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tv   [untitled]    February 4, 2024 12:30am-1:01am EET

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what is safe and dangerous there, i 'll take care of everything already, well, i was informed about everything, i understood, so i know where the danger should be read from, then all this was taken into account and , well, well, i delivered people to licha almost without problems, a couple of times there, the column came under tank fire, well, but there you can increase your speed and bypass certain dangerous areas, all this can be done, in what numbers was it, was it? on march 13, on march 14, this road was already cut off, i left mariupol around three o'clock in the morning, on march 14 at 11 in the afternoon, i know that a convoy went there, also took ammunition to mariupol, the convoy was already shot, but since march 14 , the city of mariupol, the entire mariupol garrison was already completely surrounded, how many people did you take there? approximately 670 people,
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how long were you there and holding the defense? well, until april 12, from march 1 to april 12, well , the situation was critically difficult, let 's put it that way, but at first there was a week, 10 days, well, it was possible to hold on there more or less while there were old stocks. there ammunition, supplies , and medicine, but you understand that every day it gets worse and worse, worse and worse, and if there were no replenishment of all this, it was difficult, but everyone held on and everyone knows what they held on to , it was hard, yes.
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were wounded, were killed , but there is no war without victims, well, without the dead, everyone understood that, everyone stood, everyone fought, well, if every serviceman, including me, hoped for the best, but we understood that from us, who was in mariupol, depends... what is happening in ukraine, because everyone knew that russia had withdrawn a very large number of military personnel and armored vehicles to mariupol, as well as aviation, which, in principle, both from russia and the autonomous republic of crimea, which worked in mariupol, because all this, what happened in mariupol, it could... work and advance on the territory
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of ukraine, well, the mainland, which was not yet encircled, so we had only one way out - to hold on. mariupol is, you know, the heart of this war today. there are discounts on pairs of villages of 20% in pharmacies plantain you and save. is discounts on quiet soothing 10% in pharmacies plantain, you and savings. some concerns of the sapsan unmanned aircraft complexes of the state special service of transport. appeals to the viewers of the tv channel with
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a request to join the collection of crowns and technical equipment for our textbook. thank you, glory to ukraine. to the heroes. an unusual look at the news. good health, ladies and gentlemen, my name is mykola veresen. sharp presentation of facts and competent opinions. and in america, too, they say, let's make better roads, we will also have... a special view at events in ukraine, on the border of kyiv, there will be some katsaps and beyond, what kind of world does norman dream of, can we imagine it? all this in an informational marathon with mykola veresny, saturday 17:10, sunday 18:15 at espresso. events, events that are happening right now and affect our lives. of course, the news feed reports on them, but few know what is happening. it is necessary
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to understand. antin borkovskii and invited experts soberly assess the events, analyze them, modeling our future. every saturday at 1:10 p.m with a repeat on sunday at 10 o'clock. 10. studio zahid with anton borkovsky on espresso. hello, this is svoboda ranok, an informational project of radio svoboda. top guests every day. this is the korabelny district of kherson. turn on live. we are somewhere in the vicinity of bakhmut. we tell the main thing on weekdays at 9:00 vasyl zima's big broadcast, this is vasyl zima's big broadcast, my name is vasyl zima, and we are starting two hours of air time, two hours of your time, many important topics, today we will discuss with you for two hours to learn about the war, right now
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, and we will be about the war talk more serhiy zguryats will talk with us about what is going on in the world right now, about what has happened in the world , yuriy fizar will speak in more detail, yuriy good evening, i would like you to speak for two hours in order to be aware of... economic news. time to talk about money in wartime. oleksandr morchivka is with us. alexander, congratulations, please. and sports news. review of sporting events by yevhen postukhov. two hours in the company of your favorite presenters. thank you very much to elina chechenii for the information about cultural news. presenters who have become like relatives to many. natalka didenko is ready to tell us about the weather on advent day. and also distinguished guests of the studio. andriy parubiy, people's deputy of ukraine, was also the chairman of the verkhovna rada of ukraine. events of the day in two hours. vasyl's big broadcast in the winter is a project for smart and caring people in the evening at espresso. approximately how many people were there at the lychee factory? well , about 2500. what
