tv Ukraine BBC News December 23, 2024 5:30am-6:01am GMT
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this is bbc news, the headlines: at his first rally since winning the us presidential election — donald trump threatens to try and regain control of the panama canal. the panamanian president has hit back, stating that panama's sovereign control of the canal is non—negotiable. trump claims american ships are being charged excessive fees. germany's interior minister, nancy faeser, has promised to leave no stone unturned as officials investigate the car attack at a christmas market in magdeburg on friday. five people, including a nine—year—old boy, were killed. it's emerged concerns had previously been raised about the saudi—born suspect. new york police arrest a suspect after a woman
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was burned alive on the subway in an apparently random attack. police said the man approached the woman as she appeared to be sleeping and set her clothes on fire with a lighter. officers responded with fire extinguishers, but she died at the scene. now on bbc news — ukraine: growing up under fire. russia's war on ukraine has transformed childhood. it's injured and killed almost 2,000 children. but the suffering
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isn't only physical. there is fear, loss and uncertainty right across the country. do you think that there's enough help for all the children who need it? as the attacks on ukraine intensify, how do the children cope growing up underfire? at 12 years old, lera has been learning to walk again, after the blast that shattered one of her legs and burned
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the other very badly. passing over the holes left by shrapnel... ..lera points out where she and herfriend, kseniya, came that morning to sell bracelets they'd made themselves. she didn't hear the air—raid siren. missile whooshes the russian missile smashed right into the heart of chernihiv. it was a hot holiday weekend and the streets were crowded. seven people were killed that
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when russian troops invaded ukraine in 2022, they never took chernihiv — but they did occupy much of this northern region. the ruins are a reminder of the weeks when the city was under siege and under constant fire. the russians were eventually forced to retreat, and life slowly returned to the streets. then, last august, the city theatre hosted a drone exhibition... ..and russia attacked. when you look at the destruction here, the damage to this theatre, it really drives home, yet again,
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just how dangerous life is in ukraine. and the fact that whatever russia is aiming at, when it fires its missiles at city centres like this, so often it is civilians and children who are injured and killed. 500km east is kharkiv, very close to the russian border. in 2022, russian troops almost surrounded this city, too, pounding it with shells and missiles — but they never took it. the district of saltivka was closest to russian positions. its apartment blocks were battered for weeks.
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so, anya and her children are the only people living in this entire building in this... ..middle of this complete destruction. she said she's just going to come down and open the door to take me up. 0bviously, there's no lift, and they're on the third floor here. the family escaped at the height of the fighting, but they moved back last year because, despite everything, this is home. they've had a new wall put in. the old one had a giant crack after a missile hit the building two floors up. and in the kitchen, anya shows me holes made by shrapnel. angelina is eight, and remembers finding the flat in ruins.
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it was during all this that angelina's family fled saltivka, looking for safety. but after a few days, they decided to head back to the basement of their home, and hope for the fighting to stop. in early march, the giant block of flats next door was destroyed by a missile — and angelina was terrified.
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he's come to collect a special delivery from his dad back in kharkiv. daniel and his mum left the city before the war, but his father stayed and was drafted into the army. mm... it's a nice present. my dad sent me compass and markers. the two now chat online whenever they can. daniel's dad doesn't want us to show his face. but he's teaching his son to draw, remotely. a family separated by war, keeping things normal when nothing around them is.
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the threat is far away from here... ..in the east, like daniel's dad. lera still loves making jewellery, especially now she's stuck at home, as her leg heals from multiple operations. she's not been to school for months, and she's bored and frustrated, so focusing on something like this is a help. lera lives with her sister, irina, who worries she may be
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bottling up her feelings, and wonders whether that might all spill out one day. for lera, this war has been doubly cruel. a few months before she was hurt, her brother died fighting on the front line. sasha was 27. lera and her brother were close — but she's barely talked of him since he died. sasha volunteered for the front line. he went missing in action afterjust five months.
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daniel struggled to settle here at first. he thinks other children don't get what he's going through. at the very start of the war, daniel and his mum fled even further west, joining a giant wave of refugees to europe. they came back, partly because kateryna is a child psychologist, and she saw a huge need for her skills. how serious is the damage, the psychological damage that this war has done to children?
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safe to return yet — but angelina's had no alternative. but russian forces never stopped attacking kharkiv, and are getting closer again. air-raid siren angelina sings angelina dreams of being a singer one day. if vladimir putin hadn't invaded, she'd be here by now — at her neighbourhood school. but the russians don't seem to care what they hit. angelina sings
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angelina's old kindergarten is in ruins, too. it was shut for safety, like all schools in kharkiv, at the start of the war. angelina barely remembers it here. before the invasion, there was covid. that's years of playing alone. isolation is a big issue for ukraine's children. millions are now studying online, like angelina, if they're studying at all. so her mum tries to take her out as much as possible. only in kharkiv, that often means staying underground for safety.
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daniel's been working on his self—confidence, too. he's good at this. he's small for his age, and he got badly bullied at his new school, so now he's at fight class. the trainer, sasha, believes in building up the boys�* resilience... ..and sharing their worries, too, if they need to. can you tell me what it feels like when you're wrestling? like you're in a film
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covered in the scars of the first russian assault, it's braced for another. not far from here, russian troops have crossed the border again. vladimir putin says they're not planning to take kharkiv — but ukraine has learned never to trust him. when the sun goes down over saltivka, the lights don't come on any more. russia has been destroying power plants across this country. angelina has adapted to the blackouts.
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good morning, welcome to breakfast with sally nugent and jon kay. 0ur headlines today. business leaders warn of fewerjob opportunities and uncertainty in the economy going into 2025. they blame the budget, the government says it's delivering economic stability. tributes for the victims of the christmas market attack in magdeburg as the authorities promise a thorough inverstigation into what happened. good morning. many people will be feeling festive this week but for others it can be a very lonely and isolated time so i have come to one pub in wimbledon in south london which attacking that by throwing it free christmas day dinner to anyone if alone.
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