad som blivit en symbol för kampen om staden: Flowers of Ukraine, Ukrainas blommor. P1 Kulturs Emma Engström har träffat de unga filmarna Alina Panasenko och Adelina Borets som bägge tvingats lämna sina hem i östra Ukraina. De tar på olika sätt avstamp i berättelsen om Flowers of Ukraine i sina filmer.MARIJA PRYMATJENKO – UKRAINAS STOLTHET STÄLLS UT I MALMÖMarija Prymatjenko (1909-1997) var verksam under sovjettiden och hennes bilder är hör i dag till det ukrainska kulturarvets mest omhuldade reliker. Fantastiska vidunder och fräna fredsappeller präglar utställningen ”Det fantastiska och fruktansvärda” på Moderna museet i Malmö, där ukrainska Marija Prymatjenkos naivistiska folkkonst står i dialog med den egna museisamlingen. Ett reportage av Mårten Arndtzén.ESSÄ: OXYMORON – EN STILFIGURS RESA FRÅN POESIN TILL PUTINEtt oxymoron är ett uttryck bildat av motsatser, som talande tystnad, bitterljuv eller lysa med sin frånvaro. I dagens essä från OBS ser kulturjournalisten Morris Wikström hur ett kritiskt poetiskt grepp tagits över av totalitär politik.Programledare: Lisa BergströmProducent: Henrik Arvidsson

PlayME
First Metis Man of Odesa (Interview with Matthew MacKenzie and Mariya Khomutova)

PlayME

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 56:22


Laura talks with writers and performers Matthew Mackenzie, a Canadian playwright and Mariya Khomutova, a Ukrainian artist who met in Kiyv during Matthew's theatre research trip in Ukraine. There, they sparked up a romance and found themselves expecting a baby on the eve of the global pandemic and invasion of Ukraine. The couple shared what it was like turning their very personal love story into an award-winning play and how writing helped strengthen their relationship and saved their mental health during their most challenging times.

The Epstein Chronicles
A Look Back: The Battle For Hostomel Airport

The Epstein Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2023 29:34


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

Beyond The Horizon
ICYMI: The Battle For Hostomel Airport

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2023 29:34


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

Accents d'Europe
En Ukraine, la révolution du Maïdan fête ses 10 ans

Accents d'Europe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2023 19:30


Le 21 novembre 2013, le gouvernement ukrainien suspendait les discussions sur un accord d'association avec l'Union européenne et choisissait de resserrer les liens avec la Russie, provoquant la mobilisation de centaines de milliers de personnes sur la place de l'indépendance, le Maïdan.   Entre novembre 2013 et février 2014, le Maïdan, à Kiyv, s'est transformé en place forte d'une contestation qui a mené au départ du président pro-russe Viktor Ianoukovitch et qui a coûté leur vie à plus de cent manifestants.  Après l'arrivée au pouvoir d'un gouvernement favorable à un rapprochement avec l'Union européenne, la Russie a envahi la Crimée et l'est de l'Ukraine... Dix ans plus tard, c'est tout le pays qui est en guerre. Le soir du 21 novembre, sur le Maïdan, les Ukrainiens se souviennent. Reportage d'Emmanuelle Chaze. Au Royaume-Uni, la Cour suprême juge que les livreurs de Deliveroo ne peuvent pas prétendre être représentés par un syndicat, car ils ne sont pas des employés salariés. Cette décision met un terme à une bataille judiciaire qui dure depuis 2017. Marie Billon. Le mot de la semaine : « pull-faktor » Face à la hausse du nombre de migrants qui entrent en Allemagne, une question revient dans le débat public : les prestations ont-elles un effet d'attraction, « Pull-faktor », comme disent les Allemands. Delphine Nerbollier. Les précaires à l'approche de l'hiverEn France, les Restos du cœur viennent de lancer leur 39è campagne hivernale. Ils ont distribué l'an dernier (2022) un nombre record de repas, 271 millions, contre 142 l'année d'avant. Dans le quartier de Ménilmontant à Paris, l'antenne de l'association voit donc affluer un nouveau public. Reportage de Laurence Théault.Chaque année, des foyers défavorisés craignent de ne pas pouvoir se chauffer. Avec la guerre en Ukraine et l'inflation, le nombre de personnes en précarité énergétique a augmenté de 35% en Europe depuis 2021. Laura Taouchanov.

Merci, Chérie - Der Eurovision Podcast
05.23 On His Way - Mit Omar Naber

Merci, Chérie - Der Eurovision Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2023 38:06


Traurige Nachrichten zuerst: Patricia Bredin, die erste britische Teilnehmerin, ist 88-jährig verstorben. Sie nahm beim Eurovision Song Contest 1957 mit  "All" teil.Abba-Mania und kein Ende: Nach der sehr erfolgreichen Semi-Live-Show "ABBA Voyage" in London kommt der Kino-Film "ABBA - The Movie" für nur zwei Tage weltweit in die Kinos. DIe restaurierte Fassung des mehrmals für den Oscar nominierten Regisseurs Lasse Hallström wird zum ersten Mal in alter Pracht am 17. und 19. September zu sehen sein. Der schwedische Regisseur hat fast alle Musikvideos der Kultband gedreht. Unter www.abbathemovie.com kann man alle teilnehmenden Kinos weltweit einsehen.Zwei mal trat Omar Naber beim Eurovision Song Contest für Slowenien an. 2005 mit "Stop" und 2017 mit "On My Way". Beide male in Kiyv. Beide Male ohne Finaleinzug. Wir sprachen mit dem Pop- und Rocksänger in München bei der OGAE Party Ende 2022. Omer Nabers Vater stammt aus Jordanien und ist Zahnarzt, seine Mutter eine slowenische Musiklehrerin. Omar ist gelernter  Zahntechniker, jetzt arbeitet er aber als Musiker und ist neben der Solokarriere auch mit der Gruppe "Kareem " unterwegs. Bereits mit 22 Jahren gewann er eine Casting Show und nahm mit "Stop" beim slowenischen Vorentscheid EMA teil, den er gewann und damit nach Kiyv reiste. Er war damals auch über die Landesgrenzen hinweg als Teenager-Idol bekannt. "On My Way" entstand zwar schon viele Jahre vor dem Vorentscheid 2017, lag aber lange einfach nur im Schreibtisch.Seine Musik ist mittlerweile rockig und seinen letzten Titel "Posebn Model" hat er auch auf Italienisch als "La Vita è Una Roulette" veröffentlicht.Vom Song Contest 2022 in Turin hat der "Green Day"-Fan keinen Song auf der Playlist. Sein Lieblingssong aller Zeiten? Toto Cotugnos "Insieme: 1992", der Siegertitel des Italieners aus dem Jahr 1990.In der Kleinen Geschichte am Schluss erzählt Alkis vom Liedtexter des möglicherweise größten Hits der Deutschen Eurovisions-Geschichte, der aber nie beim Eurovision Song Contest zu hören war.

Electroshock
Ruslan Sever / DJ Sender (Kiyv, UKR). Electroshock #126

Electroshock

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2023 106:28


Эфир от 09.11.2008 Долгие годы с вами встречался в эфире различных р/ст, но "Maximum" и "Electroshock", это однозначно венец моей карьеры на радио. 8 лет мы распечатывали уик-энд самыми горячими танцевальными релизами недели, а гостями становились звезды мировых танцполов. Шоу шагнуло далеко за границы сети вещания "Maximum" и транслировалось еще на 20-ти р/ст нашей страны, и не только! Грузия, Армения, Украина, Казахстан и даже США (русскоязычный вещатель). Гостями программы были мировые звезды, такие как: Deadmau5, Prodigy, Avicii и многие другие! Я был спокоен за записи шоу, ведь все они были в одном месте, на эксклюзиве и пользовались популярностью, но случалось так, как случилось…Архив был безвозвратно удален из-за сбоя в 2017г. Признаюсь, сильно переживал и практически смирился… Но! Весной 2022 один радиослушатель сообщил, что у него есть записи радио-шоу за 2,5 года (2011,2012 и часть 2013), а чуть позже случайно нашлись и ранние выпуски 2006,07 гг. Забрезжила надежда хотя бы частично восстановить "Electroshock"! Поэтому, если у вас завалялись записи моего радиошоу - обязательно отправляйте! А теперь, друзья, вы либо откроете для себя, либо вспомните то, как начинался EDM и то каким был тогда мир. Добро пожаловать на "Electroshock" и на мои страницы! Онлайн школа Руслана Севера ссылка (www.info-mymusicschool.ru/) Telegram: @abletonhello VK: djsever Instagram: musume_sever Promodj: promodj.com/ruslansever

Quarto potere
Ep. 406 | Speciale Novaya Gazeta. Viktor Orbán, l'amico del dittatore.

Quarto potere

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 19:28


di Massimiliano Coccia | Il leader ungherese viene descritto dal Cremlino come l'ultimo europeo, mentre la Russia bombarda Kiyv con droni e la Germania raccoglie prove sul sabotaggio di Nord Stream. E mentre tutto accade affiorano centinaia di storie di civili ucraini rapiti dai russi dal febbraio del 2022. Padri e madri di famiglia che non hanno fatto più ritorno a casa. Anche oggi, tutto questo dalle pagine di Novaya Gazeta.

Yellow Van Stories
Mykola Kondrashev "Choosing Ukraine"

Yellow Van Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 101:46


Mykola Kondrashev is an award-winning cinematographer and photographer based in Kiyv who also holds a master's degree in psychology.With his experience on a wide array of projects including commercial music videos, feature films, and television series, Mykola has honed his skills to create captivating and powerful visuals.Mykola's impressive portfolio of projects spans the globe and he has worked with huge names like Coca-Cola, Radisson and Nescafé.Mykola's dedication to his craft is evident in all of his work, and we are excited to welcome him on board the Yellow Van to learn more about his journey as a cinematographer, how his daily routine has changed during the war and how the deep divide of war can split right through the middle of a family.And, as always, a lot more.Welcome to the Yellow Van, Mykola!Shortly after the recording of our episode, Mykola received mail from the army to be registered with them. As I am recording this, Mykola, like countless other Ukrainians is waiting for his marching order. It could come any moment of any day. Alex Kraev from Odessa, who you might remember from one of the previous episodes, has already been at the front for almost two months now. In one of his latest Facebook-Posts, he wrote: "I am not dead, I am learning." War becomes something else entirely when you know the people who are thrown into it.SHOW NOTESNyvky - a suburb of KyivV2 RocketsBuchaIrpinCossacksKhokholOseledetsKhmelnytsky UprisingTakflix, Ukrainian film streaming serviceWladiwostokSergei Loznitsa, Ukrainian directorMy Joy, film directed by Sergei LoznitsaLink to the episode with Alex KraevMykola OnlineMykola's Personal websiteMykola's FacebookMykola's InstagramDonationsCivilian: Psychological Association of UkraineMilitary: Eyes On Ukraine, Support for DronesLove In The Face Of Fear, Jim KroftSupport the showYellow Van Stories is a Mind the Bump Production.