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was the most difficult moment for you personally there? when there are wounded servicemen, er, ah... there is nothing to help them, when you have the enemy in front of your nose, and there is nothing to hit him, these are such moments, with who did you have time to talk with the commander of the brigade, with colonel boraniuk there in ilyich, well, we know each other quite well even in crimea, and even after the exit, well, after the annexation of crimea, with colonel yaroshenko, well, with her own comrade. most of the brigade there is like my trainees of my battalion, chiefs of services , deputies there, and everything else, of course i was glad to see everyone, i was not glad to see him, he at least lifted the mood there somehow, well, as he could, what the words you said to them
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when you were leaving, that it would be good not to they forgot who they were and where they were from, and if they were going to fight, then they had to fight like that... they taught that to hide in there, to sit in bunkers, because to be afraid, there is no way out of the situation, you have to defend yourself so that the enemy himself he spoke for you and respected you himself, even understanding that there are quite a lot of incoming enemy forces, let's say this, you won't fight, you won't earn respect even from the enemy, he will also understand that, he saw that there are a bunch of people , but she will fight and this visa... women,
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with military families, with civilians, with with children, well, that's how it turned out. the passage of a meter can be two, and you can go from those two meters, like this, with spikes, like this, you cross people , you step over the drain, there were many people, a lot of people , the ring got narrower, narrowed, and it narrowed, it was narrowed, it was no longer there, it was already put on the barrel covered everything with a blanket and it was painful and painful inside everything at the plant, not a single one. the helicopter did not land, all that happened was that it landed in the port and at the port, there was no such thing at the factory, but one or two once the brigade received help,
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let's say that, which was transferred to azovstal, but it was meager, meager even compared to what was transferred to... azovstal, so yes, there were, but in essence no one saw it, also the evacuation of three wounded or dead... yes, it also happened, but not from the ilyich plant, somehow it happened that we paid more attention to the azovstali, and there this process has already begun, when the food supply ends , water, food, in medicines, yes, this process has already begun, when it was all ending, i i remember, i found boxes with maria cookies, and they were all in mold, now i see the boys
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want to eat, because i only have maria’s liver, i dried it on a fine grater and ground it by hand, made it like ala flour, added a little of some maidichki, vodichki, and i had tortillas for them, so i made them tortillas, they ate, i tell them, i tell them, i don’t cook such a bad thing at home, understand me correctly, i say... we need to eat, at least , that's how we ate then, the most critical moment when it became clear that it was not like that anymore it is possible, what options were considered, but there was only one option, this is a breakthrough, either to the azovstal plant or in the direction of greater ukraine, which option? well, then it so happened that we had no communication at all, and
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there was little interaction between the units that are located in mariupol, so i personally chose the breakthrough option, well , i understood that it was, you know, such a one a chance to win, but... yes, it was difficult, it was difficult for me, it was difficult for my servicemen, but everyone unanimously made such a decision, i believe that not everyone a serviceman will leave, well, when you don't communicate with him, when you don't support him, when you don't have understanding between servicemen, when you don't have, well, a military family, as i said before, but everyone is as one... yes, there some stayed because of their morally unstable qualities, but
