again, no—one feels
safe in kharkiv now.
many businesses have left and people
are also gradually migrating
to safer places.
but many have stayed like,
for example, me and my colleagues
from the publishing house.
but many have stayed like,
for example, me and my colleagues
from the publishing house.
and for kharkiv citizens to stay
in the city and to continue to work
is a kind of important activism,
you know, and a manifestation
of and brokenness.
so, we don't want the city to become
empty and gradually die,
and kharkiv citizens are very
patriotic and they are ready
to stand for the city to the last.
so, it was a shopping centre hit
today and just a couple of days ago,
your printing press.
tell us a bit about
the impact on the factories.
are you able to function
at all now or not?
not at all.
at all now or not?
you know, factor druk is one
of the largest full cycle industrial
printing facilities in eastern
europe, and we are producing books
for all but a few ukrainian
publishers and...