The Shift with Shane Hewitt
What is the biggest Canadian pop song of all time?

The Shift with Shane Hewitt

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2023 54:40


Stepan Berko tells us about his new career, finding and training lawmakers to help strengthen Ukranian democracy. Plus, he gives us his reaction to the brutal drone strikes on Kiyv in May. What is the biggest Canadian pop song of all time? Test your knowledge on Canada's favourite radio game show! It's the Pop music edition of Gameshowey!  And RUOK with toothpaste and much more!

Up First
Biden in Japan, Abortion Pill Ban, Ukraine Latest

Up First

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2023 13:20


President Joe Biden is in Japan for the G7 summit but he's cutting his Asia trip short to settle the debt ceiling debate with lawmakers. The commonly used abortion pill, Mifepristone, could soon be removed from the U.S. market completely. And, Russian strikes on Kiyv damaged a U.S. Patriot missile defense system as the war in Ukraine intensifies.

ADRA Canada Insider
Stories From Ukraine

ADRA Canada Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2023 41:41


It has been over a year since the most recent invasion of Ukraine by Russian began. ADRA workers have been active on the ground in Ukraine, as well as in surrounding nations like Moldova and Romania, and in countries around the world receiving refugees – all in an effort to save lives and give people hope. In this episode, we hear from staff members of ADRA Ukraine and ADRA Canada about their experiences amidst the devastation. We also hear from two survivors – one, a woman who was away from her family when they were forced to evacuate, and another a mother in Kiyv whose son has epilepsy. Hear the stories of survival, struggle, and hope, and get an inside look at how ADRA is making a difference.

Electroshock
Ruslan Sever / Dj Sender (Kiyv, UKR). Electroshock. #89

Electroshock

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2023 107:06


Эфир от 23.09.2007 Долгие годы с вами встречался в эфире различных р/ст, но "Maximum" и "Electroshock", это однозначно венец моей карьеры на радио. 8 лет мы распечатывали уик-энд самыми горячими танцевальными релизами недели, а гостями становились звезды мировых танцполов. Шоу шагнуло далеко за границы сети вещания "Maximum" и транслировалось еще на 20-ти р/ст нашей страны, и не только! Грузия, Армения, Украина, Казахстан и даже США (русскоязычный вещатель). Гостями программы были мировые звезды, такие как: Dedmau5, Prodigy, Avicii и многие другие! Я был спокоен за записи шоу, ведь все они были в одном месте, на эксклюзиве и пользовались популярностью, но случалось так, как случилось…Архив был безвозвратно удален из-за сбоя в 2017г. Признаюсь, сильно переживал и практически смирился… Но! Весной 2022 один радиослушатель сообщил, что у него есть записи радио-шоу за 2,5 года (2011,2012 и часть 2013), а чуть позже случайно нашлись и ранние выпуски 2006,07 гг. Забрезжила надежда хотя бы частично восстановить "Electroshock"! Поэтому, если у вас завалялись записи моего радиошоу - обязательно отправляйте! А теперь, друзья, вы либо откроете для себя, либо вспомните то, как начинался EDM и то каким был тогда мир. Добро пожаловать на "Electroshock" и на мои страницы! Онлайн школа Руслана Севера ссылка (www.info-mymusicschool.ru/) Telegram: @abletonhello VK: djsever Instagram: musume_sever Promodj: promodj.com/ruslansever

Heimskviður
140| Ferðasögur frá Úkraínu

Heimskviður

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2023


Við helgum þáttinn Úkraínu og stríðsátökunum rúmu ári eftir að Rússar réðust þar inn. Jón Björgvinsson fréttamaður hefur dvalið þar mánuðum saman á þessu ári. Hann er nýkominn frá Lviv í vesturhlutanum og segir að þar sé að verða til einhvers konar stríðstúrismi, þar sem kaffibollar í úkraínsku fánalitunum og skeinipappír með myndum af Pútín rússlandsforseta selst eins og heitar lummur, og söluágóðinn rennur allur í stríðsreksturinn. Jón lýsir því sem hann hefur heyrt og séð á sex ferðum sínum til Úkraínu og ástæðum þess að Rússar réðust þar inn, og samskiptum Rússa og Úkraínumanna sem hann lýsir svo skemmtilega. ?Rússar hafa áður sýnt það í Georgíu að þeir þola ekki að þessi tvö ríki á landamærum þeirra færi sig í vestur og þegar ég hlustaði á síðustu ræðu Pútíns var það eins og að hlusta á, hvað eigum við að segja, afbrýðissaman eiginmann úthúða nýja unnustanum í þessu ofbeldissambandi hans við sína fyrrverandi.? Og er náttúrulega með því að þrýsta henni enn fastar í faðminn á þessum kviðmági sínum.? Við heyrum einnig frá Dagnýju Huldu Erlendsdóttur fréttamanni en hún er nýkomin heim frá Kiyv þar sem hún fylgdi Katrínu Jakobsdóttur forsætisráðherra og Þórdísi Kolbrúnu Reykfjörð Gylfadóttur utanríkisráðherra. Þar kynntu þær sér skelfilegar afleiðingar innrásar Rússa og ræddu við Volodomyr Zelensky, en vonast er til að hann sæki leiðtogafund Evrópuráðsins sem haldinn verður í Reykjavík í maí. Umsjónarmenn þáttarins eru Birta Björnsdóttir, Bjarni Pétur Jónsson og Sunna Valgerðardóttir.

Heimskviður
140| Ferðasögur frá Úkraínu

Heimskviður

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2023 40:00


Við helgum þáttinn Úkraínu og stríðsátökunum rúmu ári eftir að Rússar réðust þar inn. Jón Björgvinsson fréttamaður hefur dvalið þar mánuðum saman á þessu ári. Hann er nýkominn frá Lviv í vesturhlutanum og segir að þar sé að verða til einhvers konar stríðstúrismi, þar sem kaffibollar í úkraínsku fánalitunum og skeinipappír með myndum af Pútín rússlandsforseta selst eins og heitar lummur, og söluágóðinn rennur allur í stríðsreksturinn. Jón lýsir því sem hann hefur heyrt og séð á sex ferðum sínum til Úkraínu og ástæðum þess að Rússar réðust þar inn, og samskiptum Rússa og Úkraínumanna sem hann lýsir svo skemmtilega. ?Rússar hafa áður sýnt það í Georgíu að þeir þola ekki að þessi tvö ríki á landamærum þeirra færi sig í vestur og þegar ég hlustaði á síðustu ræðu Pútíns var það eins og að hlusta á, hvað eigum við að segja, afbrýðissaman eiginmann úthúða nýja unnustanum í þessu ofbeldissambandi hans við sína fyrrverandi.? Og er náttúrulega með því að þrýsta henni enn fastar í faðminn á þessum kviðmági sínum.? Við heyrum einnig frá Dagnýju Huldu Erlendsdóttur fréttamanni en hún er nýkomin heim frá Kiyv þar sem hún fylgdi Katrínu Jakobsdóttur forsætisráðherra og Þórdísi Kolbrúnu Reykfjörð Gylfadóttur utanríkisráðherra. Þar kynntu þær sér skelfilegar afleiðingar innrásar Rússa og ræddu við Volodomyr Zelensky, en vonast er til að hann sæki leiðtogafund Evrópuráðsins sem haldinn verður í Reykjavík í maí. Umsjónarmenn þáttarins eru Birta Björnsdóttir, Bjarni Pétur Jónsson og Sunna Valgerðardóttir.

L'essentiel de Paul Arcand
Prise de sang en pharmacie : attention aux frais qui pourraient vous êtres facturés

L'essentiel de Paul Arcand

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2023 66:11


Prélèvement sanguin en pharmacie : attention aux frais qui pourraient vous être facturés, malgré une prise de rendez-vous via Clic Santé. SAAQclic : au tour du ministre de la Cybersécurité et du Numérique, Éric Caire, de s’expliquer sur le désastre informatique. Il dit n’avoir aucune responsabilité face aux ratés du système. Frappes massives en Ukraine : on parle avec Fabrice de Pierrebourg qui se trouve à Kiyv. Chien euthanasié après une opération l’ayant rendu quadriplégique : un couple se voit refuser une indemnité financière de 300 000$. Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee/fr/ pour notre politique de vie privée

World News Roundup
World News Roundup: 02/24

World News Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 7:55


A somber anniversary as Ukraine marks a year of war. Southern California snow. Alex Murdaugh back on the stand today. CBS News Correspondents Charlie D'Agata in Kiyv, Ukraine, and Steve Kathan have today's World News Roundup.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Shift with Shane Hewitt
The 1 year anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine

The Shift with Shane Hewitt

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 58:18


It is the anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Lawyer Stepan Berko joins us from Kiyv, and Randall Baran-Chong, the Executive Director of Pathfinders for Ukraine, a group supporting Ukrainian refugees in Canada, joins us for a special panel to see how much has changed since February 24th, 2022. And RUOK with Ketchup? How about the Cookie Monster? HEY, DO YOU LIKE PODCASTS? Why not subscribe to ours? Find it on Apple, Google, Spotify & Tune In

