tv [untitled] August 7, 2024 6:00am-6:30am EEST
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comes from ordinary estonians who collect or provide humanitarian aid, but just yesterday i read that three estonian non-governmental organizations, which have been helping ukraine for more than 2.5 years, again sent a new convoy to ukraine. of aid and there were medical products, and drones, and military aid for the front, for the army, for rescuers, they help and the aid continues to arrive and even increases in volume, because, as i said, this is a hobby. ukraine, it is very big in
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estonia, and every day we are shocked, the brutality of the putin regime, that he continues, this brutality is happening, and of course, our support will not decrease, it will only increase, well, this is a mutual admiration, i must tell you, we admire the estonians, for their support and help to ukraine from the very beginning, because in some countries i'm trying to... look for some things to justify the fact that they don't want to help, and we admire the estonians, who have helped and supported us since the first day of the war, madam ambassador, thank you very much for coming today to me and the last question for you, you have been in ukraine for a year, i understand that you have a busy schedule, you came to us after an important meeting, i mean for an interview, and you have many such meetings, but do you have time , did you have time this year in... ukraine, does it
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mean you have a favorite place in ukraine? when i came to ukraine a year ago, i told my colleagues that i am an ambassador in ukraine, not in kyiv, that i have to travel a lot and see how local communities live, i have to communicate with people. and yes, i was in kharkiv, in odesa, in rivne, in zhytomyr, of course, is our partner, a partner region, and has been in many corners of ukraine, and i think it is important to demonstrate to local communities that we support them, and we are not afraid to come to them, to come to these territories.
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because we understand that what they face every day are these attacks, shelling, alarms, and it is important for me to demonstrate that i am here, i am ready to provide adequate information to my capital, so that they can decide that more help is needed in that direction or in another direction, so what, i love your country very much, she is very beautiful, very. it's wonderful, every day i see more and more, surprisingly very beautiful things, and i really like the resilience of ukrainians, and by the way, i was also on the front line, at the beginning of march, i said that i needed to talk to the soldiers, see. what is happening at
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the front, and it was during those difficult times, when foreign aid began to somehow decrease or be delayed, and i then said that i needed to get this feedback from the front itself, so that i could pass this information to tallinn, that they could make the necessary decisions about what is specifically needed. that's why i will continue to travel, now i want to focus more on those areas that are facing more than everyone with the energy crisis, and understand what is specifically needed for these regions, so of course i will travel as much as possible, traveling lady ambassador, it is to her that we thank and thank for all the help and support we receive from the government of estonia and from the inter. estonians, who from the very
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beginning began to help us defend our country country, our independence, our sovereignty and our territorial integrity. madam ambassador, i thank you very, very much for joining this conversation today, thank all the citizens of your country for everything you do for us, this was an interview with the ambassador of the republic of estonia to ukraine anna likolk, who came to us a year ago and has already done a lot in this position. the espresso interview will continue, my name is yuri fizer, see you soon. we are looking for 17-year-old anna abazina, who disappeared at the beginning of the full-scale war in in the city of severodonetsk, luhansk region. the russians
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captured this settlement in the first days of the invasion. hanna was only 14 years old then. during all this time, there was no news about the girl, but i really hope that thanks to your concern, the child will be found. please look carefully at the photo and try to remember what hanna looks like. she has an oval face, straight dark hair and brown eyes. of course, in this photo, the girl is much younger than her 17 years, but i don't think that this will prevent her from being recognized. if someone if he suddenly sees anna abazina, or at least knows something about her possible whereabouts, he will not delay. and dial the short number of the magnolia child tracing service from any mobile operator 11630 women free. if it is suddenly not possible to call, write to the chat bot of the child tracing service in telegram. i also want to remind you that we are looking for six-year-old
