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tv   [untitled]    July 28, 2024 5:00pm-5:31pm EEST

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in ukraine, it is the 17th and the newsroom is ready to tell about the main thing for this hour. two people were injured due to enemy shelling of kherson. the enemy attacked the dnipro district of the city from a drone, the regional military administration reported. the russians attacked the village twice with kababs. a residential building caught fire in simenivka, kharkiv region, the enemy also shelled stetskivka, during the day the occupiers launched two rocket attacks on slabytsky district of kharkiv. there were no casualties, the regional prosecutor's office reported. one of the transport vehicles was hit enterprises of the district. previously, x-type missiles, or x-35 or kha-59, were used for shelling. bomb technicians, forensic experts, prosecutors and investigators are currently working at the site. in order to establish the exact type
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of ammunition. residents of glukhov in sumy oblast are recovering after an enemy attack. she is reminded of the eruptions from shells on the roads, broken windows and burned out cars. rescuers continue to examine the sites of the shots. the day before, the russian occupiers hit the residential sector of the city with rocket launchers. another teenager died 13 civilians were injured, including seven children. even as people say, who were further on the outskirts, they heard more than ten, a strong wave, everyone was swept away, but where were you at that moment, you were not at home, you were not at home, it was just purely accidental, two children were injured due to the morning shelling of nikopol in the dnipropetrovsk region, the head of the region, serhiy lysak, said. he noted that many local residents were wounded by shrapnel, and in the morning nikopol was attacked by enemy drones. in a week, russia released ukraine
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about 700 kabs and more than a hundred shaheds. the civilian population of the country is under enemy attacks , president volodymyr zelenskyy said. he called on partners to protect ukrainians from the attacks of russian terrorists. according to the head of state, this is quite possible if the armed forces are provided with long-range weapons and high-quality air defense. tv channel spresso and blessings. vesna foundation opened fundraising for the purchase of modern drones and electronic warfare systems for the third separate assault brigade of the 110th and 47th brigades of the central military district. defenders in the donetsk direction every day they hold back enemy attacks, defend our freedom and future, it was these soldiers who stood to the last and defended the avdiiv direction in the spring. the brigades urgently need flying weapons and modern means of countering enemy drones. our goal is uah, remember, each of your donations
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brings our victory closer. good health, dear ukrainians, we, the fighters of the first assault battalion, the third separate assault brigade, who defend our native land on the front line, urgently need your help, we need means of radio-electronic warfare against the enemy's small bpola and kamikaze drones, we are very much asking for your help, glory to ukraine, glory. olenivka - a pain that will not go away in the capital's maidan museum, the memory of the dead prisoners who were killed by the russians in the olenivka colony is commemorated. our correspondent yuliya zubchenko works on the spot. my friend, my congratulations and tell me all the details. congratulations annoyeva. greetings viewers of the espresso tv channel. today in the center of the maidan museum commemoration of rek is taking place. for the fallen soldiers in
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olenivka. let me remind you that two years ago, on the night of on july 28 and 29 , an explosion rang out in the occupied territory of the donetsk region, in colony number 120 of the village of olenivka. before that, 193 military prisoners were transferred to this barrack, including azov citizens. at least 53 soldiers were killed and 130 were seriously injured. still a decent figure. the dead and wounded are unknown, i suggest listening to vladyslav dudchak, a military man from azov, who survived the terrorist attack in olenivka, and svitlana solonska, the wife of the person killed in the terrorist attack, vladyslav solonsky with the call sign osyp. a criminal, a terrorist country, a country of killers, currently chairs the un security council, has not suffered any, not a single punishment. crimes against
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our prisoners of war, therefore this event is an event to honor the memory, to support the families of the victims, and we remember. we all remember everyone, he was a defender of mariupol, then a defender of azovstal, then they carried out the order and went into captivity, and there in captivity he was transferred together with the soldiers to barrack-200, he was wounded during a terrorist attack, but this is how it turned out that they were not taken to the hospital for 5 hours and he was on the way died in cooperation with the national museum of the revolution of dignity, the families of those killed in olenivka also announced the opening of the exhibition "olenivka quintessence of cruelty". stands with photos and stories of the dead are already standing on independence square. that's all the information for now. anna eve, i give you ether.
