tv [untitled] March 29, 2022 2:30am-3:00am MSK
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a large car, a twenty-ton truck, so they told me it was my own property. yes, they said, vova, we really need humanitarian assistance. you help us more. here. if you bring it to us in moscow, they collect it, but we cannot deliver people, other cars are simply afraid to go there. here. well, what did the commanders say? i said, as he says, so be it. so i began to carry this help. i fell under shelling and fell more than once. here, we even got sanya when i took her out. here's to us when we went out with her we were beaten from the city, the asphalt was on fire. she climbed into the sleeping bag covered. we had three armor plates on top of her and that's how we went out with her. they thrashed iz grad because the car is very large , it was noticeable twenty tons before. i still got hit. before, i just had a mine under the car, the wheel was torn, it was torn off. here is the sled. how did you meet? well, we got to know each other. i just went
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to moscow for another humanitarian aid and i’m already driving up to the house here, almost to moscow, so i opened something on the tablet and saw, but something was there written about anya, namely the story. here i am and she is there, but i wanted to, because i am very much like this on the internet. well, i'm not very good at using it. i wanted to get away from there, but it turned out that i did not invite him as a friend. and at the moment i didn’t have a single social network at all. that's the kind of life we lived that i had when it wasn't our children who didn't watch computers. we were all in the gardens. they worked from morning to evening. that's real life lived not online. i, frankly speaking, they created me when i was lying all of the wounded in the hospital was created by relatives of all these pages. i didn't know how to use it at all. i just poked everyone in a row and added when hmm they decided to prosthetize me. for a long time i walked without a prosthesis at all. hands on donetsk and the head
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of the association for the rescue of children she has a bardat. he, in the future, then nominated me for the nobel peace prize, decided to prosthetics me so that i could hug children with both hands, and they could not take me out. so vladimir took on such a responsibility that bring me to russia to make documents, because to come to ukraine for a passport was tantamount to death for me, which at that time was already all over the world. i gave an interview to the media about what the commanders of the forty-fourth brigade shot. i'm already in espch. yes, she filed documents about the murder of the family in court. and vladimir decided to take me away, so that they would make documents for me, registered with him, applied to the state duma, and a week later. i had refugee status, and in two i was already flying to italy prosthetics applies, you know, zakhar was like that once, not well, and for some time there was no way for
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zakhar to leave him somewhere. he went with me to work for a week, he went somewhere with me all the time. i'm because it is on this machine that i still have to work in order to somehow live . mm, it turned out that we worked in the sheremetyevo region all the time. here, and he will see the plane. that's all. time is screaming, my dad flew there. there my dad starts crying. i didn't know how to calm him down. here and then in once again at home. while i was there, i drove him in a small car to the kindergarten. here we go and the plane flies again. and he looks at me. you know my dad flew far, far away and will never fly back. and i wish i had a dad. here it is behind me. so it clings to me says. can i call you dad, huh? you will come back again vova and he will be dad , you know, i already have tears right there. i stopped right there at the crossroads, hugged him
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, i say, you can, and now after that he is already 9 years old. so he never called me , dad is different all the time, and little milana , of course, from the very beginning she began to call dad everything, so vladimir brought us. she just started to walk and still held on to the walls for a year and 3 months she was an. and you have someone left in the donbass . brother's children, brother, after 2 years after all this, 3 years ago, he died of cardiac arrest. he could not survive my tragedy, we have a difference of 7 years with him and now 2 weeks ago died, dad, he also lived in gorlovka. and as i understand it, gorlovka suffered greatly. on july 27, we called it bloody sunday. we were subjected to artillery strikes, all the central streets. three times in one
