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tv   [untitled]  BELARUSTV  September 12, 2023 2:00am-2:51am MSK

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years, but few places available. i won't sell mine to anyone. that’s why we always return home and never stay anywhere once the competition is over. we don’t even stay overnight, we immediately get into the car and leave, so we can get home faster, so we can get home faster. to be on your favorite lake
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olga nikolaevna good evening. good evening. you are an advisor to the head of the donetsk people's republic on health, ex-minister of health, donetsk people's republic , obstetrician-gynecologist, doctor, professor, doctor. sciences, here, in fact, is the person who knows more than others about how fragile
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human life is and what it is really worth ? donbass was once the most densely populated region in ukraine with more than 4.5 million people. and the war there has been going on for 9 years. let's just say that the war has been going on for nine years and ten years. is it true that today we no longer need to talk, but shout that the people of donbass need to be preserved, preserve the people of donbass you know marat sergeevich this is an absolutely correct idea, because the people of donbass k unfortunately, not only is it destroyed physically, they are trying to have a very strong influence on it morally, first of all , they are trying to decompose the spirituality of this people, and unfortunately, somewhere they are achieving their goal , primarily western western european american and propaganda and politicians who decided to wipe donbass from the face of the earth . we
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understand perfectly well in the donbass that now there is actually a war between good and evil, if we take the spiritual side of the issues between god and satan and the orthodox donbass i became such a victim. yes, overshadowing himself , let’s say today, he has been overshadowing the pain for the tenth year already. our great homeland, our mask of russia, is protected and protected by orthodoxy, protects the right of our children. for real, i don’t even talk about orthodoxy. how many universal human values, because any nation, any religion, will have these values ​​alone: ​​muslims or buddhists in the first place of this life, human life, love, family, as the most important value, and uh, in the fourteenth year, when this trouble came she came completely unexpectedly. even in donbass, we could not imagine that the army itself, the armed forces of ukraine , would shoot its own people. you
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know, it's very scary. it's very scary when we are told that russia has invaded. yes, russia did not invade anywhere. why did donbass become you, why did he stand up and hmm after all, no one was the first to attack kiev, not even 1 cm , let alone a meter, not 1 cm, not kharkov, not odessa , not zaporozhye region, donetsk people, well, the fighters of the people’s militia of donbass didn’t occupy at the beginning it was a spontaneous people's militia. the first shots here, if you could see on the internet, this is how it really was. yes, there were checkpoints, but when the ukrainian army in tanks tried to enter the city of slavyansk, this is our resort town. there is a reserved zone, there are no military bases or military units there. they were never there. this is a protected resort area, where people were treated, where people were treated by nature, and there were sanatoriums, people restored their health this is a unique reserve. and so, that’s why
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the regular kiev army, that is, the armed forces of ukraine, began to attack the reserve; for what purpose did they pursue it? eh, so, as they explained, they explained it, that, as it were, supposedly terrorists from russia came to donbass and want to seize ukraine, what kind of terrorists do you understand? why did the people of donbass come out to the square in 1914, when there was a maidan in kiev? after all, the maidan was in kiev. we understand very well now, after the invasion of these years, that these were all the maidans and you had attempt. thank you to your president. we simply admire alexander grigorievich , lukashenko, who stopped this whole thing right away in our country, unfortunately, our president simply cowardly ran away at that time, yanukovych , and did nothing, that’s all. it spilled out and moved on. why did you get up? donbass because these very protected lands in 1914, it turns out, were sold to the american company sherl for the development
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of shale gas. what is shale gas? is that true? we have, indeed. uh, small shale gas deposits are in those places, but these are protected areas, and the gas is very toxic. if this gas gets into and development implies. this deep mining means that this gas enters the water into the soil. yes, into the environment air. every living thing dies there. this chemical poisoning comes, for example, from the same river seversky donetsk, the water from which we all drink, the whole donbass drinks and is not against this with arms in hand. she is a square on a square in donetsk in kramatorsk in mariupol in slavyansk residents of donbass came out object to our native land. it was simply destroyed for the sake of some foreign oligarch, and against this people. that’s after our president fled and became the acting president of the turchins. now, turchin is actually to blame. he gave the command to send regular ukrainian
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troops. it’s good to shell donbass. and as a result, during these nine years of this nightmare, yes, what statistics are being born now? i said that the worst figures in the entire history of ukraine now, based on the results of the twenty-second year , the birth rate was 2.4 per 1,000 people, and the death rate was 16.7. that is, our mortality rate now in the donbass of the donetsk people's republic exceeds the birth rate seven times. here, look olga nikolaevna russian statistics. yes, and i’m raising it, so it’s still, no , i mean after mobilization, 9 months cherished yes, birth rate calculation. well, not here yet. comparisons, at least. well, there is an expert opinion that there will not be a strong decline and the outflow and we will not play like that either big as the voice acting, some plus are starting to come back. but this is there in russia , yes, and the ukrainian numbers are rising sergeevich