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thank you for your work, yuliya zubchenko, espress correspondent, today is the second anniversary of the oleniv tragedy in ukraine. at night , the defense forces struck. attack on the polev oil depot in the kursk region of russia, it provided fuel to the russian army, a fire broke out, the general staff of the armed forces reported. the operation was carried out by sbu forces in cooperation with other defense forces. also at night, powerful explosions were heard in the area of ​​an electric substation in the kursk region. the consequences are still being clarified. the activity of russian subversive and reconnaissance groups has decreased in sumy oblast, but... the enemy has not given up on sabotage, noted andriy demchenko, the spokesman of the state border service of ukraine. russia is trying by all available means to enter our territory, but the fighters do not allow the enemy to break through. russians
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changed tactics in the black and azov seas. the invaders now rely on submarines, they are more difficult to find and destroy. it remained in the azov-black sea massif. one location where russian ships are located, the port of novorossiysk. vessels leave this base rarely and only for short-term operations, said dmytro pletenchuk, the spokesman for the ukrainian naval forces. also, the enemy increased the number of shelling from the territory of the occupied crimea. in the suburbs of moscow, on the square in front of the main temple of the armed forces of russia, lightning struck four russians - write the local public. previously, two men are in critical condition in the intensive care unit, and two more women are in the hospital. a ukrainian woman tried to bring an ancient icon to the czech republic. border guards prevented the theft. at the uzhhorod checkpoint.
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an icon of the holy mother of god in red was found on a passenger car, in the passenger car. it was seized by the customs officers, and informed in the western regional administration of the state border. services ukrainian film director oleg fialko passed away. he was 78 years old, the man struggled for a long time with sick, said the ex-head of the national union of cinematographers of ukraine serhii trimbach. fialko is known for his works, return of the butterfly, breakthrough man, yarolash flight and god's beach. the entire espresso team extends its deepest condolences to the family and the director. did not kiss the hand, get a slap. turkish president erdogan punched a little boy in the face who refused to kiss his hand at a ceremony in the city of rize. the turkish leader considers it disrespectful to himself. the video shows how the boy approaches
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president erdoğan, shakes his hand, but the child does not respond, for which he is slapped. look for more interesting videos on the espresso youtube channel, be sure to subscribe, because there are live ether broadcasts, all news releases, programs and special projects that can only be seen here. also a short video on hot topics in the shorts section, spread them , comment, be close. and you can always read more about important things on our website espresso tv, because my colleagues work for you around the clock, also subscribe to our channels on social networks and i say goodbye. i will be waiting for you at 6 p.m final release.
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she saw something that is hard for even a doctor to remember. she knows that... there is so much pain and a sea of ​​children's tears. in the first days of the occupation of buchi, she and her husband provided medical care there. now she helps wounded fighters to recover. and get back on their feet, is engaged in their rehabilitation. today i have as a guest the national legend of ukraine, a doctor, a pediatrician, and today a rehabilitator, olga svyst. olya, i congratulate you, today i am visiting. congratulations, irina. a very interesting way and very, probably, difficult, therefore what, if you imagine him from a pediatrician, a private clinic, to a mobilized military medic. i want you to share with our viewers your experience,
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the war experience that you already have, and i want to start with february 24, 2022, where were you at that time and how did you end up, in fact, in buch? on february 24, we were at home, we lived in the city of irpin, this city is located next to the city... bucha, and my daughter was sick, at that time, and had a high temperature, and accordingly i did not sleep at night, and i must have heard for the first time, when a rocket whistled over our city, and some 30-40 minutes later in the medical community, in one of the chats, i read that the first rockets landed at the boryspil airport, and my first words, waking up my husband, were that the war had begun, wake up, well, of course. as a mother, i wanted first of all to protect my children and give them safety, but
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i am a doctor, so accordingly in the morning a nanny came and my husband and i went to our workplaces, it was a difficult way to the city of kyiv, because the city was already being evacuated, it was a long road, and at that moment i took on such a distributed responsibility to accept the reception of children at the reception department of our clinic, the polyclinics were closed and accordingly the flow of children was in the reception department, and here at the reception of the pediatrician, probably to you on my last working day at the previous place work, i looked out the window and understood that all these children were going somewhere, it was not known where, they were all sick, and i had to make a decision then, how to plan their treatment, whether with an examination in a few days, or it is unknown when, and. .. in that at that moment i understood that it was unknown when, that is why the treatment was prescribed a little more than
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usual, somewhere around lunchtime i received a call from the military headquarters that i was being called for mobilization as a military medic, i had to show up with my things within the day, i asked time, a day to take the children to a safer place to their parents, that's how my first day of the full-scale invasion actually began, but in the evening, when i got... already home and after entering the house, the shelling began, accordingly, for the first time, we children went down to the basement from the 12th floor, it was too noisy, and i wanted to protect the psyche of my children, and when they asked me son, mom, what is it, i found such a solution that it was a game of who will go down to the basement first , and when we went down to the basement, i realized that my children were in... pajamas, i only had their documents with me, which i managed to take, and i understood that it was a basement, it was
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cold, and i should go home to to take some things, this is the first mistake, because we basically prepared and knew that something will be, and it was worth packing that alarming suitcase, i am now analyzing it, what should have been done, but at that moment i calmed down and went up to the 12th floor without using the elevator according to the previous recommendations, which were given to the civilian population , packed those alarming suitcases and the next morning tried to evacuate the children from the city of irpin, from the kyiv region, we succeeded, it was a long way, and already on february 26 we returned to the city of irpin, and literally in an hour they decided that we would again let's get involved in the medical community to medics who train and receive the wounded first civilians and soldiers. that's how we ended up in bucha. can you tell us about those