AJC Passport
The Jewish Experience in Ukraine Amidst Russia's Invasion

AJC Passport

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 30:28


One year after Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine, Vladislav Davidzon, European culture correspondent for Tablet Magazine, shares what he's witnessed as a war correspondent on the frontlines, and predicts the future for his beloved country and the Jewish community he's proud to call home.  We last spoke to Davidzon hours before the Russia-Ukraine war began, when he was on the ground in Kyiv – listen now to his dispatch a year on, as he joins us live from our New York studio. *The views and opinions expressed by guests do not necessarily reflect the views or position of AJC. ___ Episode Lineup:  (0:40) Vladislav Davidzon ____ Show Notes:   Read: What You Need to Know About the Wagner Group's Role in Russia's War Against Ukraine Preorder: Jewish-Ukrainian Relations and the Birth of a Political Nation    Watch: Kiyv Jewish Forum: Ted Deutch, AJC CEO, Addresses Kyiv Jewish Forum 2023 Panel: Ukraine as the Israel of Europe with Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, Managing Director of AJC Europe, Bernard Henry Levi, philosopher, and Josef Joffe, Stanford University   Listen:  Podcast episode with Vladislav Davidzon, recorded February 23, 2022:  Live from Kyiv: The Future of Ukraine and its Large Jewish Community Our most recent podcast episode: How Rising Antisemitism Impacts Jews on College Campuses   Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod   You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org   If you've enjoyed this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, tag us on social media with #PeopleofthePod, and hop onto Apple Podcasts to rate us and write a review, to help more listeners find us. ______ Transcript of Interview with Vladislav Davidzon: Manya: On February 24th, 2022, just hours before the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, Vladislav Davidzon, founding editor of The Odessa Review and contributor to Tablet Magazine, joined us live from Kiyv to share the mood on the ground as Russian forces were closing in. Now, one year later, Vladislav joins us again, this time in person, in our studio to share what he has seen, heard, and experienced this past year since the Russian invasion of his home. Vladislav, it is so good to see you alive and well and in person. Vladislav: Thank you so much. This is so surreal. I'm so grateful, first of all, for your interest, for your affection, for your graciousness, for your respect. But I'm grateful to be here exactly one year later. It was the last thing that I did in the workday before the war began, before the old world ended. And I went off to dinner with my friend, now of blessed memory, Dan Rappaport, who was an American Latvian born Jewish financier. It was also the last time I saw him. He died under very suspicious circumstances. He died falling out of a window in Washington, DC, or of a roof, on the seventh floor, three months later. I just have extremely intense emotions about that six hour period because…I was talking to my wife, my wife's French Ukrainian, she was back in Paris. I said, if anything happens tonight, I'll call you in the morning. Things are gonna go down tonight. And then I did this podcast with you. And so, it's really amazing to be back with you a year later. Manya: Yes. I mean, I  am so grateful to see you because I really was very worried. I worried that that was going to be our last conversation, and that I would not get a chance to meet you in person after that. And in addition to everything, you've been working on a book, The Birth of a Political Nation, which we'll talk a little bit more about shortly. But, first tell me, tell our listeners how you have managed to survive and tell the stories that need to be told. Vladislav: It's not pretty. I mean, it's just, it's not elegant. I'm a Ukrainian Russian Jew, so I kind of went into primordial, bestial mode, like Russian Ukrainian, Jewish survival mode, like my grandfathers and great-grandfathers during World War II. I just, you know, something clicked and your your training and your skillset and your deep cultural characteristics click in and you just go full on Hemingway, Lord Byron, and then you just go to war. Like a lot of other people, I went to war. I burned out after about six months and I needed some months off. I was just rnning around like a madman, reporting, getting my own relatives out, helping whatever way I could, helping my family close down their businesses, helping run guns, going on t radio, you know, just collecting money, going to the front, just, going off on an adrenaline rush. And it's admixture of rage, testosterone. Adrenaline, survival, rage,  all the cocktail of horrific, let's say toxic masculine character [laughs]. I know you can't, I I know. I'm ironic about that. I live in Eastern Europe, so you can, you can still make fun of all that stuff in Eastern Europe. I don't know if you can here, but, you know, jokes aside. I just went into this deeply primordial state of Ukrainian Russian civilizational structures of brutal survival and fighting. And that went on for about six months, at which point I just crashed and collapsed and needed some off time. Manya: How much of your journalistic instincts also fueled your push on, your forging ahead and surviving just to tell the story, or was it more a familial connection? Vladislav: I have skin in the game. I'm from there. I mean, my ancestors are from there, two of my grandparents were born there. My family lived there for hundreds of years. I'm married to a Ukrainian Jewish girl. I have family there. My friends are, these are my people. I'm deeply tribal. Obviously you take the opportunity as a journalist reporting on a country for 10 years and almost no one cares about it. And you're an expert on it. You know all the politicians and you know all the, all the stories and you know all the storylines. And you, you have contacts everywhere. You know, of a country like the back of your hand. And suddenly it becomes the focal point of the world's attention and it becomes the greatest story in the entire world. And of course, you're prepared in a way that all, all these other people who paratroop in are not prepared, and you have to make the best of it. And you have to tell stories from people who wouldn't otherwise have access to the media. And you have to explain, there's so much bad stuff in terms of quality of reporting coming out of Ukraine because so many amateurs went in. In any given situation, there are lots of people who come to a war zone. You know, in wars, people, they make their bones, they become rich, they become famous, they get good looking lovers. Everyone gets paid in the currency that they want. Right? But this is my country. I've been at this for 10, 12 years. I don't begrudge anyone coming to want to tell the story. Some people are opportunists in life and some people are extraordinarily generous and gracious. And it almost doesn't matter what people's motivations are. I don't care about why you came here. I care about the quality of the work. And a lot of the work was pretty bad because people didn't have local political context, didn't have language skills. And a lot of that reporting was so-so. I made the most of it, being an area expert. And also being a local, I did what I had to do. I wish I'd done more. I wish I went 500% as opposed to 250%. But everyone has their limits. Manya: What got lost? With the poor reporting, what do you think with the stories that you captured, or what do you wish you had captured, giving that additional 250%? Vladislav: Yeah. It's a great question. I wish that I had known now what I know a year ago, but that's life in general. About where the battles would be and what kinds of people and what kinds of frontline pounds would have particular problems getting out to particular places. For example, I know now a lot more about the evacuation of certain ethnic communities. The Gagauz, the Greeks. Ukraine is full of different kinds of people. It's a mosaic. I know now a lot about the way that things happened in March and April. Particular communities went in to help their own people. Which is great. It's fine. a lot of very interesting characters wound up in different places. Much of Ukrainian intelligentsia, they wound up outside the country. A lot stayed, but a lot did wind up in different places like Berlin and the Baltics. Uh, amazing stories from, uh, the volunteers like the Chechens and the Georgians and the Lithuanians and the Belarus who came to fight for Ukraine. Just, you know, I wish I'd kept up with the guys that I was drinking with the night before. I was drinking with like six officers the night before, and two of 'em are alive. Mm or three alive now. I was with the head of a Georgian Legion two nights before the war. Hang out with some American CIA guys and people from the guys from the American, actually a couple of girls, also hardcore American girls from the US Army who were operatives and people at our embassy in Kyiv who didn't get pulled out. These are our hardcore people who after the embassy left, told whoever wanted to stay on the ground to stay. I met some very interesting people. I wish I'd kept up with them. I don't, I don't know what happened with them or what, what their war experiences were like. So, you know. Yeah. Life is full of regrets. Manya: You talked a little bit about the ethnic communities coming in to save people and to get them out. How did the Jewish communities efforts to save Ukrainian Jews compare to those efforts? Did you keep tabs on that? Movement as well. Vladislav: Oh, yeah. Oh, in fact, I worked on that actually,  to certainly to a smaller extent than other people or whatever. I certainly helped whatever I could. It was such a mad scramble and it was so chaotic in the beginning of a war. The first two weeks I would be getting calls from all over the world. They would call me and they would say this and this and this person, I know this person needs to get out. There were signal groups of volunteers, exfiltration organizations, special services people, my people in the Ukrainian Jewish community who were all doing different things to get Jews out. Tens of thousands of people were on these lists. And I would figure out to the extent possible with about 50 people, 40 to 50 people,  what their risk level was. And I would give 'em advice. I have a gay friend, one of my wife's business partners, who was the head of a major television station. And he would, he would've been on the Kill list because he was in part of intelligentsia and he was gay. I gave him particular advice on where to go.  I said, go to this village–and men aren't allowed of the country, and he wasn't the kind of guy who was gonna fight. I said, go to a particular place. I told him, go to this village and sit here and don't go anywhere for two months. And he did this. Other people needed to be gotten out. Holocaust survivors, especially. We have horrific incidents of people who survived Stalin's war and Hitler's war and who died of heart attacks under their beds, hiding from Russian missiles. There were many stories of Holocaust survivors. Typically, it's old women by this point. It's not it's not gentleman. Women do live longer. Older women in their nineties expiring in a bunker, in an underground metro station or under their bed hiding from missiles, you know. Horrific stories. but people who survived Auschwitz did get killed by the missiles. We have stories like that. And so to continue, there were many people working on getting elderly Jews out. Getting Jewish women out. Jewish kids out. There were, in fact, there were people working on getting all sorts of people out. And that's still going on. And I met a Jewish member of the Ukrainian parliament last night who did this for two months. Uh, I saw, I saw my acquaintance who I hadn't seen in two years. Yeah. There are a lot of people I haven't seen in a year, obviously, for the obvious reasons. I saw an acquaintance who's an Israeli educated Ukrainian member of parliament. He spent the first three months just evacuating Jews, driving convoys of special forces guys, former Mossad guys, special operatives into cities like Mariupol, Chernigev to get Jews out. Literally driving through minefields at a certain point with buses full of elderly Jews. And he told me last night that they got 26,000 Jews out. Just in his organization, which was Special Forces guys, Ukrainian police volunteers, Ukrainian Jewish guys who came back from Israel with IDF training, a motley collection of people. But they set up an organization and they went in, and they got people out. Manya: That's amazing. So I know before, when we spoke before you were splitting your time between Ukraine  and France, because your wife is of French descent as well. For your most recent piece for Tablet, the most recent one that I've read, you were in Tel Aviv doing an interview. So where have you spent most of your time, in this past year? Vladislav: In my head. Manya: Yeah. Understandable. Vladislav: I've spent, if I had to count up the dates of my passport, 40 to 50% of my time in Ukraine, over the last, less than the last three months for various family reasons and, you know, working on my book But half the time in Ukraine, in and out. I've been all over, spent a lot of time on the front. That was intense. That was really intense. Manya: You mean as a war correspondent on the front lines? Vladislav: Yeah,I was in Sievierodonetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, Lysychansk, Mykolaiv. I was all over the front. I was with the commanding general of the Southern front in a car, driving back from the battle of  Kherson, and we got stripped by a Russian sniper three times and they hit our car. They just missed by like a couple of centimeters, side of a thing. And the guy actually usually drove around in an armored Hummer. But the armored Hummer was actually in the shop getting repaired that day and was the one day he had an unarmored Hummer. And we were just in an unarmed car, in an unarmed command car, black Mercedes, leaving the war zone a couple of kilometers out, just a Russian reconnaissance sniper advanced group just, you know, ambushed us. They were waiting for us to, maybe they were just taking pot shots at a command car, but they were waiting for us as we were leaving. Took three shots at us and the car behind us with our bodyguards radioed, they're shooting, they're shooting. I heard three whooshes and three pings behind it. Ping, ping, ping. And we all thought in the car that it was just rocks popping off the the wheels. But actually it was a sniper. So, you know, there, there was a lot of that. It was very intense. Manya: Did you wear flak jackets? Vladislav: Yeah, well, we took 'em off in the car. When, when you're on the front line, you wear everything, but when you get out of the front line, and you're just driving back, you don't wanna drive around with it, so you just take it off in the car. And that's exactly when they started shooting us. Yeah. They would've gotten us, if they'd been a little bit luckier. Manya: Well, you moderated a panel at the Kiev Jewish Forum last week. Our