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day. on this day, 22 civilians died in our country, 43 were injured. on this day, the gorlovskaya madonna died with the baby in her arms, the temples were burned in the school. i don't have katya. how many years already, and the school has already been smashed from the foundation twice before the foundation. people were restoring kindergartens beaten in the hospital. all the children were shooting at the maternity hospital. we once i came with my husband to receive humanitarian aid. she had a large dc was on the street. lenin and arrived, and there are a lot of corpses. it's destroyed there. this is right in it. from the grad, a full pick-up point with grandmothers, humanitarian aid, people stood at the bus stop. all completely from the city, they shot large crowds of people . many of our children have died on playgrounds. vladimir and you are still carrying cargo. yes, i
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'm going back in april. how are you now knowing a little bit of the situation there assess the state of affairs. well , to be honest, i'm glad that now our leadership has made such a decision, er, to carry out such an operation. here, why am i asking, because people fled, not only because they could die at home patrols, and they did not run from anonymous rocket bombs there. they were running from very specific people. today, many are campaigning calling for ill-treatment of russian soldiers and residents of donbass let's see. so it's unclear. what a day of war in my opinion, i say 18, the guys came to the front line and do a life hack to identify guests so that they never forget what they did in ukraine, i
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think it will turn out to be a credit. i want to contact my relatives. because i think you should be afraid. we must be afraid for our husbands, who are now in ukraine and are following these criminal orders. you must be afraid and must understand that sooner or later. uh, our place will find you. you must be afraid and understand that sooner or later you will become a wife, because months the ukrainian people you will find either resorts and resorts in turkey where you will fly for the money earned in ukraine in ukraine. i instructed my doctors to eat a great humanist and announced that as soon as a person, but now a very strict order for all men to fire, because it is cockroaches are people and believe me, all the doctors who are all alive saved the patient in the russians
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will die here in large numbers, those who lead will remember the nightmare of the ukrainian land, as the germans remember. what is a real freak ball? it's just that in the first case, a woman who is a mother herself speaks. someone's daughter, what does she even carry, in the second case, the doctor burns, as far as my memory serves me. the hippocratic oath sounds the same all over the world. is not it so? what is he saying? i know for sure, i have talked more than once with those who went through the great patriotic war, for some reason our doctors during the great patriotic war helped all the wounded, everyone, not even forgive me as a fascist. and certainly not castrated in the fourteenth year. i ended up in the village of luganskaya there was a hospital. and the head doctor of the hospital
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said that he had a principled position, that we treat everyone with this, that is, not only the great patriotic war, but even now our people in the donbass remain merciful. even to the most cruel enemies. this is a distinctive feature, probably, of a russian person in touch with our studio, alexandra mikhailovna valkova. you are with us yes, i got to know your biography a little bit, i was horrified by that is, the situation in which you found yourself, you can tell us when it was, what happened to you and the main thing is how they avoided death there. it was in the fifteenth year. january 27, i valko alexandra mikhailovna was a deputy of the pervomaisky village council of the isinovatsky district, held a referendum
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and fed our people helped our militias. when did ours retreat? who came right sector dnepr alone, azov january 27 i was taken prisoner at 23:00 at night broke into the house break in the door around the perimeter were 12 people with machine guns in balaclavas, all such big tall hefty men. oh, of course i was scared. they took me right away telephones, said documents and told to dress. i got dressed. they didn’t wrap my hands with scotch tape, they pulled a hat over my head, they also tied it with scotch tape and took me out into the street. and they put me in the car and took me. there is
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such a mine-russia, and they vytush me there, who brought me, of course, they beat me on the way. well, like blows, like this, to the side. it turned out on the ribs on the liver hit. in general, when they brought me to this mine. they began to pull me somewhere. i walked along the floors, they pulled me by the hair and by the hood. i fell, and the steps were iron and i have broken legs, what were you accused of? actually, i was exchanged that i was a radio operator, that i was transmitting some coordinates, they handcuffed me for 11 days. i was in handcuffs, when they later brought me to the room, they put me near the wall, and then they started beating me. some questions were asked.
