tv [untitled] March 28, 2024 4:30am-4:59am EET
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books in shelter, will join us, can we, can we hear marina chizhova, alita gurbanova and anton novikov, good day, anton, novikov, anton, congratulations, congratulations, congratulations, congratulations, friends, we are very, very happy to see you , today on the air, tell me, tell me , please, we have already talked a little about this initiative of yours, tell me what you are doing right now, right now. and why is this book of shelter for you, what does it mean to you? at the moment, we deliver books already to the shelters, in which we have installed shelves, for ourselves the project means saving human lives, with the help of books that people can read in the shelter, that is, the book is a kind of shelter for people, and we also want to popularize it in the south.
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and ukrainization in particular, because, as you know, unfortunately , our region is more russian-speaking, but after the full-scale invasion, of course, most people switched to the ukrainian language, but not all yet, and there are people who are very russian-speaking, if , and we want to change it, we want to help people, communicate more freely in ukrainian, switch, no to be afraid, to learn, because in some shelters there are books that just help... to learn ukrainian, that is, you don't just come here and look at your phone, but you can take a book and learn something interesting and relevant. friends, please tell me, what kind of support do you need now, how can those people who now see you and admire you support you, and how can you be supported? it is very important for us to collect
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books for these shelters, because it is difficult now, as far as possible, who knows, honchar's library, which is located in kherson, it was destroyed, we took some of the books that could be saved, the kherson administration gave them to us so that we could place them in a shelter, er, this will save the library fund later, but for now we need books, so if possible. to everyone who is watching this broadcast now, i would like to urge you to send books only in ukrainian, how is it possible, how can it be done, where can i find information, how can i do it, how can i send you books, information can find on our social pages, we have a social page on facebook and instagram, there is a post that contains all the information in detail about sending to the new post office.
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we pay together with humanitarian new mail, thank you, these were kherson activists, book initiatives in shelter, and they, they collect books for bookshelves for shelters in kherson and need our inclusion of our help, thank you for thinking about it, tanya , i think it's an absolutely amazing, beautiful initiative, in that... this is such a very strong metaphor, yes book shelters, book shelters. i thought that i saw a similar thing for the first time in nikopol - this is another absolutely unbreakable, beautiful ukrainian city. we have already gone twice as part of volunteer trips, and there their central main distribution library, in addition to supporting all its branches, is trying to keep the work going there. and, in addition, they also had a basement, as in many buildings, that's for sure. center of the city, we know that
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nikopol, unfortunately, is shelled by the occupiers every day, and in this basement they, too, have equipped the shelter they run , that is, the library takes care of the central shelter of the city, and when we first got there , i think it was the spring of '23, we saw that there were shelves of books in that shelter, and it just shocked me so much at the time, how the role and meaning of libraries change in... conditions of war, and the fact that this book in the shelter continues to work, a book that is not just a shelter, we can talk about it like that, but a book for me is always an opportunity for conversation , that is, we are talking around books, we talk around the questions and topics that sound in the book, and that is probably why, literally from our second trip to chernihiv, we realized that in the future, when planning our volunteer trips, we will always be in each city. and the town to visit the local
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library, because the library has long been in ukraine, even before the full-scale invasion , not only a place to store books, it is a given... in ukraine, there are social centers, these are centers that unite their community, provide very various services, and when we now come with books to these libraries, we bring writers from ukraine and other countries, we see that it is through libraries that we find out the fastest what is happening in this city, in this region, we always get to know all the active people with whom we then continue the following initiatives, and thanks to libraries we understand , where our help is needed, and it is not only about books, we are talking about, because we also bring help for the military, and the library really became this center that unites communities in the conditions of war. you know, in addition to what i mentioned about nikopol, an amazing initiative in kherson that we just saw, i remember libraries in donetsk region, sloviansk, kramatorsk,
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libraries that are the first example i saw in ukraine that had to evacuate books, that is, libraries that are physically without books at all, but they will continue to work, work. humanitarian centers, they weave nets, they receive people, provide them with help, they conduct some consultations, trainings for people in these communities, some libraries were forced to move from the front line to the west, and they are even there continue to look for their readers, gather the community and provide the necessary support, and we have literally been back from chernihiv for a week, and this incredible library, where we had joint events, the libraries of kotsyubynskyi and devzhenko, and... this library was damaged several times during the shelling of the occupiers, we remember, especially the second floor, the roof leaked there, there were no windows, it was a very difficult situation, and now a year literally passes, and we saw a completely modern, beautiful library that gathers full audiences, film screenings,
