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tv   Our World  BBC News  February 19, 2023 9:30pm-10:01pm GMT

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this is bbc news, the headlines officials in turkey say most rescue efforts following the recent earthquake will end today, as hopes fade of finding anyone else alive. police in the north of england have found a body near where a woman went missing three weeks ago. nicola bulley was last seen walking her dog near a river in the northwest of england on january 27th. the us secretary of state antony blinken says china is considering supplying weapons and ammunition to russia for its war against ukraine. and at the bafta film awards in london tonight the first world war german—language film, "all quiet on the western front", was the big winner taking home seven awards including best film and best director.
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at ten o'clock, we will be here with a full round—up of the days news. first, ourworld: brits in battle: ukraine. on the battlefields of ukraine, you won't just find local soldiers... slava ukraini. ..but volunteers from all over the world. guatemala, portugal, america. ukrainian officials say 20,000 international volunteers have travelled to help fight back against the russian invasion. many of them came from britain. they needed help so that is why i got up and went. i've got a purpose in life out there. you didn't have any military experience previously? 100% civilian. from those who'd never held a weapon, to experienced soldiers,
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british volunteers are fighting and dying alongside the people of ukraine. i did not find out until the day before he was coming. a lot of people are like, why you are here and why are you doing this? is there a kind of war tourism? as i tracked down the people who did not have to be in this war, we find stories of bravery... get me a chest seal, open the bag. ..and friendship... everyone ok? i am proud of what i have achieved, but i'm proud of the guys who i am out there with. ..of a search for adventure and of sacrifice. i wish we could have kept him here. we are on our way to the ukrainian border to meet up with a medical team that are helping to evacuate an injured british fighter, but their ambulance has broken down and they have had to get another one so fingers crossed
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they will make it out. thousands of volunteers have made this journey into the conflict, and i am on a mission to find out what they have been up to. sharif from bristol travelled to ukraine a few weeks after the invasion. british volunteers who are ex—military are seen as bringing valuable knowledge and experience. another successful day of training with our team. and with his nine years in the british army, sharif helped teach ordinary ukrainian civilians medical and weapon skills before joining a military unit himself on the front lines. some big stuff's coming up in the next few days. so, i'm just making a video to say, hi, and i love everyone. but not long after he recorded this message, his unit came under attack and sharif was badly injured.
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had a tough night cause the anaesthesiologist wasn't in, so, yeah, that is my life at the moment. i have been in touch with sharif while he spent weeks recovering in a military hospital in the heavily bombarded city of odesa. say hi to the doctor. i am off to another operation. wish me luck. now, a british charity is helping him get to the border and back to the uk. but the journey is far from straightforward. apparently, he does not have all the right military paperwork so he might not actually be able to get out. as a contracted soldier with the ukrainian military he has been told he needs permission to leave and his document still has not come through but with his health at stake, the team take the decision to just get across the border.
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you made it! how are you doing? how are you? exhausted but i am good. i bet, i bet. should we get you in the warm? that would be amazing. helping sharif make thejourney, ewan and craig are medics who are usually evacuating ukrainian refugees but sharif is now the second british fighter they have helped return home. speak to the sergeant, the sergeant was very clear that had it been an ukrainian they'd have just amputated. meeting sharif is a stark reminder of the realities of war and the cause he chose tojoin. i felt that if i did not step up to the plate then i would not be true to myself as a human being because i have skills and to sit at home on my laurels and just watch this war happen where i could actually do something that could make a difference, save one life, train one person to use a rifle, teach somebody how to put a tourniquet on their leg. but to begin with, he says, not all volunteers were welcomed. a lot of people were like, why are you here? why are you doing this?
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a lot of people are running away from the country. but after a while a trust was built because we are fighting for a cause that we chose to join. i mean, there is negativity there as well. being called a tourist or whatever else. is there a kind of war tourism? there are a few people like that? there is plenty. they will go and see a blown up building, or they'll go carry a weapon and they'll do something for a month and then they'll go home. that fizzles out after a while. the attack which nearly killed him happened during an operation near the southern city of zaporizhzhia. we had been on a four—day operation but we pushed a little bit too far. we knew there were three tanks in the area. we pushed so far forward, that it was what we call a come on, where they moved out of the way, waiting for us to come in and then they came in and give us everything they had. before we knew it there were rounds coming down and it was just boom, boom, boom.