CEO, Ted Deutch and AJC Europe Director Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, were also there. Your panel focused on the new Ukraine. What does that mean, the new Ukraine? What does that look like? Vladislav: Thank you for asking about that. Let me start with talking a little bit about that conference. Along with Mr. Boris Lozhkin, the head of Ukrainian Jewish Confederation. I put together with Tablet where I'm the European culture correspondent, wonderful, wonderful conference. It is the fourth annual Kiyv Jewish Forum. It took place in Kiyv for the last three years, but today, obviously this year, it won't be for the obvious reason and we put together a conference so that people understand the issues at stake, understand the position of Ukrainian Jewish community, understand the myriad issues involved with this war. Just a wonderful, wonderful conference that I really enjoyed working on with remarkable speakers. Running the gamut from Leon Panetta, Boris Johnson. Your own Mr. Deutch. Just wonderful, wonderful speakers. And, six really great panels, and 20 wonderful one-on-one interviews with really interesting people. So please go to the website of the Kiev Jewish Forum or Tablet Magazine and/or YouTube, and you'll find some really interesting content, some really interesting conversations, dialogues about the state of war, the state of Ukrainian Jewry, the state of Ukrainian political identity and the new Ukraine. Manya: I should tell our listeners, we'll put a link to the Kiyv Jewish Forum in our show notes so that they can easily access it. But yeah, if you don't mind just kinda elaborating a little bit about what, what does the new Ukraine look like? Vladislav: Well, we're gonna see what the new Ukraine will look like after the Russians are driven out of the country. It's gonna look completely different. The demographic changes, the political changes, the cultural changes will play out for decades and maybe a hundred years. These are historical events, which will have created traumatic changes to the country and to Eastern Europe, not just to Ukraine, but all of eastern Europe. From along the entire crescent, from Baltics to Poland, down to Hungary, through Moldova, Belarus. Everything will be changed by this war. This is a world historical situation that will have radically, radically changed everything. And so Ukraine as a political nation has changed dramatically over the last seven years since the Maidan revolution. And it's obviously changed a lot since the start of the war a year ago. It's a completely different country in many ways. Now, the seeds of that change were put into place by the political process of the last couple of years, by civil society, by a deep desire of the resilient Ukrainian political nation to change, to become better, to transform the country. But for the most part, the war is the thing that will change everything. And that means creating a new political nation. What that will look like at the end of this, that's hard to say. A lot of these values are deeply embedded. I know it's unfashionably essentialist to talk about national character traits, but you know, again, I'm an Eastern European, so I can get away with a lot of things that people can't here. And there are such things as national character traits. A nation is a collection of people who live together in a particular way and have particular ways of life and particular values. Different countries live in different ways and different nations, different people have different traits. Just like every person has a different trait and some are good and some are bad, and some are good in certain situations, bad in other situations. And everyone has positive traits and negative traits. And you know, Ukraine like everyone else, every other nation has positive traits. Those traits of: loving freedom, being resilient, wanting to survive, coming together in the times of war are incredibly generative in the middle of this conflict. One of the interesting things about this conflict that is shown, the way that all the different minorities in the country, and it's a country full of all kinds of people, all sorts of minorities. Not just Jews, but Greeks and Crimean Tatars, Muslims, Gagauz, Turkish speaking Christians in my own Odessa region, Poles on the Polish border, Lithuanian Belarus speakers on the Belarusian border. People who are of German descent, though there are a lot fewer of them since World War II. All sorts of different people live in Ukraine and they've come together as a political nation in order to fight together, in a liberal and democratic way. Whereas Russia's also an empire of many different kinds of people, And it's also been brought together through autocratic violence and authoritarian, centralized control. This is a war of minorities in many ways, and so a lot of the men dying from the Russian side are taken from the minority regions like Dagestan, Borodyanka, Chechnya. Disproportionate number of the men dying from the Russian side are also minorities, disproportionate to their share of the Russian Federation's population. In some circles it's a well known fact, one of the military hospitals on the Russian side, at a certain point, the most popular name amongst wounded soldiers, was Mohammed. They were Muslim minorities, from Dagestan, other places. There are a lot of Muslims in Russia. Manya: That is truly a heartbreaking detail. Vladislav: And they're the ones that are the poorest and they're the ones who are being mobilized to fight Ukrainians. Manya: So you're saying that literally the face of Ukraine, and the personality, the priorities of the nation have been changed by this war. Ukrainians have become, what, more patriotic, more militant? Militant sounds … I'm afraid that has a bad connotation. Vladislav: No, militant's great. You know, Marshall virtues. . . that's good. Militant is, you know, that's an aggressive word. Marshall virtues is a good word. Surviving virtues. It's amazing the way Ukrainian flags have encapsulated a kind of patriotism in the western world, which was in many ways unthinkable for large swaths of the advanced population. I mean, you see people who would never in a million years wave an American or British or French flag in Paris, London, and New York and Washington, wave around Ukrainian flags. Patriotism, nationalism have very bad connotations now in our decadent post-industrial West, and, Ukrainians have somehow threaded that needle of standing up for remarkable values, for our civilization, for our security alliances after the war, for the democratic world order that we, that we as Americans and Western Europeans have brought large swaths of the world, while also not becoming really unpleasantly, jingoistic. While not going into,  racism for the most part, while not going into, for the most part into unnecessary prejudices. They fight and they have the best of traditional conservative values, but they're also quite liberal in a way that no one else in eastern Europe is. It's very attractive. Manya: They really are unified for one cause.  You mentioned being shot at on the front lines of this war. This war has not only changed the nation, it has changed you. You've become a war correspondent in addition to the arts and culture correspondent you've been for so many years. And you've continued to report on the arts throughout this horrific year.  How has this war shaped Ukrainian artists, its literary community, its performing arts, sports?   Vladislav: First of all, unlike in the west, in, in Eastern Europe. I mean, these are broad statements, but for the most part, in advanced western democracies, the ruling classes have developed different lifestyles and value systems from much of the population. We're not gonna get into why that is the case, but I, as a insider-outsider, I see that. It's not the case in Eastern Europe yet, and certainly not in Ukraine. The people who rule the country and are its elites, they are the same culturally, identity wise as the people that they rule over. So the entire, let's say ruling elite and intelligentsia, artistic class. They have kids or sons or husbands or nephews at war. If we went to war now in America, much of the urban population would not have a relative who died. If a hundred thousand Americans died right now would not be, you would probably not know 10 people who died, or 15 people who died. Manya: It's not the same class system. Vladislav: Correct. America and the western world, let's say western European world from Canada down to the old, let's say Soviet borders or Polish borders, they have developed a class system, a caste system that we don't have. You could be a billionaire, and still hang out with your best friend from high school who was a worker or a bus driver. That doesn't happen here so often, for various reasons. And so a larger proportion of the intelligentsia and the artistic classes went to fight than you would expect. I know so many writers and artists and painters, filmmakers who have gone off to fight. A lot, in fact, I'd say swabs of the artist elite went off to fight. And that's very different from here. And this will shape the arts when they come back. Already you have some really remarkable, interesting things happening in, in painting. Not cinema because cinema's expensive and they're not really making movies in the middle of a war. Certain minor exceptions. There's going to be a lot, a lot of influence on the arts for a very long time. A lot of very interesting art will come out of it and the intelligentsia will be strengthened in some ways, but the country's losing some of its best people. Some of its very, very, very best people across the professions are being killed. You know, dozens of athletes who would've been competing next year in the ‘24 Olympics in Paris are dead on the front lines. Every week I open up my Twitter on my Facebook or my social media and I see another athlete, you know, pro skater or a skier or  Cross Country runner or someone who is this brilliant 19, 20 year old athlete who's supposed to compete next year, has just been killed outside of Bakhmut or just been killed outside of Kherson or just been killed outside of Sloviansk or something like this. You read continuously and there's a picture of this beautiful, lovely, young person. who will never compete next year for a gold medal at the Olympics. You see continuously people with economics degrees, people who went to art school being killed at the front. So just as the army, as the Ukrainian army has lost a lot of its best men, a lot of its most experienced soldiers have been killed recently in Bakhmut and in other places, the intelligentsia is taking a wide scale hit. Imagine like 20-30% of America's writers, artists, people who went to art school getting killed at the front or something like that. I don't have statistics, but 10 to 15, 20%. Can you imagine that? What would that do to the society over the long term, If some of its best writers, people who won Pulitzer prizes, people who won national book awards wound up going to the army and getting killed? Manya: When this war ends… Vladislav: When we win, when we win. Manya: When you win, will there be a Ukrainian Jewish community like there was before? What do you see as the future of the Ukrainian Jewish community and how do you think the trauma of this conflict will impact that community? Vladislav: There will be a Jewish Ukrainian community, whether there will be a Russian Jewish community remains to be seen. There will be survivors of the community. A lot of people will go back, we'll rebuild. We will get our demographics back. A lot of people in Ukraine will have already stayed where they're going. There are already a lot of people who have left and after a year their kids got into a school somewhere in the Czech Republic or France or Germany. They're not coming back. There will be a lot of people who will have roots somewhere else. Within the community, certain cities, Jewish life will die out. What was left of the Lugansk, Donetsk Jewish communities is gone now. What was left of Donetsk Jewry is gone. There were a lot of Jews in Mariupol, thousands of Jews. Many of them who survived World War II. Certainly the Mariupol Jewish community has no future. None. Absolutely none. For the obvious reasons. The demographics of the Jewish communities have all changed and we're gonna see over time how all this plays out and sorts itself out. A lot of Jews from Odessa went into Moldova and they will come back. A lot of Jews from Dnipro have been displaced, although the city has not been touched. And they had the biggest Jewish community of like 65-70,000 Jews in Dnipro, and the wealthiest Jewish community and the best financed, the most synagogues. I actually went, before the battle of Sievierodonetsk, I went and I asked the rabbi of Dnipro for his blessing, cause I knew it was going to be a bloodbath. I didn't really want to die, so, you know, I'll try anything once. and it worked. Proofs in the pudding. I'm still here. He's done tremendous work in order to help Jewish communities there. One of the interesting parts of this is that little Jewish communities that had been ethnically cleansed by the Holocaust, which were on their way to dying, which did not have enough Jews in order to reproduce on a long timeline in Western Ukraine. Now because of the influx of Jews from other parts of the country, from the south especially and from the east, now have enough Jews in order for them to continue on. I don't know if anyone knows the numbers and it's too early to say. Places like Lviv had a couple of hundred Jews. They now have several thousand. There are at least three or four minor towns that I can think of in Western Ukraine, which were historically Jewish towns. which did not after the Holocaust, after, Soviet and Post-soviet immigration have enough of a Jewish population in order to have a robust community a hundred years from now, they now do. Now that is a mixed blessing. But the demographics of Jews inside Ukraine have changed tremendously. Just that the demographics of everything in Ukraine has changed tremendously when 40% of a population have moved from one place to another. 8 million refugees, something like 25- 40% of the country are IDPs. Lots of Jews from my part of Ukraine, from the South, have moved to West Ukraine. And those communities, now they're temporary, but nothing is permanent as a temporary solution, as the saying goes. I think Chernowitz, which never had the opportunity, I really love their Jewish community and they're great. And the rabbi and the head of community is a wonderful man. It did not seem to me, the three or four times that I'd visited before the war, Chernowitz, where my family's from, that this is a city that has enough Jews or Jewish institutional life to continue in 50 years. It does now. Is that a good thing, I don't know. That's a different question, but it's certainly changed some things, for those cities. Manya: Vladislav, thank you. Thank you for your moving reports and for joining us here in the studio. It has been such a privilege to speak with you. Please stay safe. Vladislav: Thank you so much for having me. I really appreciate it. It's really great to check in with you again one year after the last time we spoke. 