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that i’m a traitor to the motherland, that i’m a terrorist, they beat me with a rubber mallet, that they were laying tiles, they beat me in the face, i have a fracture on my face here, here, here it’s fused, but not here, it doesn’t grow together, it falls there. and the nose was broken broken teeth. it's compound after a while. they brought me an open can of canned food and poured it into a disposable plate, but they didn’t feed me, they didn’t give me water there. well, where everything was broken in my mouth and this and he eat. this is our ukrainian borscht. and so he brought it to my face and poured this sprat in a tomato
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on me, naturally it got into my mouth. i felt that there was sand. then one military soldier said. that he opened a jar and poured it on the ground and said, now we will feed her borscht, collected it together with garbage and sand and brought me something to eat for 19 days. i was not taken to the toilet. i was never allowed to wash. well, do not wash, do not wash. well, imagine me constantly killed , souls came or took me by the throat and beat me against the wall. i fell, lost consciousness, then i saw, only berets of the forty-fifth-forty-sixth size. they kept me in a room. i call it the freezer , when i went there, i saw traces of bullets. this time and hastily, mashed blood. so it turns out that people were killed there, shot,
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how did you get out of captivity? i was taken to court. i am arrived. well, how they led me, and i also, firstly, lost weight, i have pants. i managed them to me when the handcuffs were removed. i was able to fasten them here on a wire so that they would not fall off me, to be honest , well, it was a terrible sight for me, first of all, it stank a lot, and when they brought me to court. this investigator, the prosecutor, had a shock there. they had a set table on the table, champagne, cognac, there were cakes, snacks, slicing balls, and when they brought me, they were shocked, they were horrified, where did you get this homeless woman. you say, bring her out and you are still going to bring her to mariupol for trial now after the verdict. you won’t take the embroidery and then she says, let’s
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say, you will appear on the agenda at the red army commandant’s office. i said yes. then sign here, when she gave me a pen , this is the investigator. i don't have nails. i have long beautiful nails. they tore them out to me along with the meat. all nails were well, green fungus, i went to the nails. i signed well and me then. well, as they were taken out, they were released. thank you for telling these nightmares. i think that those who listened to you now and who mentally put themselves in your place should understand what the russian federation itself is doing in ukraine now. thank you, alexander
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mikhailovna, now on a direct line. please tell us, we have some questions clarifying what you just said. and you can identify these bastards who beat you to testify in fate, who mocked me were always in balaclavas, they did not see their children, and the prosecutors were an investigator. maybe in time i will be able to to identify, and you may have left some documents, therefore, you told the case, how the court conducted you, there is something that will help, as a result, to bring these bastards to justice. you understand that alexander mikhailovna, that when they beat you in balaclavas, they were well aware that they were committing crimes. yes , the right sector of azov, banned in the dpr and in russia, for mockery of the civilian population, which
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did not take up arms in their hands, is still shooting and killing people. civilians they are 19 days from mine taken captive. i have 20 years of life. for all these years they should be judged by the people's court. thank you very much alexander mikhailovich zarina tell a. is it possible to judge these scoundrels, these bastards who put on balaclavas, were well aware that they were committing crimes, that it would be difficult to identify them. you know, in this situation it is extremely difficult to say that these criminals can be found. but we are simply obliged to return to the nuremberg trials. i would just like to say that something like this is bound to happen. we have to necessarily. i mean the russian federation within the framework of those remnants of international law that we still have today on the territory of our entire planet. we must collect and somehow
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hold everyone accountable. who was involved in these atrocities, because she was beaten by people who are unknown to recognize their faces, how to find them. in this case, it is necessary to work together , it is necessary to raise these subpoenas, which gave her everything that she has in her hands today, all these material evidence that is not only with her, but with those people, after all, she is not the only person who was subjected to such atrocities on the territory of donbass, all 8 years such atrocities, bullying, torture, genocide of the population took place, and the russian federation must today take a leading position in this transformation of international law because today we are seeing a peak. this, i would say, even ignorance, legal, which may have questions for alexandra mikhailovna, because alexander mikhailovna, maybe someone else was in captivity with you, who can testify additional, maybe someone saw them, what else do you need to know? zarina maybe you can tell me what else. what else can alexander tell? i would
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like to clarify with you. and as i understand from your story, you, of course, were not provided with a lawyer. uh, during the interrogation. that is, i observe from your story a complete violation of the criminal law of criminal procedure not only of the russian federation, but also. criminal law of the entire international community listen to you alexander well, i think, when we get there for that side of it may day there will be people who know who did this to me, maybe they will help, not all the same people like me left here. after these tortures, some of them even let go home, so people will be happy, and i will be glad to meet them, and they will tell everything, and who it was.