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he tried to shelter in a half—dug trench with a ukrainian fighter alongside. and every time a round would come down, i would lean to the left, he would lean to the right and try and grab each other�*s helmets and get as low as we could and it was only a matter of time and one of the rounds just sort of landed between our legs and blew upwards. i crawled out and then that is when the russians opened up the small arm fire and took out my left arm. what was going through your mind? i was positive that i was going to die. ijust thought, i am going to sufferfor an hour and then die. it is not like the british army where we have got some helicopters come and pick us up, we've got no morphine, it doesn't work like that out here. it is old school, second world war stuff. but their commander managed to get sharif out alive. he finally got a kozak vehicle to cross open ground under tank fire, picked us up and drove us away. an hour and 20 minutes i am still gasping for air with two punctured lungs, and i saw my hand hanging off. the right shoulder was splat
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open, the top of the right arm was shot and the bone�*s been destroyed, the forearm has been blown apart, it has been ripped out and the wrist is been taken apart. my stomach was torn open and put back together. what was it like recovering in that hospital? you are awake for these surgeries most of the time. it is time to continue the journey. sharif�*s ukrainian fiance is coming as well and there is little time to lose. he's to be transferred to a safe hospital in bristol where surgeons are going to try and save hand. if he stays in ukraine he is going to lose his hand. fighters aren't the only ones risking their lives in this conflict. ewan and craig have been travelling to some of the worst hit areas. we have been bringing people back across the border. i couldn't have sat at home
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and watched what was happening and not come in and actually take part. how do you fund this? a lot of personal money has gone into this and ultimately we rely on donations. the team have organized a medical repatriation flight back to bristol. despite life—changing injuries, sharif is still holding on to a determination to return to the front line. i am going back. you still want to go back? there is nothing else in this world that i want more than to be there with my boys. you nearly died. if it means that much to you then you're not going to start something and not finish it. it is an honour. but there will be some road to recovery. this is the last leg of the journey and then he is nearly home. they are bringing aden and they're getting us back. you are going to be missing him? of course, but i see him very soon. i hope. ready?
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pack your things. thank you so much. you have no idea. it is straight to the hospital for me, so, not a lot of bristol that i will be seeing it for a while. after nine months in the conflict, he is back on british soil. his a story of survival has caught the attention of the newspapers who have given him the nickname, rambo. the call for volunteers to enlist in the ukrainian military came from the president himself at the start of the invasion. "to the citizens of the world," he said, "come and fight side—by—side with ukraine." in what he called the beginning of a war against europe. i can understand why ukraine has been welcoming volunteers
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who have combat experience to help take on the russian army. but what about those who do not? these guys are getting together for the first time since being on the front lines and they have agreed to share a few war stories with me from months in the trenches. why did you go? i have seen what was going on in the news. they are firing on civilians here. this is just like terrorists what they are doing. you did not have any military experience beforehand? 100% civilian. no military experience. i tried tojoin the military when i was younger, but i could not get in but i could put all my heart and soul injoining. i saw a facebook advertisement, it was all in ukrainian but i translated it. if you know how to handle a gun, contact us, so i gave them a ring. told them that i'd been in the guard,
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like cadet experience. i know it's nothing much but they said we'll give you a month's training and we'll send you out into the front line in the kharkiv district. after travelling across ukraine, theyjoined a battalion with other british and international volunteers fighting in the east. oh, damn, we got to this new place. they metjames, aged 21, who'd quit the british army to go. they needed help so i knew i could fight, that was what i was trained to do so that's why i got up and went. and tim, who spent time in afghanistan. this is where we sleep. and they began filming their experiences along the way. they issued a rifle about the time we get a volunteer contract, here's where you're going. all we knew was dig a hole, watch. did you feel up to it? i did wonder, what have i got myself into here but it did feel natural. as they learned to become
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soldiers, it was eye—opening even for those with experience. in the british army, i have never come under tank fire, it is not something that happens in the british army. we have the tanks, we have the helicopters, we have the fast air and things like that. here, it is all against you. it was not long before they were involved in intense fighting. once you get the first flyover, you watch videos of fire fights then when you are there, and the rounds do go out, my training kicked in. the first time ever i experienced combat i was in a school. we got hit by multiple missiles and the intel we got, five tanks approaching and we all got out. i remember there was a mud hill and as i looked up, a tank came straight through the bushes and straight for me. we heard on the radio,
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one tank destroyed, two tanks are destroyed, three tanks destroyed. that split—second i didn't know if i was coming out of that situation. i thought i was going to get killed right here, right now. it was james's first experience of many coming under fire from russian tanks. this round missing him by inches. everyone ok? it has landed right next to me. i can't hear nothing. i can't hear a thing. as the ukrainian frontlines pushed forward, the group were involved in many operations to recapture ground, often encountering abandoned russian positions along the way. so the russians were there yesterday. ukrainian military, myself and my teams pushed the russians out. civilians are happy.