Der schöne Morgen | radioeins
Macht sich die Linke unglaubwürdig?

Der schöne Morgen | radioeins

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 21:16


Seien Sie schon mal vorgewarnt: es wird richtig kalt! Das ist nicht unwichtig für alle, die am Wochenende demonstrieren wollen. Die Partei Die Linke hat für morgen zur Demo in Berlin aufgerufen - NICHT zu verwechseln mit der Demo von Sarah Wagenknecht und Alice Schwarzer am Samstag. Die ganze Zerrissenheit der Linken nimmt Markus Feldenkirchen vom Spiegel im Kommentar unter die Lupe. Außerdem geht’s um die Tomaten im Supermarkt, die unter katastrophalen Bedingungen geerntet werden und um das Café Moskau in Berlin, das ab heute zum Café Kiyv wird.

Politiquement incorrect
Ukraine : Félix Séguin nous rapporte le quotidien des habitants de Kiyv

Politiquement incorrect

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 8:07


Chronique Crime et Société avec Félix Séguin, journaliste au Bureau d'enquête de Québecor : veille des 1 an de la guerre en Ukraine, Félix est sur place.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

Reportages par SBS French - Reportages par SBS French
Le 3 minutes du 21 février 2023

Reportages par SBS French - Reportages par SBS French

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 3:34


L'Australie risque le blackout après 2025. Joe Biden effectue une visite surprise à Kiyv. Elisabeth Borne tend la main aux syndicats.

Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: The Battle For Hostomel Airport

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 29:41


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

Den Uafhængige
Frihedsbrevet overtager Den Uafhængige

Den Uafhængige

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2023 120:14


Vi spørger Mads Brügger, om det er slut med vores uafhængighed. Vi spørger også, om yderfløjene i dansk politik er sat helt udenfor indflydelse. Glæd dig blandt andet til et længere interview med Pelle Dragsted fra Enhedslisten og det nu tidligere Nye Borgerlige-medlem, Niels Peder Ravn, der er hoppet til Konservative.Din vært i dag er Oliver Breum.Lyt til udsendelsen uden reklamer i vores app, som vi netop har opdateret med en række nye funktioner - lige nu er de første 14 dage som medlem gratis www.duah.dk Tidskoder: [02:00] : Niels Peder Ravn, nyt medlem af K i Københavns Borgerrepræsentation (tidl. Nye Borgerlige) // Om yderfløjene i dansk politik er sat udenfor indflydelse. [13:00] : Jens Rohde, forhenværende folketingsmedlem og nu politisk kommentator på Den Uafhængige // Om yderfløjene i dansk politik er sat udenfor indflydelse. [18:00] : Lasse Pedersen, psykologistuderende på Københavns Universitet // Om psykologistuderende på Københavns Universitet er forkælede eller om det er er underviserne, der er nærtagende. [33:00] : Jesper Clemmensen, arbejdsløs // Om arbejdsløse seniorer bliver holdt ufrivilligt uden for arbejdsmarkedet. [47:00] : Jacob Kaarsbo, senioranalytiker i Tænketanken Europa og tidligere chefanalytiker i Forsvarets Efterretningstjeneste // Om Ukraine overdriver angrebet på en russisk militærbase. [01:04:00] : Mads Brügger, ansvarshavende chefredaktør på mediet Frihedsbrevet // Om det er slut med Den Uafhængiges uafhængighed. [01:17:00] : Anne Sofie Meilvang, projektleder i Dyrenes Beskyttelse // Om det er værd at redde dyr væk fra krigszoner. [01:30:00] : Pelle Dragsted, erhvervs og finansordfører i Enhedslisten // Om yderfløjene i dansk politik er sat udenfor indflydelse. [01:48:00] : Claus Mathiesen, lektor i russisk ved Forsvarsakademiet // Om Putin har skiftet strategi med de mange droneangreb målrettet Kiyv.Support the show: https://www.duah.dkSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Jew Function Podcast
TJF Talks - Episode 31 - Live from Kiyv

The Jew Function Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2023 69:36


In between missile attacks, power outages, and near-paralyzing uncertainty, we had a rare opportunity to chat with a dear friend of ours, Vlad from Kiyv. What does it mean to be a Jew in Kiyv during this war, what can Jews do when everything seems lost and what do you really need to survive an ungodly war. Listen to the mystery book podcast series: https://anchor.fm/thejewfunctionpodcast Vlad Goldakovskiy is an architect, writer and speaker and also a close friend. Please wish for the swift ending of this senseless war and the safety of everyone there. He can be reached on FB @vlad.goldakovskiy Link to Seth's book: https://www.antidotetoantisemitism.com FREE audiobook (With Audible trial) of The Jewish Choice - Unity or Antisemitism: https://amzn.to/3u40evC LIKE/SHARE/SUBSCRIBE Follow us on Twitter/Facebook/Instagram @thejewfunction

C dans l'air
POUTINE EN BIÉLORUSSIE... NOUVELLE OFFENSIVE TERRESTRE ? – 19/12/22

C dans l'air

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 63:58


EXPERTS PIERRE HASKI Chroniqueur international « France Inter » et « L'Obs » IRYNA DMYTRYCHYN Maîtresse de conférences à l'Inalco Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales NICOLE BACHARAN Historienne et politologue spécialiste des États-Unis GUILLAUME ANCEL Ancien officier de l'armée française Kiyv est en alerte. Après avoir été la cible d'une quarantaine de missiles vendredi, la capitale ukrainienne a été une nouvelle fois attaquée par des drones, ce lundi au petit matin selon les autorités ukrainiennes. « L'ennemi attaque la capitale », a écrit l'administration militaire de la ville sur Telegram, exhortant la population à se tenir prête à se mettre à l'abri. Au total, 18 drones sur 23 ont été interceptés et abattus dans l'espace aérien de Kiyv. Deux personnes au moins ont été blessées, ont précisé les autorités de la capitale. 12 autres drones kamikazes ont été lancés sur le pays, tous interceptés, selon le ministère ukrainien de l'armée de l'air. Depuis octobre, la Russie, confrontée à une série de revers militaires, a opté pour une tactique de bombardements massifs sur les infrastructures critiques. Le ministère de la Défense russe assure que ces frappes visent les installations militaires et énergétiques de l'Ukraine, et perturbent « le transfert d'armes et de munitions de production étrangère ». Mais dans les faits, ces frappes menées par le biais de missiles et de drones ont privé des millions de civils ukrainiens – au moins temporairement – d'un accès à l'électricité, à l'eau, au chauffage et aux services vitaux connexes. Ces derniers jours, avant ces nouvelles attaques, 40 % des habitants de la capitale étaient privés d'électricité. Pour faire face à cette pluie de missiles et de drones, le président ukrainien a demandé aux Occidentaux de livrer davantage d'armes à son pays afin de lui permettre de « se battre tout l'hiver ». Il réclame notamment plus de systèmes de défense antiaérienne et antimissile. Cette demande formulée depuis de long mois par Volodymir Zelensky a reçu récemment le feu vert de Washington. Les Etats-Unis ont annoncé la semaine dernière le déblocage d'une nouvelle aide de 275 millions de dollars et la livraison à l'Ukraine de batteries de missiles « Patriot », leur équipement de défense aérienne le plus performant. Ils hésitaient jusque-là car la Russie en faisait une sorte de « ligne rouge » à ne pas franchir. L'ancien président russe, Dimitri Medvedev affirmait, le 30 novembre dernier, que les pays de l'Otan deviendraient une « cible légitime » s'ils livraient des « Patriot » à Kiyv. Washington a donc décidé de passer outre et d'envoyer un signal au Kremlin qui poursuit les bombardements en Ukraine et ne prévoit aucune trêve de Noël ou du Nouvel An. Le Premier ministre britannique, Rishi Sunak, a lui annoncé ce lundi, depuis Riga, qu'en 2023 son pays allait maintenir voire dépasser le montant de son aide militaire à l'Ukraine, évaluée à 2,3 milliards de livres (environ 2,6 milliards d'euros). Il a également estimé qu'il fallait se « concentrer sur la dégradation des capacités de la Russie à se regrouper et à se réapprovisionner, ce qui signifie s'attaquer à ses chaînes d'approvisionnement et supprimer le soutien international ». « Je pense en particulier à l'Iran et aux armes qu'il fournit actuellement à la Russie », a-t-il insisté au cours d'une réunion avec les dirigeants d'Europe du Nord, baltes et néerlandais en Lettonie. La France, pour sa part, a organisé une conférence internationale à Paris la semaine dernière pour aider les Ukrainiens à passer l'hiver. Elle continue également à renforcer sa présence militaire sur le flanc est de l'Otan en déployant notamment des véhicules blindés d'infanterie (VBCI) et des chars Leclerc en Roumanie. De son côté, Vladimir Poutine est arrivé en Biélorussie ce lundi, alimentant les craintes de l'Ukraine selon lesquelles il aurait l'intention de faire pression sur son allié pour qu'il se joigne à une nouvelle offensive dans les premiers mois de 2023, depuis le territoire biélorusse, répétant le scénario du début de l'invasion, le 24 février. « Nous nous préparons à tous les scénarios de défense possibles » a expliqué dimanche Volodymyr Zelensky qualifiant, dans son message quotidien, la frontière nord de « priorité constante » alors que l'armée russe vient d'annoncer que ses militaires allaient prendre part à des « exercices tactiques » en Biélorussie. Alors quelle est la situation en Ukraine ? Armes, carburant, médicaments… quels pays aident l'Ukraine et comment ? Que prépare Vladimir Poutine en Biélorussie ? DIFFUSION : du lundi au samedi à 17h45FORMAT : 65 minutes PRÉSENTATION : Caroline Roux - Axel de Tarlé REDIFFUSION : du lundi au vendredi vers 23h40 RÉALISATION : Nicolas Ferraro, Bruno Piney, Franck Broqua, Alexandre Langeard, Corentin Son, Benoît Lemoine PRODUCTION : France Télévisions / Maximal Productions Retrouvez C DANS L'AIR sur internet & les réseaux : INTERNET : francetv.fr FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/Cdanslairf5 TWITTER : https://twitter.com/cdanslair INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/cdanslair/