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sashko hrytsenko. i have already told the story of this boy, also from the temporarily occupied territory of luhansk region, in previous programs. the child was abandoned by his mother. now sasha is trying to find his father, who is in an uncontrolled part of ukraine. we spoke with the man and now i will tell all the details of this frankly shocking story. she left the house and then returned, but then she left again and i did not know the whereabouts of her common-law wife. so, when a full-scale war began, a small one. sashko lived with his mother and his husband's grandmother in the city of lysychansk. this territory was occupied almost from the first days. at the beginning of last year, the child's mother left home and left sashka with his old woman great grandmothers from my native grandmother. yes, it was my great-grandmother and my grandmother. it was
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a long time ago, probably somewhere in the 23rd year for sure. this is the beginning of the 23rd year. i found out, this is it. maybe she threw it earlier on my grandmother who was willing to go up the mountain. she left the house. for a long time , the boy was taken care of by his great-grandmother, but soon the elderly woman died and the child was taken away by social services in the occupied territory. sasha was immediately taken out of lysichansky. all this happened about a year ago. the service came and took the child, after that i knew where he was, what he was, well, relatively i knew what for example, according to rumors, according to gossip, such that he was somewhere in alchevsk, then he was transferred to luhansk, and then his whereabouts are unknown. whether the child is still in the temporarily occupied territory of luhansk region, or whether the boy was taken to russia, it has not been possible to find out the father so far. the man, of course, turned to the police, but so far there is no clue to find out where his six-year-old son is. i
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'm looking for my child, hrytsenko oleksandr oleksiiovych, i'm asking someone who cried for him, if anyone can by signs some that will suit, boy, be a weasel. i will be very grateful to you. i appeal to everyone who sees this video, especially to the residents of the occupied luhansk region. look carefully at the photo of sashko hrytsenko. the guy looks 6-7 years old. he is thin, about 110-15 cm tall. he has straight light blond hair, an oval face, and brown eyes. he is a very kind child, he is very drawn to people. if anything, he liked to, well, play there. like all children, but this child has the status of cerebral palsy, he could not pronounce such formulations of what words there are, if there is any meaning. sashko has a medical diagnosis of cerebral palsy, which is why he cannot always formulate
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his thoughts clearly, but he is very sensitive and reaches out to people. if suddenly someone has seen the boy or knows where he might be now, call the hotline of the tracing service immediately. children magnolia by the short number 11630. calls from all ukrainian mobile operators are free, if suddenly there is no way to call, write to the chatbot of the child tracing service. we have created a resource through which you can report any crime against a child, in any city, at any time, just go to the site and report, and we will launch all possible mechanisms to punish the criminal. stopcrime ua. there are discounts until independence day on baneocin 20% in psyllany bam and oskad pharmacies. do you suffer
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from heartburn? i recommend izoto. isota interacts with the acid in the stomach, which leads to a reduction in heartburn symptoms. izota is your water if heartburn bothers you. there are discounts until independence day at eden. 25% in psarynyk, bam and oskad pharmacies. vasyl's big broadcast winters my name is vasyl zima. this is a big ether on the espressu tv channel. two hours of airtime . two hours of your time. my colleagues and i will talk about the most important things. two hours to learn about the war, about the military, the frontline component. serhiy zgurets. but how does the world live? yuri fizer is already in front of me and it's time to talk about what happened outside ukraine. yury, good evening. two hours to keep up with economic news. time to talk about money in wartime. oxendar morcha. next to me and sports news, i invite you to talk yevhena pastukhova, two hours in the company
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of favorite presenters, cultural news, lina chikchenina, our art watcher, is ready to say good evening, presenters who have become familiar to many, natalka didenko is already next to me, ready to talk about the weather for this weekend, as well as respected guests of the studio. mustafa dzhemilov, the leader of the crimean tatar people, is in touch with us, mr. mustafa, i congratulate you. good day. events of the day in two hours. vasyl zima's big broadcast, a project for smart and caring people. espresso in the evening. the journalist who joined the zsu is political expert who became a special agent, taras berezovyts in a new project on espresso. the real front is a thorough analysis of the main events. reports, comments of leading specialists and experts. analytics from the major of the armed forces. how to make sense of disturbing news and distinguish the truth from the hostile. and pso program realnyi front with taras berezovets every saturday at 21:30 on espresso.
