This is not a movie about meteor showers before the apocalypse; this is Russia bombing Kyiv last night. A city with several million people in it - children, the elderly, and normal families just like yours.
Every dollar paid for Russian oil is money for the war. More than 110 tankers from Moscow’s shadow fleet are currently at sea. On board are over 12 million tons of Russian oil, which, due to the easing of sanctions, can once again be sold without consequences. That is $10 billion – a resource that is directly converted into new strikes against Ukraine - @ZelenskyyUa
Pilot talk series.
In this video, a drone pilot describes his crew’s missions. You’ll hear raw emotions and how he sees the day-to-day work – eliminating the occupier.
Warning: Army humor can be rough.
In the poll, you almost unanimously chose the Ukrainian voice with English subtitles.
#414pilottalk
Israel has accepted a Russian vessel carrying stolen Ukrainian grain from temporarily occupied territories. This was reported by Kateryna Yaresko, a journalist for the SeaKrime project of the Myrotvorets Center. The Russian bulk carrier ABINSK was granted permission to enter the Port of Haifa with a cargo of over 43,700 tons of wheat.
https://t.co/gR6Hx9EsZ1
humor is a basic field. humor themes and all of its possible configurations are waves. once a wave is observed, it collapses into a joke - a humor particle.
We will remember this winter.
When an entire nation froze in the cold right on the border with the European Union, fought against the Russian army's advance, but did not give up.
When Ukrainians lit candles in cold apartments, repaired destroyed power stations, rescued people and animals from under rubble, held their ground in frozen trenches, and, despite everything, organized mass dances in the winter’s streets as a kind of coping strategy.
Because the Russians came to take everything from us — our land, our freedom, our joy, our children's future. And we decided not to give them anything.
Photo after a Russian drone hit a shelter for spinal cord injury dogs in Zaporizhzhia
13. A fellow soldier had his pelvis shattered.
He begged me to kill him, but I didn’t dare — I still hoped we could evacuate him.
We couldn’t return. Our unit was cut off.
The russians tortured him for a long time and then beheaded him alive.
We could hear his screams from kilometers away.
I still regret not kіllіng him myself. It comes back in dreams.
14. Knowing exactly where your brothers-in-arms were killed — the house, the street —
and knowing you will never be able to go there and bring them back.
15. At night in Bakhmut, in a morgue, opening body bag after body bag with a flashlight — bodies laid outside in rows — looking for your brother-in-arms.
And finding only his arm and leg.
That same night, a woman died. They put her into a white bag. Everyone else — into black ones.
Having coffee together in the morning — by evening, he’s gone.
Hearing “I’m wounded” over the radio — and then nothing.
Knowing someone is dead, and not being able to tell their parents.
16. The moment you realize you won’t make it in time —
and all you can do is try to calm them before they dіe.
I am a Ukrainian Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. I have a question.
Why has Trump's year of negotiations been the deadliest for civilians in Ukraine since the full-scale invasion? The number of deaths and injuries has increased by 31 percent compared to the previous year.
Why did Putin not allow himself such brutal strikes on civilian infrastructure under Biden, whom Trump calls “weak,” but totally destroys peaceful cities and disregards the “strong Trump”?
Photo Liz Landers
Андрій Сморгунов, гірник очисного забою
Роман Лисогоря, машиніст гірничих виїмкових машин
Денис Бойков, помічник начальника дільниці
Роман Мухонько, електрослюсар підземний
Микола Довбиш, гірник очисного забою
Руслан Чічієков, гірник очисного забою
Євген Тарасенко, механік дільниці
Денис Кармелицький, гірник з ремонту гірничих виробок
Віталій Булаш, майстер гірничий
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