Maintenant, vous savez
[LES 10 MOTS QUI ONT MARQUÉ 2022] Qu'est-ce qu'un viol de guerre ?

Maintenant, vous savez

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2022 5:37


"Maintenant, vous savez", c'est le podcast quotidien de Bababam, qui donne les clés essentielles pour savoir vraiment ce qui se cache derrière les mots, sigles, concepts qui font notre actualité. Cette semaine, retour sur les 10 mots qui ont marqué l'année. De l'affaire des "Uber Files" au phénomène de la shrinkflation, en passant par l'expression "Sixième République", (re)découvrez ces mots qui résument à eux seuls toute notre année 2022. Dans un rapport publié le 3 avril 2022, l'ONG Human Rights Watch a documenté des « crimes de guerre apparents » commis par les soldats russes sur la population ukrainienne. Deux semaines après le début de la guerre, le 6 mars 2022, des premiers viols ont été dénoncés par les civils. Ils ont eu lieu à Vorzel, à une cinquantaine de kilomètres de Kiyv, touchant une femme et un adolescent, qui ont succombé à leurs blessures dans les heures qui ont suivi. Quand en a-t-on entendu parler pour la première fois ? Comment expliquer que la guerre facilite les viols ? Y a-t-il des moyens pour les victimes de viols de guerre de les dénoncer ? Ecoutez la suite de cet épisode de "Maintenant vous savez". Un podcast écrit et réalisé par Pauline Weiss. A écouter aussi : Comment le Covid-19 a-t-il déstabilisé le régime chinois ? Comment se prémunir face au risque de coupure d'électricité ? Pourquoi la viande périmée est-elle remballée par les industriels ? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Radio Cité Genève
Culture - 09/12/2022 - Marc Olivier Wahler & Samuel Gross

Radio Cité Genève

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2022 8:42


Le Musée d'Art et d'Histoire de Genève a le plaisir d'inviter la Galerie Nationale d'Art de Kiyv pour une exposition exceptionnelle présentée au Musée Rath.  "Du crépuscule à l'aube" qui se tient jusqu'au 23 avril 2023, regroupe des œuvres majeures sur le thème de la nuit, provenant de la collection du musée ukrainien.  A cette occasion, le directeur du MAH Marc Olivier Wahler,  nous présente sa fierté de travailler sur une exposition à Genève dans un contexte de conflit difficile pour la population Ukrainienne.  Organisé sur fond de conflit entre la Russie et l'Ukraine, cet événement est l'occasion pour le MAH de réaffirmer que l'art constitue un patrimoine universel. Nous écouterons également Samuel Gross, co-commissaire de l'exposition.  

C dans l'air
UKRAINE : LA RUSSIE FRAPPÉE SUR SON SOL – 07/12/22

C dans l'air

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 63:18


EXPERTS FRANÇOIS CLEMENCEAU Rédacteur en chef international – « Le Journal du Dimanche » ARMELLE CHARRIER Éditorialiste en politique internationale – « France 24 » ANNIE DAUBENTON Journaliste-essayiste Auteure de « Ukraine, les métamorphoses de l'indépendance » LUKAS AUBIN Directeur de recherche à l'IRIS Auteur de « Géopolitique de la Russie » Alors que les forces de Kiyv et Moscou continuent de s'affronter en Ukraine, plusieurs frappes ces derniers jours ont touché le territoire russe, parfois loin des lignes de front. Ainsi lundi des drones transformés en missiles ont tiré sur des bases militaires russes à des centaines kilomètres de la frontière. Le ministère russe de la Défense a accusé les forces ukrainiennes de chercher ainsi « à mettre hors service les avions russes de longue portée », utilisés pour les frappes qui visent depuis plusieurs semaines de nombreuses infrastructures énergétiques sur le territoire ukrainien. Kiyv n'a jusqu'ici revendiqué aucune des explosions. Mais c'est bien l'Ukraine qui s'est rendue responsable de frappes en Russie, qui ne sont pas une première, mais qui ont eu lieu cette fois bien plus profondément à l'intérieur du pays que les cibles jusqu'ici atteintes. Surtout, elles ont touché des bases qui ne sont pas seulement le lieu de départ des avions russes de longue portée. L'aéroport d'Engels-2, dans la région de Saratov, abrite également une partie de la dissuasion nucléaire russe. Et ce n'est pas du goût de Washington : « nous n'encourageons pas ces attaques et nous n'aidons pas les Ukrainiens à les mener » s'est ainsi défendu hier soir le chef de la diplomatie américaine. Sur le front terrestre, les combats continuent de s'intensifier à Bakhmout dans le Donbass où s'est rendu Volodymyr Zelensky pour envoyer un message à ses troupes au lendemain de la visite de Vladimir Poutine sur le pont de Crimée. Une guerre de l'image alors que sur le terrain une guerre de position fait rage. La Russie cherche à « geler les combats » en Ukraine pendant l'hiver afin de renforcer ses forces en vue d'un nouvel assaut au printemps, a expliqué le chef de l'Otan. Jens Stoltenberg a également déclaré que les membres de l'Alliance poursuivaient leur fourniture « sans précédent » d'armes et de soutien à l'Ukraine, malgré les inquiétudes sur un éventuel épuisement des stocks occidentaux. En Ukraine, la ligne de front s'est stabilisée depuis que les forces de Kiev sont parvenues à libérer la ville de Kherson et les zones environnantes sur la rive occidentale du fleuve Dniepr en novembre. Toutefois les regards sont désormais tournés vers la frontière Biélorusse où des exercices militaires se déroulent. L'Ukraine dit craindre que la Russie, qui l'a envahie le 24 février dernier, ne se serve à nouveau de la Biélorussie pour tenter une nouvelle incursion terrestre dans le nord de son territoire. Parallèlement, la guerre de l'énergie se poursuit. Près de la moitié des installations énergétiques ukrainiennes ont été endommagées après deux mois de bombardements. Et si l'électricité est rétablie généralement dans les deux jours suivant chaque attaque, le réseau fonctionne en mode de plus en plus dégradé et des millions de personnes subissent des coupures de courant d'urgence. DIFFUSION : du lundi au samedi à 17h45FORMAT : 65 minutes PRÉSENTATION : Caroline Roux - Axel de Tarlé REDIFFUSION : du lundi au vendredi vers 23h40 RÉALISATION : Nicolas Ferraro, Bruno Piney, Franck Broqua, Alexandre Langeard, Corentin Son, Benoît Lemoine PRODUCTION : France Télévisions / Maximal Productions Retrouvez C DANS L'AIR sur internet & les réseaux : INTERNET : francetv.fr FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/Cdanslairf5 TWITTER : https://twitter.com/cdanslair INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/cdanslair/

Office Hours with Spencer Rascoff
Navigating the Seas of Technology Innovation, a Conversation with Zoolatech Founder Roman Kaplun

Office Hours with Spencer Rascoff

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2022 33:39


Roman Kaplun is the CEO and Co-founder of Zoolatech, a custom software development company specializing in high-end software engineering based in the San Francisco area. Born in Leningrad in the former Soviet Union, his family moved to the United States as Jewish refugees in 1988, right after he completed High School. Zoolatech has workers in the U.S., Ukraine, Mexico, and Poland. The startup was able to evacuate, relocate, and resettle many of its employees from Kiyv after the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24.  Prior to Zoolatech, Roman held a number of Engineering Management and QA roles for Hotwire, Expedia, and IAC. Roman's career began in the maritime sector where he spent a few years at sea, mostly in commercial fishing. Roman has more than 20 years of experience overseeing critical information technology deployments for leaders in the e-commerce, Travel, Media, and Mobile space. Kaplun holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Transportation, Logistics, and Business Administration from California State University Maritime Academy.