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the rest they all had, there was a task that they had to perform, there was to be a convoy, we all had to leave, we were loading into that equipment, we understood what was in the letters sheathed here and there, and you really know it, it was 50 for 50, we understood that i will either die or pass. that's it, that's what this understanding was, we sat down, we prayed, and we were already leaving the bunker, we, well, before that, we went out there with my husband, the goat is sitting, i agree with this 5 years old, my goat is 5 years old, young, he tells me if you won't want to, if you want to give up in... "i'll give up with you, if you don't want to, then we'll go for a breakthrough, i say, let's go for a breakthrough, i have all the main mass, that
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's all that i have here in i thought, i want to go to the child, i want to go to my mother, i just want to go home, just to see that they are alive, whole and that they are doing well, well, i will tell you briefly, they went out in the direction, in the northern direction , well, in small groups, which was not remarkable for the enemy with the task of going to the rear , well, to the rear of the enemy, and all we could do was to hit what are the maximum losses between the positional space, well, i will say this, from my battalion the most people got out of the first cream, yes they broke through, got out and after a week or two again... they started active actions only already from that side, that is, the exit was on
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average took about a week, no, more, more, yes, about two weeks, well if you look at the map like that , the length of the route is 130 km, yes, directly, but we all understand that no one was going directly, so when we talked with our
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friends, our exit was covered, that’s how we saw the planes, we understood the robot, well, we are short , in short, we drove 10 kilometers , not even five, probably not, thank god, thank god, yes, but at the time we didn’t know about it and we thought, damn it, it’s just a bug, our equipment broke down and it won’t start , the electronics are covered, let's get them, and here we start a little, as the whistle blows, yes it has already whistled whistling damn, the aviation is already flying , it’s being dropped, we from that equipment just fuh, like peas, we scattered, where at the moment when this air bomb was falling, i heard that it was falling somewhere, in short, and we are somehow so much more there my group stuck to the building so that somehow the damn thing would open up there, there
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was such a pit, and that's all, i just hear that it's flying , well, not in front of you, it's shorter. yes, but i went out, let's say so, within the battle formations, well, but, as you know, it didn't work out a little bit, can you tell at least a little about the experience of polon, well
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such an experience, you know. the experience of captivity, i don't even know how to answer this question, well, it only allows a serviceman to rethink his life, did the enemy know who you are? yes, because, i think, in a week, in two, we were completely listened to, completely understood. some are located, the more were military personnel who were taken prisoner, well who, no matter how you want it, but one, the second, the third will say something, so yes, it was known who i was and in which direction i was, or applied to torture you
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you know, i have not yet seen or heard of a single military serviceman... then when we came out, we almost got captured once, yes, we had so many chances to get captured, they shouted at us in russian , they saw us, yes, yes we froze, and i didn't hear it, i didn't even hear it in the fairy tale, i didn't hear anything . they fired at us there from a machine gun, from a machine gun, from
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such a small-caliber one, well, there where close combat could have already started when we left. we went to the zaporozhye region, no, i'm sorry, not to zaporozhye, that's where we went, yes, by the way, and then already when we reached our positions there were such yes... i remember what was really funny, it was already at the end, guys, be careful, there is a mine, and we are like that, but nothing, you have already passed, how strong they are... propaganda, what when they understand adequate solutions, hear adequate solutions, hear some
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adequate stories, they do not believe it , saying that it is a production, it is all specially in order to show it to us there, they just have very strong propaganda there, which... well , how many, how many people have i seen there, or not people, there is nothing adequate human, well, how much is it all for 8 for how many years of the war did it absorb them all, then i hear like spots-spots, a sound like rods, they give us signals that you , well, we see you, we see you.