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much of the fighting involved old school trench warfare. we were 600 metres from russians at all times. our treeline was their treeline and a field in—between. sound travels further and you could hear them talking. life in the trenches was a constant game of cat and mouse with the enemy. mick so we went on this attack on independence day, the whole of the ukrainian frontline pushed forward. i rememberjust going up the back of the tree line and five prisoners was there. what have we got here? a couple of russian prisoners. how does that work? they surrender, you surrender. quite sad to see. they were either really young or really old. they didn't want to be there. it was strange. it made it feel real. did you feel sorry for them? yeah, i empathised. my biggest fear out there were actually getting captured. five russian prisoners, surrendered. _ i wanted to kill them.
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did you? i wanted to kill them. there was a high chance they could have killed some of my very good friends, these guys we had captured. they weren't crying. they were probably laughing about it. they only cried when they've been caught. "i'm a conscript. "i never meant to do it. "i got sent here." ukrainian authorities send blanket text messages to russian soldiers' phones, telling them surrender and they won't be harmed. how do you treat them? we just hand them over to the ukrainian authorities. did you speak to them? yeah, i said a few words to them. i said a few words in his ear. i wanted to give them something to remember. gunfire. we've got to get out. as the months go by, it's clear the risks become routine. you can accept that any second, any moment, anything, and this moment could be the worst you have or the last moment the guy next to you has or two trenches down the line.
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in august, a british volunteer from norfolkjoined the unit. we were close, always close, looked up to him as an older brother. he could light up a room, he really could. craig mackintosh was a landscape gardener. hello, darling. he was funny, he would always do some crazy thing to make us laugh. we was really close growing up. he always wanted to go in the army ever since he was little. he would have all his toy soldiers. he always played with them. but when he travelled to ukraine's family had little warning. i didn't find out until the day before he was going, he said not to stress and worry. and, yeah, that's the first i've heard about it. what was your reaction? i was gutted. did you ever try to talk him out of it? all the time.
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even on the way to the airport, like, just, yeah, anything to get him to come home, but he had his heart set on it. initially i was very angry. it didn't make sense to me. i thought at first, why would you leave everyone and not tell anyone, and then i thought, wow, what a courageous thing to do. what i remember about craig, we called him pikey, - his call sign were i pikey, he loved it. he'd found his place there, you know, he were happy. but the group were about to undertake one of their most dangerous operations. i might message him on a tuesday and i would hear from him on thursday or maybe friday. one day i text him and never got nothing back. we were just on this big counteroffensive and this was the actual last firefight we got into that day. we were in russian territory, the russians did not know we were in their territory. one of our friends, an australian friend, he was digging a trench, so ijust was sat on the edge
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of the trench. you know you get the feeling someone's behind you? i looked behind me, surely enough there was someone there. he was only ten metres away from me, looking all confused, like that, like, "what are these guys doing here? they're our guys? " he thought you were russian? yeah, he thought we were. that's when i seen his face change. i seen he was planning something. he had time to see every single... he looked around. he had eye contact with me, he had eye contact withjed, everyone behind us. i was getting screamed at behind, "make sure it's not friendly, make sure it's not friendly!" so at this point i was.... "put your gun down, put your gun down!" dropped to the floor, but he raised his gun, so i shot him six times. but the russian soldier had already fired his own shot. ijust remember looking and shouting back "jed's down!" and "jed's dead." and i heard behind me, "craig's dead." it was 25 august that i found out that he had been shot. it crushed me. after that firefight, i looked down, and to be
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honest, i cried, i cried. not because i was scared, but just seeing it up close and personal, you are talking with someone, having a laugh someone in the life isjust gone. just gone within a click of the fingers. the police came to myl dad's and they told us. i didn't think he was going to go on the frontline. - ididn't think that- was going to happen. i thought he was going i to be helping, but away from the front line. i think most people die of cancer or common illness, not being shot out at war. i don't know, ijust didn't believe it, it didn't feel real. friends and family said their final goodbyes. it was heartbreaking. but he got the send off that he deserved.