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i would like to say that i am an obstetrician gynecologist. i have more than 35 years of experience as an obstetrician-gynecologist, and a practical doctor at that. i came to my first workplace, then it was the donetsk regional center for maternal and child health. now this is the donetsk republican but this is the same medical institution in which i worked in the hall for more than 35 years, that is , every day we delivered babies, went to operating room and uh, there are demographic indicators, in addition to the birth rate and mortality rate, which can be called prognostic indicators. there is such a so-called total fertility rate indicator, this is, uh, the average number of children that a woman gives birth to during her reproductive age. yes, that is , this moment is while she can give birth to children. according to all world statistics, in order for the country to develop even differently, in order for there to be simple reproduction of the population in the country. yes this indicator should
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be at least two, that is, the father and mother came and started a family, at least two children should replace them, and i read that the coefficient should be somewhere around 2.15. in order for there to be reproduction , for the country to prosper, this coefficient must be higher than three, that is , it must be the production of labor, no matter how we say it. yes, family, the value of children, but if we take, say, on the scale of the country of any belarus, russia, ukraine, america, or any country, but in order for the population not to die out, let’s say this, yes it must be called simple reproduction of two people. two people came and must remain after them, this is the minimum, the minimum that should be for the country to develop. i already said there should be more, at least three or more then there is an influx of labor. are there any prospects for development? unfortunately, we already had this indicator in ukraine, long before any hostilities
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. it was below two, it was somewhere around 1.6 here in donetsk, donetsk and donetsk lugansk region. he was generally 09 , imagine 09 children on average. yes in one family. yesterday i was on the internet on purpose. yes , yesterday i looked on the internet specifically at what indicators. now in russia in the twentieth year, this indicator was 1.5 in the twenty- second - 1:42, that is, there is a population decline anyway. in donbass, no one counted it because it was in connection with sexual activity, but something took into account the fact that before the war it was 0.9. i think that now it is somewhere around 0.8, while the fertility rates that we have in ukraine, no matter what they say, no matter what they say, they have too there is a catastrophic decline in the birth rate, but their population decline is catastrophic today. and not only due to emigration due to the war itself, because even though they are hiding their losses. well, yesterday we literally talked. i looked at the indicators on kyivstar mobile communications. uh-huh , mobile communications are very popular in kiev, and so
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the central office of kyivstar itself reports that their number of subscribers has decreased by 800,000 800,000. this is only according to kyivstar, which simply went offline. yes we can assume that some people have left, but even if they, say, left somewhere in europe, they can continue using the same messengers. yes, there is somewhere in the telegram on whatsapp to stay on your ukrainian numbers, but no, these numbers are simply crossed out, that is, you can already judge the losses of ukraine plus. of course, with the lifestyle that is now being promoted in the promotion of same-sex marriage, lgbt perversion of children , violence against children hmm, very soon this population will decrease, uh, by a multiple, so i am sincerely sorry. i myself know as by origin. my father is ukrainian, my mother is russian, that is, i have 50% russian blood and 50% ukrainian blood. i always wrote in my dad’s passport that i was ukrainian. i
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was very proud and so were my children, especially my eldest son. we were all proud that we are ukrainians - it has always been a nation, very kind, very hospitable, very hospitable , hospitable well, here we are. i think that the american political propagandists have achieved their goal. they quarreled one people. this is the worst thing. you see, the worst thing is a civil war, when we watched and studied history in school, and the civil war was a hundred years ago. well, yes, when the red and white fought there, the soviet government was against it. under gvardeiskaya , the russian empire was collapsing against the empire . we were taught at school that yes, here is the tsar. it was bad. empire - it was bad hmm but red white red were good white bad hmm you see now. eh, i’m going through the civil war for ten years. we can say that the most vile thing that can happen is the great patriotic war. well, yes. she was very scary it was bloody with great casualties,
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but everything was clear there. there was an external enemy, hitler's germany. uh, the country of the soviet union is the entire soviet people. it doesn’t matter, a russian ukrainian, a belarusian tajik, an armenian, everyone stood up to defend their united motherland and for those europeans. we were russians. we were all russians, we will always be russians, and now we are all and now, when we are for them, when one brother fights against another brother, when in the neighboring trenches there are hmm people who have passed, for example. afghanistan who served together in afghanistan. and this was the case with us at the beginning in 1914, when they recognized each other by their voices and said, listen to the boar. so it’s you, you and i, right there, uh, in afghanistan, do you remember? yes, i remember, well, now you and i are fighting against each other. you know, i’m very sorry for the ukrainian people, who fell under this propaganda, they believed it, and they instilled such hatred towards us, uh, the same
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as like they are to the russians. now, as i understand it, hatred is being cultivated and is already underway. hatred of belarus because because belarus is with russia hmm well, if that brings us only to this question. yes, but here are the numbers that some experts voice, that 400,000 dead are much more, much more, much more, you understand, a lot. these are the ones that are missing. uh, in fact, these are dead people because what does missing mean? this means that they didn’t count him, didn’t take him away, or as a result of, let’s say, some kind of massive shelling. well, for example, if the sun shoots, it burns everything, that is, people burn out. there they simply burn in hundreds and thousands. nobody is counting them, but these figures are that about 7 million people left ukraine and four and four and a half million are not going to return there at all. they are from your point of view. really. i think it’s quite realistic, because, well, normal people.