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discussions, debates, for me it's a kind of miracle, for me it's about some kind of so great resilience, resistance of each of our communities that it really fascinates. and since you have already started talking about chernihiv oblast, i will mention one moment, because tetyana and i were together on this very trip, and together with other beautiful members of pen, and again with kateryna kalytko, sofia andruhovich, with vakhtan kybululadze, and here in novohorod siverskyi, which is actually a border area, so there 20-30 km to the russian border, one man got up on meeting, it was extraordinary... but such a sincere conversation, and he told us this, he says that you won't believe it, but ukrainian writers have not come to us since 1989, 89, and we were all very impressed then, i remember,
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that the soviet authorities took very good care of ensuring that there were contacts between artists and writers with people farthest from... from the center in the provinces, cities, towns, villages, even there on farms, pig farms, they gave concerts everywhere, some meetings, how can it be done now, that is, there is no such propaganda apparatus, yes, what would this contact provide, but contact is needed, no matter how you see it, that 's how you can organize it on some such a wider level, because peng will not be able to anyway. to make such a contact, which is very necessary for both us and them, how can it be done? you know, i was also very impressed by this moment, this man's speech in novgorod-siverskyi, i also think about it constantly, and i think not only about the fact that it
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was part of the soviet propaganda machine, but also about the generation this is about 60-year-olds, so partly about dissidents who are not only because of the soviet system. and the opportunities provided by the soviet authorities, but also at their own request, they really wanted to go to the people, of course, it was just the soviet authorities - they tried to instrumentalize this instrument, but in fact these contacts, but on the other hand, i heard about these meetings in the same chernihiv, they remembered how both pavlychko and drachi had come there with such enthusiasm that the leading, main ukrainian writers came to us to talk like this with us, with their readers, that is, this is a very important moment and that community, about which we talk a lot today. we say, yes, the community of six thousand people, their influence, their desire to know and feel their country, yes, their, their lands. ah, when i think about these experiences in general, i think about the fact that even before the age of 22 i traveled a lot, we had two
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programs, a lace, within the framework of which we travel to the district centers of ukraine, in our there was a rapprochement program, we went to big cities, but during these volunteer trips i realized that i... don't know my country, i'm always very i traveled a lot, i was in all regions of ukraine, but now, when we go to small towns, when we visit villages, even in these communities, i realized that we don't do this much and that i don't know my country, so it's obvious , that it should be continued , travel even more, and now other initiatives are appearing, yes, initiatives of public organizations, the publishers' forum is now also traveling with a book initiative to the regions, but for sure this will never be enough, and it is obvious that we have to leave and at the state level, when the state, state institutions too will use all opportunities for writers and artists to travel. all regions of ukraine, do you remember that this opinion was also voiced in novgorod-siversky,
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that it is possible that if there were more of these contacts, these conversations, yes, about what we live in, then the situation in this region would be different, here we would read more ukrainian books, and no one knows how the military actions there would take place, and this is a very painful moment, it is addressed to ukrainian artists, it is addressed to us by these people, we need to think about it now of course there is a great difficulty. with safety moments in these trips, these stories, but at the same time we see and are convinced by our experience that it is possible and that this is most importantly extremely necessary, by the way, not only in novogorod siverskyi, but also in general in these border areas in the territories , the opinion that there is no such thing as a vacuum, one way or another, is the absence of the absence of ukrainian culture, that's how it was filled. television, which was russian-language and pro-russian, russian performers,
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russian books and so on, i.e. where there was a void, it was filled with something very foreign, i want to show another excerpt from the film about mykolaiv, which is dear to me, about pen's trip to mykolaiv, because it makes it even more clear how he actually communicates . with local libraries, local cultural figures, what conversations they have, these are very small fragments, but they give this understanding, please, then we removed all this, because we were preparing for evacuation, and we haven't opened the books yet. firstly, and secondly, two-thirds of the team absent, so some of our departments
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are working, which are not yet, to date 58 libraries are damaged, 58 of them, i will tell you very briefly what we are doing here, everything we see, we will tell, it is very important to be physically present, as in the ukrainian language, as well as in the krimispotar language, because it is important for us to maintain the kameshtar identity , including in the occupied... this is one of the key threats to the occupiers, strong national, ukrainian and kremstar languages are identical, we will need more and more new books, of course, because people, no matter how hard it is, they still read.