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first days in bucha, what did you do there and who exactly did you help? i had the idea that this is a gray zone, that is, there is a front line where active battles are taking place, and there are hospitals and doctors are not affected, that is, it is a safe place, the wounded will simply come to us. but later we realized that this was not the case at all, because when we first heard the automatic rounds under the windows, heavy convoys were passing through the neighboring streets. technicians and we could see it and even count it, fighter jets were flying over us, and we saw landing from enemy helicopters. , and with the advancing armed forces, wounded from
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during the defense of the airport, were also wounded. children, since the hospital did not work with children, because it was not a children's hospital, so i dealt with children and the wounded, and those who simply had an illness and needed medical help, and they ended up in this institution, i first came across gunshot and landmine wounds in children, and i had no experience before that, so we were looking for a network, i called my colleagues, i was interested in... how to act so as not to harm, how to make the right decisions in treatment of children. it was the first time i saw the amputation of limbs in children. and i needed to find the words to talk to the children, to explain. it was difficult. i remember one girl,
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sofia, she lost her mother and her cat during the evacuation. and lost it. her upper limb, lost her hand, she was in the palace, where there was a window, and the first thing she asked was to close the window, can i go to a smaller room, of course we arranged it, brought her to a smaller room, blocked the window, the children were afraid, we explained that the armed forces of ukraine were working, that they were protecting us on ... trying to protect them from the terrible truth that we all find ourselves in, from this reality, and in one of the conversations with sophia, holding her hand, she cried and said that i was riding, i want to continue it, and at that moment i promised her that you would do it, you would continue,
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we will leave, from here you will have a hand protest, and you will be able to do it, i know for sure that you will be able to. and so looking ahead, everything really worked out for sofia. sofia survived, evacuated with us from zbuchi, and she received prosthetics abroad, and even dreamed of writing a book, and she wrote it and published it, it's called don't wake up. there were also other children, you continue to communicate with sofia, yes, of course, we keep in touch. in fact with everyone who was then in bucha, and whom we evacuated, especially with all the children, and with together with their relatives, we are accordingly very proud of their achievements, there were also children who simply had various acute conditions that
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needed medical assistance, and i am proud of those parents who, despite the fact that after 5 o'clock it was extremely dangerous to move around the city , made a decision to save the children's health and reached the hospital at night, but this is something that probably everyone experiences in ukraine, when one part of your relatives is at home, and with the other you have to go to another city, and at this time you have danger is upon you, the bullets are flying at... time and rockets are flying, and now we provided them with emergency aid, stabilized the child's condition, and they cannot be left, they don't want to, they want to go home, because other relatives are waiting for them, they are worried about them, this family was also evacuated after a few days, they wrote back to us that they left, everyone survived, it was very happy news for us, of course, although
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we were still under occupation at that time, we were also advancing. cients, civilians, wounded who were trying to find food or water and were shot in the street, or grenades were thrown at their feet, in our a mechanism was worked out over time, who accepts patients in the reception department, who calls a team of surgeons, who collects information, whether there is a family member or not, and we worked in this format for about two weeks. did you manage to save everyone, who exactly did you save, and about this evacuation, what was it like? it was not the first time. that is, we were notified of the first day of evacuation, but i took care of the children for the most part, and my understanding was that on the first day
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you should not go, and this evacuation probably will not happen. a lot of people gathered in the square, uh, and that planned route, the green corridor, it didn't happen, that is, the buses didn't come, and it was terrible, we didn't collect the children, because we suspected... that it wouldn't happen, we didn't they were staying in the hospital building for the day, but many people were around in the square, and of course they wanted to stay here, either in the hospital or near the town hall, few wanted to go back to the basements for the night, well, such a great disappointment when you i almost survived and left, and you again we have to go back to that basement, but the next day, after all, with a delay... in time, the buses arrived, we managed to have our own bus for the wounded, that is, we had two buses with the wounded, and we started
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moving in a column with everyone, of course , we instructed everyone that if there were any shelling, then we should lean as low as possible to the floor of the bus, they understand that it might not save us, but... but glass is glass, and open windows, increased danger, we had for each patient packages with medicines, because we did not know how long the evacuation would last, and each of these patients received serious treatment with antibiotics, accordingly, each of them had their prescription sheet and these medicines, and we also managed to prevent hypothermia, that is, we had blankets, because they didn't even have suitable clothes, but they wore what they had, they took blankets, in principle, no one got cold, except me, because i must have had adrenaline, i was very cold during the evacuation, and now returning to the first turn
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at the intersection, on the bus it's like an automatic the queue passed, such a sound, accordingly, we all fell to the floor, but then we exhaled, it was a burning truck, a military vehicle, and accordingly, glass or the remains of some other parts simply passed along the paneling of our bus, and we continued to move in a column, once again we we were stopped on the zhytomyr highway, our route was changed, because the route that was supposed to run to the left was destroyed, cars were blown up, there was a fire. accordingly, we stood for some time on this road, on the open road, it was scary.