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uh, now they simply can’t live in ukraine, firstly, uh, it’s very difficult, because now you probably saw and everything was announced on social networks, all the mobilization of everyone , including the sick and the mentally ill and how can all health workers be mobilized? i don't understand, but this is hmm unreasonable. so they call them limitedly fit, yes for military service, and how much they really are limited to a year. or are they fatally totally limited, you know, for example, people infected with hiv can fight calmly, that is, they do not pose any danger to others. well, unless they live, uh, enter into same-sex sexual relationships and infect each other forever. well, while there, he sleeps , a few years will pass, that is hiv-infected people can fight people with an open form of tuberculosis - this is a huge danger to others, and the copy is that
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the infection immediately spreads to the entire military , and the mental health is epileptic. you see, it’s generally scary to call on an epileptic. after all, he may have an attack; unfortunately, we had such situations when in 1922. at first we called up the military registration and enlistment offices and sometimes it happened. so they took away children with epilepsy and did not pay attention to it. and during the battle the person began to attack, and he pulled the trigger of the machine gun. yes , he had epileptic seizures. he i understand what he’s doing, he’s falling and he can simply shoot his own , he’s driving a combat vehicle, if he’s driving a tank, that’s well, and then a mentally abnormal person who is given a weapon in his hands, someone looked at him the wrong way, someone offended the commander. offended, colleague. he said it wrong or looked wrong. but he can shoot the entire personnel of his unit or explode a grenade or there, well, that is, this objectively, we are not stretching this here. no, we are not pulling this. that is. i speak as a doctor. here i am speaking as a doctor. yes. eh,
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which one else can pursue? ukraine goals? i think in this way i’m trying to get rid of people on whom i need to spend money on treatment, for example, feelings are you know what blasphemy. they do, what kind of violence they do, what do they do in general, when they i mean, the ukrainian army. well, uh, i don’t know, what about the regular ones, maybe not. these are those who are drafted into the army. and those who are our battalion - this is worse than the nazis during the great patriotic war. what atrocities? they did it in the sea, they fell on the waves, but in other cities it’s just scary. here i am even now. it’s scary to talk about this, that is, fascism, fascism is the worst thing, and neo-fascism, which is happening now. this is much worse than the fascism that existed in the forties. that's forty. the first forty, the fifth, you understand, we need to talk about this, including in this studio, so that our viewers can hear. we also have oshchepenites who are now fighting in ukraine or went, uh, to poland in order to learn military skills and return here to establish their own democracy
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, the same as they are installing a national security system or trying to establish on the territory of donbass yes, but now we are talking more about men, yes , war is a man’s business, but women , they give life, yes, but it’s somehow not customary to talk about this now. here the nazis are shelling the cities of donbass at the movement, including from the artery with cluster munitions now at direct fire. yes, but here's how: here are the women and children in these conditions and most importantly, how they decide to have children. you know, here. we are when it all started, it all started, as i said, very unexpectedly. we were all not ready for this; accordingly, no one, neither women nor children, was ready. and so, when that uh, president, uh, poroshenko spoke, he had such a famous speech when he said that our children will be, that is,
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meaning, donbass will be sitting in basements. and our children will study. their. children will not eat there. and our children will eat anyway onwards and so on. eh, the children actually lived in basements. and uh, many to this day, to this day, live in basements. you see, the scary thing is that ours are both children and women. yes, in fact, the people i can’t say that it’s impossible to get used to it, but they adapted, if in the first 14-15 years, we flinched there from every hmm , some kind of sound of a blow breaking, but now we clearly define this arrival, or is it our kids who differentiate by caliber. yeah, it’s now 120, it’s 15 flying somewhere . it’s hit by hail. but this is a hymer with arrived, well, from a distance it’s understandable. our children understand what needs to be done here , you know in the fifteenth year, when ukraine completely cut off the donbass from itself. that is , the students were not given diplomas - they continued to study, our medical university
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continued to work. although for us. so i was a teacher and remain a teacher at a medical university. we were ordered by the ministry of education of ukraine to move the university from a huge city. donetsk yes, the small town of krasny liman in which the population is only 4,000 people in in this krasny liman there were only 6,000 students and another 2,000 teachers. and then we were indignant, and we somehow endured during the great patriotic war. nobody moved us, we won’t go anywhere. we stay in donetsk and so, uh, and we go to work under fire and our children literally. until the twenty-second year, we studied full-time, because well, the intensity of the shelling was not so intense now, of course, it was very intense. children. not only did we study remotely during covid. so now from 22 i want to go to schools too. drawing unfortunately that's how our students in the fifteenth year then we had uh , the rector of the associate center bogdanov bogdan anatolyevich and he uh then decided the issues of where which university
