🔴 Russian drones attack Kherson in swarms, destroy homes and neighbourhoods.
Their Telegram channels threaten to burn the city down. To ashes.
This city needs our help. Now. Before it is too late.
Kherson heroes: residents, firefighters, volunteers.
💔 She lost her husband. She lost her two sons and her daughter. She survived carrying their fourth child.
On February 10, a Russian strike on Bohodukhiv in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region killed Hryhorii Shykula and the couple’s three young children - two-year-old twins Ivan and Vladyslav, and one-year-old daughter Myroslava.
Hryhorii was a Ukrainian veteran who had returned home from the war after losing a leg in service.
His wife, Olha, survived. She was pregnant with their fourth child.
Today, she stands alone where a family of six should have stood together.
Photo: Office of the President of Ukraine.
Сьогодні, 4 червня - День вшанування пам’яті дітей, які загинули внаслідок збройної агресії російської федерації проти України.
Світла пам'ять янголятам💔🕯️
Je zaujímavé, že Robo neukázal jazvy, aby nabral politické body. Nemá problém používať "päť guliek v bruchu" ako argument pred študentami, ale košeľu nevyhrnie, naopak robí všetko aby sme nevideli, dokonca sa kúpe oblečený, i keď v minulosti nemal problém ísť hore bez 🤔... #sk
Rozmohl se nám tady takový nešvar. Země bez eura prý rostou rychleji než země s eurem. Přitom 8 z 10 nejrychleji rostoucích zemí EU má #euro! Dokonce i Slovensko s eurem roste rychleji než Česko s korunou.
#euromyty#koruna#hdp#ekonomika
Víte co je sranda. Schillerová spolu s Babišem připravili lidi o miliony zrušením 2. pilíře (spolu se Sobotkou), nebyli schopni udělat důchodovou reformu, udělat DIP, podpořit zajištění dlouhodobé péče.
A teď jim tleskáte, jak zařídili nízké poplatky na penzijku :-))
⚡️⚡️⚡️ Zelensky wrote an open letter to Putin
When you came to power in Russia more than 26 years ago, many in Ukraine had a positive attitude toward you. That was true. That is now in the past.
Today, the absolute majority of Ukrainians positively view the fact that our long-range drones “visited” the opening of your forum in St. Petersburg, covering a distance of more than 1,000 kilometers. As you well know, this distance is not the limit of our capabilities.
But now we all see that this is finally becoming unacceptable for Russians — that the war is bringing more and more negative consequences to Russia.
They do not like our drones and missiles.
They do not like fuel shortages and constant price increases.
They do not like ongoing bans.
They do not like your intention to launch a second wave of mobilization to expand the war to another direction in Ukraine or to direct it against other neighboring countries.
They do not like that your war has no end in sight.
Yes, you can still force Russians to live this way. But your resources are significantly shrinking.
You cannot fail to notice this. After 26 years, old age is starting to take its toll. The further it goes, the more fatigue will grow — including from you.
It’s not that we in Ukraine are worried about Russians — after everything your war has brought to Ukraine. But I care about Ukrainians.
We are losing our people, and every loss is painful. And even when Ukrainian losses are one to five or one to six compared to Russian losses, it still matters greatly.
Ukraine preserves its independence. And it will preserve it — despite any predictions.
We have brought the war onto your territory, and you would not have managed it without help from North Korea. You are the first Russian leader who has had to turn to Pyongyang for assistance.
And today you are completely dependent on China — also a first in Russian history.
The choice is yours now. Stop the war. Ukraine offers to end this war. I propose a meeting.
We believe Europe’s participation is necessary — those who are truly capable of influencing the situation. We believe the United States must be involved, and this could determine the configuration of a new security architecture in our part of the world.
The frontline is now the line from which diplomacy should begin.
Ukraine is ready for a “all for all” prisoner exchange, and this could become a good prologue to ending the war.
If you do not personally come to the idea that this war must end, Ukraine will continue to fight for its existence. We will have those who support us.
But you will also have to fight much more for your own existence — not Russia’s, but your personal one. And this is not a threat from me or Ukraine. These are facts of Russian history: when Russia grows tired, changes happen.
We can work toward that fatigue. You can stop your war.
Eternal memory to all whose lives were taken by this war.
Glory to Ukraine.