Dave Troy Presents
On The Front Lines in Ukraine with Nate Mook

Dave Troy Presents

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2022 95:45


For the last five years, Nate Mook has led World Central Kitchen, the ground-breaking humanitarian charitable organization founded by award-winning chef José Andrés. Helping to build the organization from scratch to over $400 million in projected 2022 revenues, Nate has been on the front lines of relief efforts around the world for years. And for the last six months, he's been in Ukraine helping to feed people reeling from Vladimir Putin's disastrous invasion. First on the Polish border, and then on the front lines in the east, Nate offers an invaluable first-hand perspective about what's really going on there, and what we might expect next. Dave and Nate are old friends, having produced TEDxMidAtlantic together in Washington D.C. since 2009 — which is how Nate met José and began his journey with World Central Kitchen. They sat down together in Washington D.C. on August 16, 2022, while Nate was in town, before starting his next mission. Read more about Nate and World Central Kitchen in the Washington Post here. Keywords: Nate Mook, José Andrés, World Central Kitchen, TEDx, Washington D.C., Ukraine, Gen. Milley, Amy Klobuchar, Lviv, Kherson, Kharkiv, Kiyv, Zaporizhia, Putin, Ukraine, war, humanitarian, food, relief, charity.

Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: The Battle For Hostomel Airport

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2022 29:42


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

The Epstein Chronicles
A Look Back: The Battle For Hostomel Airport

The Epstein Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2022 29:42


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

Yellow Van Stories
Oleksiy Martsenyuk "The Shifting Of Desires"

Yellow Van Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2022 125:37


Oleksiy Martsenyuk is the Executive Director of the Center for Defence Strategies in Kiyv, an organisation that helps to monitor defence reforms and develop key government policies that will affect the country's security and defence sector. This certainly needs a little more explanation from you, Oleksiy! And we will get into that in the course of the podcast. Also, he served as a Civilian Deputy Minister in the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence for just under a year. Originally, Oleksiy has a business background though. And because of this, Oleksiy's and my relationship actually goes way back. When I studied photography in Gent, Belgium, at the end of my first year all students had to choose a topic and project outside the curriculum, entirely self-sufficient and motivated by our own interests. This is now almost 18 years ago. As a foreigner myself, I chose the topic of migration and opted to take black and white portraits of people far away from home in Belgium. I put it all in book form, presenting them on a double page with their portrait in black and white on one page and the most cherished and valuable photo they brought with them in colour on the other.  Oleksiy was introduced to me by my dear friend Apoorva, studying with him at the time. A big shoutout and a big hug to you, Apu, who I don't see or hear nearly often enough! I remember the portrait of Oleksiy still so well after all these years. Standing in his rather modest and empty student cave, but with a big, bright Ukrainian flag on his wall. Leaning in, curiously observing me with a gentle smile while I was trying to create something lasting with the little that I knew at the time. But, in a way, I have; by having him with me today - 18 years after that photo was taken. I am so happy and grateful to have you with us today, Oleksiy, after all this time!SHOW NOTESNew York Times, The Bodies Lay Dead in the StreetBBC News, Bucha KillingsVOX News, Ukraine KidnappingsDeutsche Welle, Russia Uses Kidnappings to Intimidate UkrainiansGolda MeirWeimar RepublicFriedrich EbertPhilipp ScheidemannThe Ebert-Groener PactSinking of the MoskwaBayraktar DroneHIMARSNord Stream 2Rheinmetall builds military training centerThe Orphanage, Serhiy ZhadanKamil Galeev (@kamilkazani), Twitter ThreadMUSICLove In The Face Of Fear, Jim KroftYellow Van Stories is a Mind The Bump ProduSupport the show

RN Breakfast - Separate stories podcast
PM Anthony Albanese visits Ukraine - politics with Phil Coorey

RN Breakfast - Separate stories podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2022 8:03


Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has accused Russia of war crimes during a tour of several war ravaged towns in Ukraine. Following talks with President Volodomyr Zelensky in Kiyv, the PM has announced an extra $100 million in military aid for the fight against the Russian invaders.

SBS Greek - SBS Ελληνικά
European leaders visit Kiyv - Ηγέτες Γαλλίας, Γερμανίας, Ιταλίας επισκέπτονται το Κίεβο

SBS Greek - SBS Ελληνικά

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 3:57


The leaders of France, Germany, Italy and Roumania visited Ukraine on Thursday 16 June and met with the Ukranian president Volodymir Zelenski.  - Το Κίεβο επισκέφθηκαν χθες(16.7.22)  οι ηγέτες των τριών μεγαλύτερων κρατών της Ευρωπαικής Ένωσης σε μιά ένδειξη αλληλεγγύης προς την Ουκρανία και την συμμετοχή της στην ‘ευρωπαική οικογένεια'.

Hora 25
El análisis de Xavier Vidal-Folch | Retaguardia en Kiyv

Hora 25

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 1:39


Xavier Vidal-Folch reflexiona sobre la visita de tres líderes europeos a Zelenski.

World Today
What's on the agenda for "Russian Davos" in St. Petersburg?

World Today

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 50:04


St. Petersburg International Economic Forum is underway in Russia. What to expect from this year's event? (00:48) German, French and Italian leaders arrive in Kiyv in show of solidarity. We'll look at their role in the Ukraine conflict. (10:05) US Fed announces biggest interest rate hike since 1994. (23:58) Japan to attend NATO summit for the first time. (33:12) UK vows more Rwanda deportation flights after legal setback. (42:37)

Expresso - Comissão Política
Suas Altezas os juízes do TC. Costa o construtor. E, vá, um minuto PSD

Expresso - Comissão Política

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 56:28


Há uma guerra de juízes no Tribunal Constitucional por causa da indicação de um novo juiz que é totalmente contra o direito ao aborto - e aqui discutimos se a escolha de um juiz é uma decisão política. Falamos também de Costa em Kiev, das promessa de ajuda em obras e da não promessa europeia. E sim, falamos um pouco desta espécie de campanha do PSD See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Smart 7 Ireland Edition
60 confirmed dead in Ukraine school bombing, U2 go underground in Kiyv, Northern Ireland election results and a new Dr. Who announced

The Smart 7 Ireland Edition

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 7:03


The Smart 7 Ireland Edition is the daily news podcast that gives you everything you need to know in 7 minutes, at 7am, 7 days a week… Consistently appearing in Ireland's Daily News charts, we're a trusted source for people every day. If you're enjoying it, please follow, share or even post a review, it all helps… Today's episode includes references to the following items:https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/1523206064518295555?s=20&t=Tup-0BTV_fozsnAvngbJIA https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-61370906https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/1523238780047613952?s=20&t=Tup-0BTV_fozsnAvngbJIAhttps://twitter.com/Ash_Stewart_/status/1523309007863431170?s=20&t=Tup-0BTV_fozsnAvngbJIA -https://twitter.com/newschambers/status/1523267107730960384?s=20&t=Tup-0BTV_fozsnAvngbJIAhttps://twitter.com/RidgeOnSunday/status/1523209005698482178?s=20&t=Tup-0BTV_fozsnAvngbJIAhttps://twitter.com/rtenews/status/1522633491527225345?s=20&t=Tup-0BTV_fozsnAvngbJIAhttps://twitter.com/rtenews/status/1523350365927837696?s=20&t=3JnKIrUZQtS_-M5NEOKxvw https://twitter.com/footballdaily/status/1523362387302133761?s=20&t=wpN_nopC-J4gVxVwhI53Zwhttps://twitter.com/thepostmonument/status/1523295335933628423?s=20&t=Tup-0BTV_fozsnAvngbJIAhttps://twitter.com/BAFTA/status/1523366227741085696?s=20&t=wpN_nopC-J4gVxVwhI53Zwhttps://twitter.com/BAFTA/status/1523379303874183168?s=20&t=wpN_nopC-J4gVxVwhI53Zw Contact us over at Twitter or visit www.thesmart7.com Presented by Ciara Revins, written by Liam Thompson and produced by Daft Doris. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

News dal pianeta Terra
Stand by Ukraine

News dal pianeta Terra

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 7:49


9 maggio 2022 - Mentre gli U2 suonano nella metro di Kiev, il G7 si ritrova in videoconferenza per valutare la situazione ucraina. Intanto in Afghanistan torna l'obbligo del burqa per le donne, ci racconta questo passo indietro di oltre 20 anni Leila Belhadj Mohamed.

Newshour
Evacuation of Mariupol fails

Newshour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 48:22


Ukraine's deputy prime minister has said an attempt to evacuate several thousand of the remaining civilians trapped in the devastated southern city of Mariupol has not gone to plan. The US ambassador to Kiyv, Kristina Kvien, blames Russia. Also in the programme: Wimbledon to ban Russian and Belarussian players; and Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen go head-to-head in TV debate. (Picture: A woman with a sign reading "Save Mariupol" and her hands tied on her back attends a rally against Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Prague, Czech Republic. Credit: REUTERS/David W Cerny)

Maintenant, vous savez
Qu'est-ce qu'un viol de guerre ?

Maintenant, vous savez

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2022 5:15


Qu'est-ce qu'un viol de guerre ?   Dans un rapport publié le 3 avril 2022, l'ONG Human Rights Watch a documenté des « crimes de guerre apparents » commis par les soldats russes sur la population ukrainienne.  Deux semaines après le début de la guerre, le 6 mars 2022, des premiers viols ont été dénoncés par les civils. Ils ont eu lieu à Vorzel, à une cinquantaine de kilomètres de Kiyv, touchant une femme et un adolescent, qui ont succombé à leurs blessures dans les heures qui ont suivi. Le 13 mars 2022, une autre femme a raconté avoir été violée par un soldat russe dans la région de Kharkiv et blessée par un couteau. On parle ici de viol de guerre : un type de violence omniprésent dans les conflits actuels. Quand en a-t-on entendu parler pour la première fois ? Comment expliquer que la guerre facilite les viols ? Y a-t-il des moyens pour les victimes de viols de guerre de les dénoncer ? Ecoutez la suite de cet épisode de "Maintenant vous savez". Un podcast écrit et réalisé par Pauline Weiss. A écouter aussi : Qu'est-ce que la protection temporaire ? Qu'est-ce que le groupe Wagner ? Qu'est-ce que la légion internationale ukrainienne ? Vous pouvez réagir à cet épisode sur notre page Twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Pilestræde – Berlingskes nyhedspodcast
Berlingske i Butja: »Det voldsomste nogensinde«

Pilestræde – Berlingskes nyhedspodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 20:25


Berlingskes fotograf Asger Ladefoged har været i Butja i ganske få timer. Han har fotograferet ligene i gaderne og de sårede mennesker, der har gemt sig i kældre i flere uger. »Det bliver ikke hårdere end det her,« siger den garvede fotograf. Alligevel mener han, at det er vigtigt folk ser rædslerne fra byen. Asger Ladefoged er med fra et hotel i Kiyv og beretter om, hvad han så. Vært: Kaare SvejstrupSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Up First
Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Up First

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 12:34


Ukraine's President is calling on the international community to investigate war crimes in the suburbs of Kiyv after Russian troops withdrew from the region. The White House and top Democrats agreed to a much smaller COVID spending bill with bi-partisan support. And in Sri Lanka, protest erupted as the country deals with an economic crisis and shortages of food, fuel and medicines.