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events, events that are happening right now and affect our lives. of course, the news feed reports on them. however, it was not enough to know what was happening. it is necessary to understand. antin borkovsky and invited experts soberly assess events, analyze them, modeling our future. every saturday at 1:10 p.m. with a repeat at... studio event with anton borkovsky at espresso. greetings to our viewers, this is the experience of war and i, iryna koval, today invited oksana vegovska, an infectious disease doctor, professor, dean of the medical university named after her, to our studio. bogomolets oksana, i congratulate you. but probably not everyone knows that
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you are not only a doctor, a professor, and a dean, but also a volunteer. therefore, today i want to you to talk about this experience of yours. congratulations. i want to start our conversation on february 24, 2022. so that you remember where you were, what you do. and did you think that everything would be exactly as it was? well, i think that everyone remembers this day, i am not an exception, on this day i found myself in the city of vasylkiv, which was one of the first to be affected, where the houses of local residents, the airport were fired upon and attacked, and after arriving there.. . and for my husband's mother, i realized that i could not just be in
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this city and began to ask, as a doctor, what can i do to help, how can i be useful, of course, the first thing that came to mind was to go donate blood, but through acquaintances i found out that there is territorial defense, and doctors are needed there, of course, of course, and so on. .. on the first day of the war, i became a doctor, a volunteer of shit vasylkova territorial defense. this is how my volunteering journey began. how long did you stay there? as of today, i remain a doctor of territorial defense of the vasylkov shield, i do not know where, at first we started and organized a medical point, where we provided aid to civilians as well, especially during attacks, my function was to provide aid at the place where
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the person was injured and to... take the person to the hospital, where the person was already operated on and provided with qualified medical care, and of course to provide assistance to the boys and girls who were volunteers, literally a month later a medical hospital with beds was organized and, accordingly, from the first day we were on duty there, that is, we lived there 24/7 for many days, and at this... pace i was there until october 2022, and at the same time, i was still working at the medical university and traveling to work, then it became easier, there were more of us on duty, well, the hospital
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is still functioning, well, i know that you started traveling specifically to the de-occupied territories and... and providing medical help to people in the de-occupied territories, most often, where exactly are you going? well, it started with a trip to kharkiv, i will never forget june 22 , when i got to this city, which i fell in love with and love very much, i was simply carrying medicine for the military, for my own, for example, students, combat medics . which were mobilized to different units and to different medical institutions, and on the way from kharkiv , my colleagues called me and asked how it is possible to provide help to people in kharkiv, conversation after conversation, i say, not only people in kharkiv need help,
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vasylkov also needs help , but i forgot, my first experience was chernobyl, i forgot. yes, it was chernobyl, it was de-occupied, it was immediately kharkiv, it was the de-occupied kyiv region, it was our entire kyiv region de-occupied, it was the first experience when we, together with our boys from the territorial defense, today was de-occupation, tomorrow we will visit boyarka, berodyanka and irpin and the entire zhytomyr route. directly to chernobyl, and then there was kharkiv, and then kharkiv oblast, zaporizhzhia oblast, donnytsia oblast began, and it went on like that, is it possible to somehow characterize all the cities, villages where you come with the group, and what you you see there
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most often, it all depends on when it was, whether it was, for example, the 22nd year. 23rd or is it now 24th year, the situation was a little different, well, for me, it affected me a lot what i saw immediately after the deoccupation of the entire kharkiv region, because we had such an opportunity, we, along with the military , were the first to arrive, that is, people had not yet seen medics after the deoccupation. psychologists, we didn’t see anyone to talk to, we are now used to all these shots, it was very impressive, destroyed infrastructure, destroyed hospitals, all medical facilities, it doesn’t matter, dispensary, hospital, kindergartens and schools, and of course
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destroyed, there were some cities that were destroyed, villages by 90%. often talk about what literally looted hospitals, yes, you can say everything, the equipment is taken away, even the beds absolutely, almost everything was taken away when we entered, the hospital may still have walls, but inside it was destroyed, it was burned, and it was obvious that it everything was taken away, well, plus - the first torture chambers, about which no one has yet spoken. for example, i know that my son, who also traveled with me, as a volunteer photographer, he took the first photos. shades that became known in the kharkiv region, and it was very impressive, because it's not just the walls, everyone
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has seen these photos, everyone understands what was inside, and back then we didn't talk about such things, but women, women who were sexually assaulted, women who were pregnant as a result... of this sexual violence, children who, in front of their eyes, someone from their family died, as a result of shelling or a sniper shot, children who became adults, children who did not look their age, both physically and mentally, and who worried about their own grandmothers, grandfathers, people who lived. because the occupation was different, it was long, if we are talking about donetsk region, it was longer than kharkiv region, that is, people who lived in dilapidated houses, people who lived and