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been to mykolaiv, what do you remember about mykolaiv, what impressed you in mykolaiv on that trip? you know, every time i watch these videos or see some photos from our trips, i have the feeling that i see my own people, ah, library managers, library workers, people we return to, in which we now we often ask for advice when, when we go in this direction, and mykolaiv is absolutely just our hometown, we are very close friends today with... with their libraries , that is why i am filled with such great joy that i see, see these faces and
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remember this experience, in fact, this trip was at the same time as kherson, we first went to mykolaiv oblast, then from there we went to kherson, and i remember this library first of all , how we were met, what questions were asked, what this library looked like, that is , even in those difficult conditions, we know that mykolaiv too... was in very difficult conditions in the first months of the invasion, but despite this they show that here we are already windows replaced here we have old prints they showed you, old prints show, here we have... a piece of rocket fell right in the yard, it didn't explode, we continue to work, and they told how they went to the library, even on the most difficult days, when people tried not to leave their homes, but they went to check what was happening here, whether the books were safe, tried to keep in touch with their audience, it really fascinated me and still fascinates me, and in fact mykolaiv also
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encouraged us to extend our help in this way libraries, we started, in addition to that we ourselves purchase and... we bring new books to the de-occupied front-line territories with our penbus, we also started to announce a general ukrainian collection of books, and we managed to collect even more publications for mykolaiv and kherson, and these are such active people that they try not only to help the city, the region, but it seems to me that they also help the whole of ukraine, with their activity and everything they do, everything they do today. i want to ask you more about such a unique phenomenon, about like volodya ermolenko, a philosopher, and the president of the ukrainian foam and his wife tetyana oharkova, they collect money on the cultural podcast platform of their kultpodkast, and almost every time, well, not every time, but very
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often, they bring not only books, but also a car, like for the armed forces of ukraine. which they buy with the money they raised on this podcast of theirs, i wonder how you see the reaction of western intellectuals, foreigners to this, in general, how they perceive it, because it is something unique for an intellectual, so that with on the one hand, and here is such an activity, and on the other hand, these people have to support their army in such a way, and it is obvious that they are often surprised by this, this question always sounds about the role of intellectuals in the conditions of war, this is already such a question, with which it begins almost every international event where we are invited, and i always talk about ukrainian artists who are at the front today, who joined the army, tell their stories, tell how they explain this decision to join the army and
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defend their country today, and tell other stories, i always say that so many of our authors joined the ranks of the armed forces, all the others became volunteers, i always say that in ukraine everyone is a volunteer, and then i tell separate stories, in particular i tell the stories of tetyan and volodymyr, i am also talking about the history of the cult podcast, it arose as a project even before the full-scale invasion, and according to my feeling, as a listener, this project was designed to show ukrainian culture, as an absolutely obvious part of european culture, so it tells... ourselves and to remind who are our artists, who are these large-scale names of our culture, and then after the 22nd year, when tatyana and volodymyr are actively involved in information work, they still conduct dozens of broadcasts in different languages for a foreign audience every day, they begin to travel with humanitarian aid to the occupied
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territories, and then they also come to this realization and decision that everything... they do, everything that sustains culture today, it must also support our army, and for border always when asked how to help ukraine, how to help writers or artists today, the first thing we all say is please support our army, it is the main partner of ukrainian culture, and the story of the cult podcast is actually a very strong example and a very strong metaphor of how ukrainian culture today supports his country and supports his army, tatiana and volodymyr. organize many initiatives to raise funds, they continue to record podcasts in different languages, and in particular all the events that take place in our space, our apartment owners, they are all aimed at raising funds for the army and buying the next cars. i think that, in fact, ukrainian culture today cannot have another scenario, ukrainian culture should
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also work to support the country and support the army. tanya, thank you for this conversation, tetiana teren, executive director of ukrainian pen, was our guest today. you understand that supporting culture is a part, a very important part of our resistance to russian aggression. if you want to support a ukrainian book, ukrainian culture, do it, help the kherson libraries, help the podcast cult, help the all-ukrainian collection for damages. libraries, and in this way we will only be stronger and our culture will be stronger. thanks for being with us today, see you in a week. exclusively on the air
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of our channel. congratulations, friends, politklub is on the air on the espresso tv channel. the most relevant topics of the week: russia's war against ukraine, the war in the middle east, the crisis on the border between ukraine and poland. topics that cause drone attack on kyiv and other cities of ukraine, drone attacks on moscow and other cities of russia. analysis of the processes that change the country and each of us. ukraine should get the right to start negotiations on joining the eu. vitaly portnikov and the guests of the project: we are bored, because there is nothing to fight about, let's invent something, they help us understand the present and predict the future. for the world , trump's second presidency will already be. a project for those who care and think politclub every sunday at 20:10 at espresso. hello, this is svoboda
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morning, an informational project of radio liberty. top guests every day. this is korabelny district, kherson. turn on live. we stay somewhere in the vicinity of bakhmut, we tell the main thing. on weekdays at 9:00. 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 they also say, let's have better roads , we will have even better ones. a special look at the events in ukraine, there will be some katsaps on the border of kyiv and beyond. what kind of world is mr. norman dreaming of, can we imagine it? go out all this in an informational marathon with mykola veresny saturday 17:10, sunday 18:15 at espresso. vasyl zima's big broadcast. two
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hours of airtime, two hours of your time. two hours to learn about the war and how the world lives. two hours to keep up with economic and sports news. two hours in the company of favorite presenters, presenters who have become like family to many, as well as distinguished guests of the studio. events of the day in two hours, vasyl zima's big broadcast, a project for intelligent and caring people, in the evening for espresso. channel espresso and ukrainian pen present own names project with myroslava barchuk. a series of conversations with ukrainian and western intellectuals who analyze and comment on the most relevant social debates. we will find out exactly what news the guests of the project will analyze this week and who will be the guest of the studio this sunday. undoubtedly, the topics will be relevant, the guests - special. proper names with myroslava barchuk. sunday: 17:10 at espresso. watch voli this week.