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it's like that, it was like that, it's just , it's, it's indescribable, it's just indescribable, one concept that you survived, went through all this, that's all, you saw what in general, well, i don't know how it 's possible i had to experience how many people from the brigade eventually got out of the encirclement, in order of writing , there were approximately, well, approximately 186 people, those who left on foot, died. somewhere around a thousand people, probably the rest in captives, and thank god
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the exchanges have already improved a little, so we have already been able to exchange quite a few of our boys and girls there, how long did you stay there, almost six months without five or six. six months, in the most critical moments there, what helped you? to stay sane in general and to have some hope, to dream and think about something good, about my family, and how i will spend time with my family when i may be in ukraine someday, well, that's all... .. if, well, as far as i communicate, also volunteer workers who were exchanged, then, in principle, our thoughts , our desires coincide, what thought
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helped you to reach, what helped you, child, child, mother, well, i just knew that i was by myself before leaving, well, i contacted my parents. i hinted to them that, like, something is brewing between us, like some kind of scumbag, so i tell them, like, dad, mom, pray for me, pray for all of us, and those were my last words, but i i probably planted it in general with these words, and in short , what helped me was that here i go, there is a field, a field, a field, i am going, i am looking at the echo, i am looking at the sun, i just understand that papa is looking at the sun, that mom is looking at the echo. and that they know that i'm leaving and they're waiting for me, i know that for sure, what did you do right after you came back? he was in rehabilitation for two weeks,
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after which he returned to the army, as one of the options, even an add-on, maybe. his candidacy as a volunteer to participate in this task and as part of azov, well, we were subordinated to azov at that time. participated in the same way, there was a collective solyanka, this is like our 53rd battalion, as well as the airborne assault troops and... the same,
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if i'm not mistaken, the 54th azov brigade , which participated in kyiv, also came here after the defense of kyiv, and we as part of them went to help the boys, well, as they told us, we fulfilled our task, we took them to i noticed that when the 36th brigade was breaking through to the front, it was...
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the enemy and our task was to occupy two villages, we failed to occupy the second village, we made a lot of money in the first one and started to pull back, well, when we started to pull back we were covered very tightly, like aviation, artillery, yes they met us, let's say so, not with casualties, but as a part of the people found themselves on the back burner, why ee? the guys decided to continue the defense, we, well , tried to win for a while, everyone thought that such a problem should be solved in some, well, more humane, civilized way, well, it can’t be, maybe through some agreements or through extraction, so but this did not happen, unfortunately. in march
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2022, having surrounded mariupol, russian troops advanced further with the goal of seizing all of donetsk region. at that time viktor sikoza performed tasks together with the 503rd battalion. well, the defense, and in this direction of ugladarsky, began precisely with those trenches occupied there by the fighters of the 503rd battalion. achilles, deputy battalion commander. yes, then we held back with our battalion, a small body. according to the so-called book , that is why they gave them serious resistance at first, how the events unfolded in zachativka, how did you get surrounded there, well, just so you understand, somewhere we had a battalion that occupied the defense along the front, well, about 15 to 20 kilometers, probably, that is, we were all stretched into one
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line the enemy, who concentrated on reconnaissance, then, during the flight of the night bird, we, we noticed three columns that were disbanded, which were supposed to move, as i understand it, somewhere in the direction of volnovakha, on average each column had from 70 to 80 units of equipment there, artillerymen ours worked, accordingly, the enemy turned on us with this mass and began to move forward, the battle went out. i remember it’s a matter of landing meters, i don’t know, maybe a kilometer, one and a half shootings, they fly without an echelon, about thirty are flying in our direction, the number is more accurate, it’s tanks they are braying, and we are driving around in a white sprinter without a front window, i generally say, in short, if they kill, then they will kill, if not, then wake up, so i wrap myself in a sleeping bag completely, because there is no front window, i wrap myself in a sleeping bag,
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and i i say that we were. well, it’s easy, a t-shirt, a fleece there is zsushna upstairs, there was no need to throw all kinds of clothes there, there was no understanding either, and that’s all, after that, after that we regrouped and held the defense in yevgenivka for three days, held it successfully, here, despite the fact that the enemy was also advancing on us by ascendant forces, well, ascendant forces , well, there were five times more rough than... us who held this village, at that moment the battalion commander was killed, the pasha was shot down by the kingdom of heaven, well, the battalion was a bit disorganized, morally and psychologically you can understand the situation, after the death of a combatant, especially a battalion man, that is , he enjoyed a rather strong authority, a very big loss for the marines, very much, but his special composition is not that...

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