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continue to live, for example, in the destroyed hospital in siversk, where we fell no longer counted, eight or nine times, i was very impressed by this, because there is a cemetery on the territory of this hospital, it is a cemetery of medical workers. who worked there, who died during one of the shellings, when i am in siversk, i definitely go there in order not to forget, it is very difficult, and for sure, we will never be able to forget it, most of the time, what do you talk about with these people, what words do you choose, and what do they say, well, we come first of all as doctors, so we ... were, as they are, because we have it's
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a tradition to go back to the place we 've already been, so i already have my patients, and they're already waiting for the doctor to come back, they 're talking about how they do their appointments or how they take their medicine, this is where people take their medicine. as prescribed and they are waiting for the doctor to come back, and i know oksana, after you probably saw everything, this is all the horror you are talking about, you went to school and started studying to be a psychologist, yes, yes, yes, well, i thought about this before, but somehow i i didn't have time for everything, but i was really impressed by the children. it was in zaporizhzhia, these were children from the occupied territories, teenage children, in whom i, as a doctor, pediatrician, detected suicidal thoughts and inclinations at the reception, it was not just one
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child, and therefore it had a very extraordinary effect on me, i passed on the news psychologist, but thought that i lacked knowledge, no looking at the fact that i have been working for many years of my life... with children, with their parents, so that maybe there is not enough, yes, that i need more knowledge in order to help, to provide psychological help, just like children , as well as adults. well , it's probably worth giving some advice to all those people who are watching us now, who live in the de-occupied territories, and i just remember one of our private conversations with you. when we talked about the fact that both adults and children, they have, let's say, not very strong, yes, we can say, health, and there is
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neglected diseases, and they can be neglected not only because of the war, but because before a person did not take care of his health, it so happened that the war, and maybe there are some chronic diseases, there was no way to treat them, what can you advise, which after? everything you saw, choose words to address people. well, i want to say, first of all, that you should remember that you are not alone, that the whole country supports you, there are quite a lot of volunteer organizations, both ukrainian and international, that come to the de-occupied territories to pre-front territories, and they provide various types of medical assistance, and at the same time... this is done on a regular basis, there are organizations in which there are ukrainian doctors, there are, for example, our organization, where
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they volunteer and come with us. and returning doctors from israel, the united states of america, germany, and from various countries. and it supports us and gives us inspiration. for example, yesterday, one of my friends from the united states of america, who came to conduct regular trainings in tactical medicine, free of charge for our students and for volunteers and applicants, for everyone. those who wish, he tells me that do not forget that you are my family, i have known this person since the 22nd year, and this is really important, because i understand that this is real, but do not forget that ukraine is my one and only a big family, and that's why you 're hurting, we're hurting, you're being shot at, we 're also being shot at, we're on the same page. if
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someone comes across, maybe with some other opinion, well, it's not for you to tell that people are in different psychological states, and that's why there can be such a reaction to stress, or was some such story in these de-occupied territories, where exactly did you come, which impressed you and maybe it is standing before your eyes, you still remember it, and it is always, it is us... if you always have to find it, it doesn't matter , how many adult children have you seen in one visit, you always have to find at least one whom you really helped and saved, that is, either it was an undiagnosed diagnosis, he could not have been diagnosed before the war, because either by mistake put, the same thing can happen, and you
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figured it out, put it correctly. diagnosis accordingly, correctly directed, if necessary for an examination, prescribed the correct treatment, and the child or adult recovered, it can be, well, for example, tell me who, who it was, who is interesting to hear about this, and it is constant, it is on every trip, well, for example, in the kharkiv region, it was a boy who at the age of 12 weighed about 140 kg, a boy, yes, i... my mother is small, thin, fragile, and i am very glad that she was still able to bring him, because he resisted, he didn't want to, er, we, just at the same time the doctor was at the appointment a neurologist, a psychiatrist, we looked at him comprehensively together, i looked over all the documents that my mother brought, er, i explain that it is about
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a disease in general. violation of the metabolic cycle, i found an extract, i say, that ’s what the geneticist told you, well, i say, look, she says, frankly, i didn’t get there, because the diagnosis was made literally before the war, i say, in kharkov there are excellent doctors of genetics, a medical center , mother still got there, he began to receive proper treatment. and started well to lose weight, that is, the quality of his life is much better, the main thing is that he is diagnosed and treated, how is it possible and where is it possible to get enough strength to work at several jobs, even in his free time, which, as i understand it, is not , this is how i show my free time, because i understand that there is none at all, and to study, i know that... and you study
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the german language at the same time on courses and go to the de-occupied territories, where do you find all the time for this and the very first inspiration because i know it's lacking right now many ukrainians give up when we read the news, when we understand that our strength is running out, and i simply believe that everyone should do what he knows best. "i know how to treat the best, so in this way i bring our victory closer, that is, it gives you strength when you understand that you are doing what you love, this is my specific contribution, this is my specific help, and this is my clear conscience,
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