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the national anti-corruption bureau exposed the bribe in august 2018. then €500 the judge received a decision to extend the powers of the arbitration administrator in the bankruptcy case of the company. volodymyr bulka asked for five bottles of champagne. the bribe giver said: five - is it in euros or not? dollars after being exposed for bribery in 2018, judge bulka submitted his resignation and went on an honorary pension with a lifetime allowance. if the judgment becomes final, the resignation and benefits will be suspended. in ukraine, a competition for the selection of candidates for the positions of judges of the constitutional court is underway. he chooses judges for the first time advisory group of experts, a specially created body for a comprehensive independent assessment of moral qualities and professional competence. and experts have a lot of work, not all applicants can boast of integrity. not always everything happens as indicated. this is maksym muzyka, judge of
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the economic court of khmelnytskyi region. in 2011, the judge purchased a new hyundai santa fe for $3,800 when his combined annual income was three times less. part of the funds that were used for the purchase of the specified car were my funds. and a part provided by my parents, i indicated this in my written explanations. of course, parents are a classic judicial inexhaustible source of money. however, the advisory group of experts was not convinced by the explanation. we have not been able to find out the complete source of the income for the acquisition. your mother's income in 2011 was 361,000 ukrainian hryvnias. and if you take into account that your mother incurred expenses in the process of entrepreneurial activity, this amount will be somewhat lower. so, your mother had
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personal daily expenses. so that's the problem, because we can't find one the amount of those savings, even on her part. experts also drew attention to the fact that the judge's father also bought a new car worth 30 to 40 thousand dollars in the same year 2011. well, it doesn't match at all. in 2019 , maksym muzyka bought an apartment for half a million hryvnias, for this he took a loan from the bank and did not do without breaking the law. bypassing the provision obliging to carry out settlements under notarized contracts exclusively in non-cash form. i know the law, but life is much more complicated than we imagine about him. but maksym muzyka neglected the norms
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of the law not only in this part. for example, in 2012-13, he did not declare a plot of land with an area of 1000 m2. the explanation is brilliant. probably, for this we need to go back to 2012-13 and remember how the declaration was made. the declaration, well, i will say frankly, was formal. maksym muzyka is a doctor of philosophy, less than six months ago he defended his thesis, but at the interview he could not remember the names of those who helped. to obtain a scientific degree, the recidivists were her women. in addition, to music many questions about plagiarism. he forgot to indicate the authorship of the sources he used, and even in the midst of a full-scale war he used russian sources. i did not indicate in several of my articles, there were no references to the authors. yes, this is unacceptable, i agree. we will find out
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soon whether maksym musika will become a judge of the constitutional court of ukraine. and this is another candidate for the ksu, oleksandr radutny. he is an associate professor of the department of criminal law at yaroslav the wise national university of law. maybe, declaration is a kind of dialogue. oleksandr radutny, according to the declaration, has two garages, two apartments and a residential building. and all this at a cost of 1 hryvnia. the candidate for the constitutional court does not calculate well. i tried to translate karbovan several times. in hryvnia, at other times of filling out declarations, i wanted to point out, well, in order to give my explanations about this 1 hryvnia, of course, that 1 hryvnia attracts attention, i wanted to do this actually for the sake of dialogue. radutny's calculations do not agree not only because of money conversion. last year, he submitted two declarations, one annual, the other for a competition, to the constitutional court, filling them out with a difference of several months. during
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this time i forgot. how much did the ford car cost him, whether it was uah 90 or uah 70,000. radut does not explain, he bought it abroad and imported it to ukraine almost as scrap metal. i have documents in my hands, none of which contain an amount, how much did you get? and i paid different amounts, like different amounts? and paid for the auction, this car was purchased after the accident at the auction? well, how did you pay for the auction? through a private bank? everything, that is, in you have documents, all these documents are with the state registrar of this vehicle, i only have the certificate in my hands, because after it was imported, after it was repaired, it was not yet considered a vehicle, so how can the doctor of law , associate professor of the department of criminal law, who...
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