Univision Reporta
Así resiste Ucrania

Univision Reporta

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 29:46


La mayoría de los expertos militares coinciden en que Vladimir Putin subestimó la capacidad de las tropas ucranianas y de sus habitantes. Este sábado, Ucrania recuperó el control de decenas de ciudades tras la retirada de las tropas rusas de los alrededores de Kiyv, lo que supone una importante derrota para el ejército ruso y posiblemente un punto de inflexión en la guerra. Conversamos con Felix de Bedout, colega periodista de Univision. Felix estuvo varios días en Leópolis, Ucrania, donde dedicó largas y emotivas jornadas a entrevistar a decenas de civiles y soldados ucranianos que se enfrentan a los invasores rusos desde distintas trincheras.

Up First
Monday, April 4, 2022

Up First

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 13:08


Russia is being accused of war crimes after mass graves were found after Putin withdrew forces from the outskirts of Ukriane's capital, Kiyv. Jury selection begins today for the sentencing phase of the trials of the Parkland High School shooter. And, Pakistan's Prime Minister dissolved Parliament and called for a new election as a vote of no confidence was set to take place sending the country into a constitutional crisis.

Brendan O'Connor
Russian Troops Retreat

Brendan O'Connor

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2022 8:01


Johnny O'Reilly, Irish Journalist based in Ukraine reports from Kiyv as Russian troops begin to retreat back towards the east of Ukraine.

Klassik aktuell
Interview mit Anatolij Vasilkovskyi von den Kiyv Soloists

Klassik aktuell

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2022 4:44


Kurz vor Kriegsbeginn ging ihre Tour los. Seitdem reisen die Kyiv Soloists, ein Streicherensemble aus der ukrainischen Hauptstadt, durch Europa. Als Friedensbotschafter ihres Landes.

The Epstein Chronicles
The War In Ukraine: The Battle for Hostomel Airport (3/4/22)

The Epstein Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 29:45


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

Beyond The Horizon
The War In Ukraine: The Battle for Hostomel Airport (3/4/22)

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 29:45


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

Forklart
Kort forklart: Hva skjer med kolonnen på vei mot Kyiv?

Forklart

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 4:02


I flere dager har en 64 kilometer lang kolonne av russiske militære kjøretøyer sneglet seg mot hovedstaden Kiyv. Nå hevder det amerikanske forsvaret at kolonnen har stoppet opp. Hva skjer? Torsdag morgen så det også ut til at den første større ukrainske byen var tatt av Russland. Med journalist Harald Stolt-Nielsen.

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 298: Podda från höften

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 75:22


Uppföljning/uppvärmming Jocke är sjuk Christians kollegor hånar podd-formatet “Sköna grabbar pratar om ingenting.” Det finns ett poddformat för alla. Hur gjorde Steve Jobs när han poddade på scen? Fettisdagen, vad har ätits? Fredrik har lite uppföljning, och fastepanik utbryter Dockuppföljning, typ: Fredrik har funderat på hur han kombinerar tangentbord och pekdon. Vi diskuterar livsfarliga tangentbordsgenvägar Ämnen Putin gör vad han kan för att koppla bort Ryssland från den civiliserade världen - hur mycket och var har vi nyhetsknarkat/doomscrollat? Riho Terras, Anders Östlund, The Kiyv independent Film och TV Senaste Talk show med Ken Kocienda - eminent. Mer sånt. Länkar Utveckla Digitala influencerpodden När Steve Jobs spelade in podd på scen Burger kings semmelburgare Åsas i/utanför Kungälv - varmt rekommenderade semlor Fastan Starlink Anders Östlund The Kyiv independent Rhio Terras Nordengren och Epstein i P1 Talk show med Ken Kocienda Creative selection Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-298-podda-fran-hoften.html

DEN NYE RUMALDER
Chefen for Roscosmos spreder krigspropaganda på Twitter, mens Elon Musk aktiverer rum-internet over Ukraine

DEN NYE RUMALDER

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 50:57


Krigen i Ukraine kan også mærkes i rummet. Direktøren for Ruslands rumfartagentur har tweetet en propaganda-video med russiske soldater og Elon Musk har aktiveret Starlink-internet over Ukraine. Vi dykker ned i, hvordan krigen i Ukraine belaster samarbejdet mellem Vesten og Rusland i forhold til Den Internationale Rumstation. Vi har også et interview med en ESA-astronaut der sidst var på Den Internationale Rumstation i 2020. Medvirkende: Ole J. Knudsen, kommunikationsmedarbejder ved Fysik og Astronomi på Aarhus Universitet. Thomas A.E. Andersen, direktør for Danish Aerospace Company. Oleg Kutkov, indbygger i Kiyv. Luca Parmitano, ESA-astronaut. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Whiskey Hell Podcast
Love Channels

Whiskey Hell Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2022 121:53


Well the beer kinda sucked tonight but the conversation was fun. Hope you enjoy it. We discussed the weeks Kiyv goings on and got into some marketing ideas to bounce off Jefe next week. We hope he likes them. Enjoy the show!BeersFitzColdfire MoleRevision Darkling by McShaneMr Sandman by River North BrewingDub CoAbuse of stoutHousekeepingListener StuffNewsUkraineSanctionsVodka PornhubZelensky VideoLouis CK?John MearsheimerMarco RubioWhy is Sean Penn there?Cool ShitVenus Fly Trap

Eurovision Radio International
Radio International - The Ultimate Eurovision Experience (2021-08-04) Live Interview with Vanilla Ninja (Switzerland 2005) and much more

Eurovision Radio International

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2021 231:52


Radio International - The Ultimate Eurovision Experience is broadcast from Malta's Radio 105FM on Tuesday evenings from 2100 - 0059 hours CET. The show is also broadcast on RUN FM in the United Kingdom live on Wednesday evenings from 1900 - 2300 hours CET as well as on the Facebook Page of Eurovision Radio International with an interactive chatroom. AT A GLANCE - ON THE SHOW THIS WEEK Live Interview with Piret and Lenna from Vanilla Ninja (Switzerland 2005) Live Interview with Emily Roberts, author of the Eurovision Musical and Eurovision Movie "Let me be the one" - You can watch this movie on YouTube by CLICKING HERE Eurovision Cover Spot and The Eurovision Birthday File with David Mann Eurovision Spotlight: A Golden Eurovision Summer: 1964 with Chris Poppe Eurovision News from escXtra.com with Nathan Waddell  Eurovision Birthday File and Coverpot with David Mann Your music requests New Music Releases by Eurovision Artists   Live Interview with Vanilla Ninja (Switzerland 2005):  Radio International - The Ultimate Eurovision Experience is delighted to welcome to the airwaves of Radio International - The Ultimate Eurovision Experience Piret of the group Vanilla Ninja. The group consists of four female members and all together they represented, although being Estonians, Switzerland at the Eurovision Song Contest 2005 in Kiyv, Ukraine. Vanilla Ninja's entry at Eurovision 2005 is entitled "Cool Vibes" and came 8th in the Grand Final for Switzerland. It's been 16 years after the Estonian Girl Power represented Switzerland at Eurovision and lately the ladies released a new song called "No Regrets" ahead of their album release in October 2021. For more details of Vanilla Ninja visit their website by CLICKING HERE Radio International is very happy to welcome Piret on the show live and we are looking forward to all the lovely stories that they can tell us during their Eurovision career and beyond. Listeners are encouraged to actively take part during the show to submit their questions to the artist via our Facebook Chatroom during the live broadcast on Wednesday evening from 1900 - 2300 hours CET or via our website's email address - click here. The Radio International Interview Hall of Fame: During the Interview Sessions Radio International takes photos and videos which you can find on the Radio International Interview Hall of Fame 2020 and 2021. To view the photos done during the interviews - click here - for the Radio International Hall of Fame Photo Album. This is the Hall of Fame: Charlotte Perrelli, Linda Martin, Niamh Kavanagh, Katrina of Katrina and the Waves, Scott Fitzgerald, Eldar of Ell and Nikki, Sanna Nielsen, Lina Hedlund and Andreas Lundstedt from Alcazar, Ira Losco, Jan Johansen Nicki French, Debbie Scerri, Rasmussen, Rainer from Wind, Jalisse, Thomas Forstner, Lisa Andreas, Esther Hart, James Newman, Senhit, Serhat, Vanessa Amarosi, Lesley Roy, Brooke, Franklin, Martina Majerle of Quartissimo, Miriam Christine, Claudia Faniello, Fabrizio Faniello, Chanel, Jordan Ravi, Viorela Moraru, Mia Negovetic, Parvani Violet Vasil, Janice Mangion, Mariette, KEiiNO, Anett Kublin (Anett and Fredi), Tess Merkel, Glen Vella, Hera Björk, Anton Ewald, Katrina Dimanta formerly of Aarzemnieki, ManuElla, Tusse, Blind Channel, Danny Saucedo, Jendrik, Tornike Kipiani, GO_A, Kurt Calleja, Rafał Brzozowski, Barbara Pravi, Fyr og Flamme, almost all artists from the Eurovision 2021 class. Find out more details of how to tune in live - click here For full details of this week's Show Content and Play List - click here

DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW (15.03.21)

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2021 61:54


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW (05.03.21)

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2021 60:10


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW (27.01.21)

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2021 61:48


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW 30.12.20

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2021 54:13


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW (19.11.20)

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2020 56:19


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW (29.11.20)

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2020 59:45


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW (26-10-2020)

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2020 57:49


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW (07-10-2020)

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2020 60:51


DJ SPARKO
DJ SPARKO - KIYV MORNING SHOW 30.09.20

DJ SPARKO

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2020 61:12