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at that moment, i was making a list to send to the dobrobutu clinic who could accept the most difficult patients for evacuation. we had seven of the most difficult patients. i will be grateful for the rest of my life to my colleagues who responded immediately and said: "we will take all the hardest." and that is, when we were standing, when we were driving, we formed a clear plan, where we would take these two buses of wounded, to which hospital we would send them, and who would be able to take care of them, and actually, who would take care of the wounded children. enemy tanks drove past us, we really didn't we knew how it would all end, but later we still got to the evening, we got to the already ukrainian land, near ukraine. flag, you know, my first feelings were that when i got off the bus, i was in a white coat, although i understood that it did not give any guarantees,
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absolutely, but it still defined me as a doctor, and when we actually arrived home to the evacuation point, and i approach her ambulance, the ambulance brigade, i say: i have 20 wounded people there, i need 10 cars there, at least to evacuate them, in there are two of you here, i say take half, they say we can't, this is our aid station, we can't move, and we had to move quickly, it was already evening, they are tired, they need to be given medicine, it's cold, it's march , and i approach one police officer, i say, can you help me escort? buses so that we could travel through kyiv through checkpoints freely and quickly, they are waiting for us in the city of kyiv in such and such hospitals, they agreed on our route and we
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, accompanied by... the police, drove the entire part kyiv, where we already have patients from our buses, ordinary bohdans, specialized medical transport at the station, that is how we got patients to different hospitals, and the patients got to the regional hospital, and they got to dobrobut, and they got to the 17th hospital, olo , here is this experience of yours about... you just talked about, the experience you got already during the war, how it helped you already now in the rehabilitation of the military, i would say that it was the beginning, the beginning of the formation of me as a different doctor, in that moment, having a call from the military commander and having experience of occupation in the bush with all kinds
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of injuries and... making quick decisions, that was the beginning of why i am in rehabilitation, i first saw children with amputations, saw people with amputations, with spinal cord injuries, garden cage injuries, combined injuries, and i understood that i wanted to be in this direction and help them, that is, you yourself chose this direction of rehabilitation, so you decided that you did, but i did not get there right away. at first i had a place of service in a military unit, as the head of the medical service, and my work there was a little different, i had experience in providing emergency care in civilian conditions, we went through it every six months in our clinic, it was a rule that we had skills in providing emergency care, but in military medicine it is completely different and... and one of my
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areas of work was also to master the provision of assistance in tactical medicine according to military protocols, but over time , my fate was such that i got into the field of military rehabilitation, and now i have been working in this field for the second year, and i it seems that i am in my place. this is the second year you have been working, and what can you say. about this direction in general, what are the main challenges you face on a daily basis, if we talk about rehabilitation in particular? the main challenge is our soldiers, these are ukrainians, these are our boys and girls who defend our borders and our freedom, and the main challenge is how quickly to restore them, how to return them to society, or how to return them?
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them to the place of duty, however, the vast majority of injuries are quite complex, and the rehabilitation process is long, and given the nature injuries, not all boys can return to military service, accordingly, one of the main challenges not only for me, but globally for us as ukrainians, is the integration of veterans, not only veterans, but people who...suffered from the war in ukraine, into society, and to provide them with the understanding that they are very important people in our society, and we have great gratitude, to create comfortable conditions for them, er, now we have many barriers, and this is not only in rehabilitation, but in general in moving around the city, yes? well, for example, a military serviceman, or simply a person with limited mobility
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a person who... moves in a wheelchair and or his daughter goes to school, then it would be very important for us as a society to create these conditions so that this veteran or just someone with reduced mobility could get to this school without obstacles, without outside help, or, for example, toilets, can we people with reduced mobility always... get to the toilet, no, not always, this is a problem, this is a problem not only in cities, it is also a problem in administrative institutions, in educational institutions, in medical institutions , now recently a textbook on barrier-freeness was announced, where various institutions were analyzed and specific recommendations were issued, as possible depending on the situation.

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