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like he said, no—one else would understand, he has got to do it for his own reasons and that's what he done. same as a lot of people. they feel like they can make a big difference, which they are. he was happy and you've got to be happy for him. your brother's a hero, but, yeah, still won't bring him back, though. it's hard and my children miss him. pikey and jed, we're . not going forget them. jed, pikey, ninja — i think about them every day, every day. they will always be remembered by me as very good people. they were. music plays. do you think the british volunteers out there actually make a difference to the overall war effort? yeah. yeah, big time as well. like the ukrainians see us and it makes them feel like they are not alone.
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i'm proud of what i've achieved, i'm proud of the guys that we were out there with, we did a lot of good, we took a lot of ground. it's impossible to know the exact number of british volunteers in ukraine as there's now a number of battalions that accept soldiers from abroad, but ukraine's international legion says there continues to be a steady stream of volunteers willing to join the fight and that the uk is still one of the most represented countries within its ranks. i would never tell anyone to go out and do what i've done. i believe i've saved a few lives and i'm a better person for what i've done. a lot of people who have sat watching it on the news and saying "i'd go if they didn't have this,
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if i didn't have that." i had a good job. i had me own house. give it all up. some people would say you are crazy. people call us crazy, people call us crazy. james dee in leeds, - about to go back to ukraine. we're ready for it. slava ukraini! what is it about it that draws people back? i think it's the brotherhood. civilians don't understand it. i've got a purpose in life out there, i'm happy, i've got my friends, and i've got a purpose. i'm connected up to machines and i'm in very, very good hands. is it worth it? i would do it all again now, even though my outcome. it's probably the fact that i was doing something that i loved and i believed in. he found what he'd always been searching for. in the photos i've seen, he looks like he was happy. i wish we could have kept him here. it's not that we love killing
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or we love bloodshed, - it's because in those - situations humanity really does shine through. hello there. we saw a change of fortunes really today. it was more southern and southeastern parts of the country that had the best of the sunshine, whereas further north we saw much more cloud coming into scotland, the stream of cloud coming in from the atlantic bringing some heavier rain in northern scotland for a while. this evening, the worst of that rain will move away. and then overnight we'll get this secondary band of rain pushing back down into scotland. it's been windy in scotland and the winds continuing to pick up in many places overnight in northern scotland. we could have some gusts of around 60 miles an hour
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for a while by the end of the night. a lot of cloud to come tonight. it's going to be a mild one, particularly in northern ireland. perhaps temperatures no lower than 11 degrees tomorrow. the winds continue to gradually ease down through the day, but this rain is stuck in scotland. could see a secondary band of cloud, a few pockets of rain and drizzle affecting northern ireland over the irish sea into northwest england. there's a lot of cloud on the scene. again, some eastern parts of england, particularly across east anglia, could get some sunshine. it's going to be very mild here, 16 degrees. northern scotland getting some sunshine, but the air is a little bit chillier here. on the whole, though, we're starting the week with some very mild air across the uk. there is colder weather trying to push in from the atlantic, but it's taking a little while longer to reach us. so we're still in this mild south to south westerly air stream on tuesday. the winds continue to ease down on tuesday. but as you can see, there's a lot of cloud. may get some drier weather coming in from continental europe to bring some sunshine in the south east later. and those temperatures still on the mild side,
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at 13 or m degrees. there is this band of rain, though, coming into northern ireland and western scotland during the evening. that weather front will take some rain further east overnight and then the wind direction changes. instead of that very mild south—westerly wind, we get more of a northwesterly wind by the time we get into wednesday. and that will bring some chillier air and perhaps one or two wintry showers into the far northwest. but really, wednesday is a very messy day. there's a lot of cloud. could be some rain here and there and across some northern hills. that rain may turn a bit wintry later on in the day as things start to get a little bit chillier. so we've got seven or eight degrees across the northwest. in the southeast, still temperatures ten or 11 degrees, not as mild as it is at the moment. we start the week ahead with very mild conditions, but with a lot of cloud. then we get that rain around the middle part of the week. then things get a little bit colder, perhaps with the risk of frost at night as well.
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this is bbc world news. three weeks after nicola disappearaed, a body is found in a riverjust a mile from where she was last seen. we'll be reporting on the police handling of the case and the questions now being directed at senior officers. the at senior officers. police have not confirmed the body the police have not confirmed the body they have recovered is that of nicola bulley but they say tonight their thoughts are with her family. we'll bring you the latest from the village of st michael's on wyre in lancashire. also tonight.., will russia soon be buying chinese weapons for its war in ukraine? the americans warn china not to do it.
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we're live in kyiv, as ukraine prepares to mark the first

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