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thank you for alexander mikhailov, do not even hesitate, we will find and prosecute to the fullest extent of the law. the information channel on the first continues to broadcast from alexander gordon and yuri baranovskaya. is there anything else for us tell colleagues, we listen to you. yes, people fled from death, and then and now they are fleeing. let's see how the evacuation goes. civilians , donbass tell the truth crying crying praying. that's how the temperature survived. i have a child in the country. sorry together water. everything is frozen water. did you really decide to run through the bullets there
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? the most terrible thing was when you were standing for boiling water for tea, but there was no shaking nearby. and the children are literally from 15 m away from you. if it had not been taken out in russia, then no one would have touched it. rusty water, probably, to fall asleep and at every knock on the door everyone will shudder, there is simply no more strength. at the studio, elena sapronova, in 2015, she and her family fled from donetsk elena
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hello, how did the hostilities begin for you. and for me, grief began back in 2013 from the first days of the uprising in the first days of the beginning of the maidan. on the third day, i already realized that some kind of power had come from here. it is not easy to stand and shout chants. eh, who does not jump, that is rock moskilyak to gilyak. glory to ukraine, it was clear that it was organized, that it was somehow very strong. such, probably, is the nazi government, which will continue to put pressure on the russian-speaking population to oppress the ukrainization by force that one hundred percent. our history will be, uh, a crossroads in favor of the nazis for another fight. the slavic ones had just begun, and at this time. i just got a call from slavyansk. my friend lena tells me
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i'm sitting in the basement now, they came here, the nazis are beating us. uh, it's scary that something is scary that what's going on, if i die, tell them we were killed by the nazis, and she says, you have no idea what hmm they did to my brother. uh, it means that the guys from some neighboring village there, which were nationalized very pro-ukrainian, pro- nazi, pro-bandera, came to catch her brother. uh, they beat him. so that there they broke his ribs, there they broke his legs, well, in general, he says, thank god they didn’t kill him, and he and his mother hid. eh brother. in the basement then abruptly after the new year's eve. this is the beginning of january, the fighting begins . everything is booming. airport bombed roar stands such that you know it just walks with a tremble, the earth's house
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moves with all the neighbors. these are the strips glued crosswise with adhesive tape so that, well, at a certain distance, it saves from flying glasses. yes, and when a shell exploded near our house, uh, we quickly got together and everyone came to my mother. mom has a basement in a private house, a basement and then a basement, when i was preparing for the program, that all this time we had a diary we asked you to read some fragments from your diary, and then we will discuss it ok. to describe what happened next is not enough no words, no nerves, but i will try the basement night on the floor of the bed for everything that can insulate the cold floor on the frost outside. we go to bed 11 people. we
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lie in a row in fear and despair, we pray for salvation , we pray that the ukrainian authorities will soften their hearts, that wisdom will come to them that they are committing nazi genocide of their own people. we pray, mother russia. save us for god's sake. i hear hail flying over the roof of the house, it's such a feeling, creepy. like it's rattling fast such shuh-shuh very such fast sharp and a little later there is an explosion. in short intervals heard howling in the chimneys from the wind of war and it's yours i'll never forget. i lay with my head covered. with
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inflamed eyes, i thought about the people who survived the great patriotic war. they were also bombed by the fascist government, this is dishonorable. this is grief. i personally really dreamed that it was vladimir vladimirovich putin who would be my president, i believe him, he is the best , and we even argued among ourselves that hope is only for putin if he is for all of us russians ukraine is not. how many people have we seen running on foot, you know, they have no transport, and they are with bags with e. you know, these are like in a cage, which is with some kind of bags. here are children, here are pale. here they are, scared. uh , the houses, uh, that lead to the border were all literally destroyed, and this kind of destroyed houses and
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shells protected by bullets. this, of course, was just terrible. and so, when we went to the russian federation finally, i am in my homeland, as in the church they received in the orthodox there and with things and helped. uh, there is one family of my son completely sang from head to toe in good things and there was a relationship and fed and treated and there was work.
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to live to live during the war is, you need to narrow your emotional window, you need to compress it. sorry this condition. i don't know rice grains. you see, this is what scares me, but when you get used to it. we discussed some kind of domestic violence a hundred times, and when a person gets used to it, when he survives, if he doesn’t get used to it, when it becomes,
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well, the norm for the xxi century, but on the twenty-first day? well, that is, how to go to the basement with a child, it is no longer scary. it is the norm for the sound to determine that it is flying, and then as a, then either rehabilitation, or they will remain there. or they will start to take revenge, because this becomes the basis of the personality together from behind. i remember february 19 already collecting things from the office. i get a call to my work phone. i understand the phone, distinguished colleagues. they say that tomorrow you will urgently fly to rostov -on-don, because i am coming these are pupils of orphanages for several luhansk need to be provided. help support, i remember i was raised by a boy. and he says, thank you very much. i say what is your name? are you talking? he keeps saying, at least i can eat and sleep in peace, i don’t smell the damp basement and this
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cold, because we were assigned to the basement almost every night, because there was a bombing. i remember how my friends went to the corners of our country. even abroad, they called asking for help. i remember when we used to buy almost 50 for 50 for 100.000 rub. medicines, stationery, vegetables, fruits, clothes, and i remember when i met the director of the orphanage , announcer alexandrovna. she just cried , thanked, but thanks for the fact that we are russian people who extended a helping hand. as an orphanage, i ended up next to the children and with them together, and you know, i am once again convinced that what our president does is great to him rostov-on-don and other points during his stay helps the refugees we transfer. according to our colleagues, the program time will show the information channel continues its work.
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