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in the russian federation can you kind of stick to, yes, to get a diploma uh-huh certified in the russian federation and we were so lucky that our students took exams in krasnodar, in orel, and in kursk. and so they told how our students arrived in krasnodar, arrived in krasnodar, walked along the territory of the university in at this moment the plane is just flying. well, there were airfields and airports. they also worked . all our students sat down as if on command. and just like that , the krasnodar teachers who were present covered themselves with their hands from above. they were just in shock, they didn’t stand there crying, because our children behaved like that, well, the students let us down, but by the way, the students showed the best results. this was also noted in the russian federation as good knowledge. what else do our women do? of course they continue to work. here for example, we have a hospital. when we created the military, we were the first women to come to this hospital on an equal basis with men, and most of
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the hospital staff were also women. they just came people with two higher educations, not doctors. they came, we cleaned the floors, washed them, fed them , changed clothes, they came and said how we could help, they worked absolutely free of charge. it was a volunteer hospital with no salary. and many even receive a salary from their main place of work, bought food and brought to the hospital, to feed your book yes to the hospital, which was not in fact russian yes and not only literature. she knows many examples of books on medical topics in folded times. yes, well, an incident, kotsky or you know the cancer ward to get married? yes, well, we lived here. yes, you have your own book , your own book of like-minded people. yes, here is the hospital that never existed. why exactly this name? why wasn’t he in fact he was he worked for a year and a half 18 months from june 6, 1914 to december 6
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fifteenth year. eh, why this name? because it was not legally registered anywhere, as we said, it was not accepted by the ministry, the ministry of health, or the ministry of defense. why is that? well, because it’s a young republic. it had just been created; at that moment we did not believe that the war would last. that is, if it is included in some structure in a hospital, this implies a staffing table and separate funding. well, like charters and so on. so this is supposed to last for a long time? yes, here he is was created, and it will last for a long time, that is, in the fourteenth year, when the ukrainian army began shelling the territory of donbass, you thought that this would be sorted out quickly. or rather , the horror, it will stop quickly ; they didn’t believe that the army itself could shoot. actually the genus. we thought it was given, but this is some kind of absurdity. this is a mistake. now they’ll sort it out there, maybe president poroshenko will come instead of the escaped yanukovych and he’ll quickly
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restore order, but how can they have their own millions of their own there, and destroy the donbass, which at that time actually accounted for 25% of the total national income of ukraine; it was the income of the donbass because the main industrial enterprises were agricultural, and so on and so forth. all this was the most densely populated area. yes, you said 4.6. it was the day before. here in the fourteenth year on the eve of the war, but i remember very well, when, let’s say, the beginning of the two thousandth, we had such a channel one plus one in ukraine and there was an advertisement for this tv channel, and it was like made of cubes the numbers were one plus one and there it was 18, 52. 52 million - this was uh the beginning of the two thousandths and in the donbass then in the donetsk region specifically in the donetsk region there were 5.5 million. but then our birth rate was already falling we already had a high mortality rate then. and we already predicted then
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that with such a birth rate the population would decline; then, long before the war , it was the beginning of the 2000s. that is, you did not believe that it would flow, and therefore i did not formalize it legally. but when we already went there in september to formalize it, and all sorts of bureaucratic delays have already begun. they began to explain to us that the finances were not provided for and were not pledged, but in the book there is a figure of 12,000 people who passed through this year to the hospital ; more than 12,000 of real real people passed through. these were wounded, injured patients, because we had two surgical departments, one therapeutic and surgical departments were on each, and the therapeutic department at the beginning we expanded it to 25, then to 30 beds in total difficulties, if we take it from the hospital, there are about 125,130 beds, we have august september 1914, i was then the chief physician of the hospital, and we regularly held five-minute meetings,
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the head, as always, reported on the number of fighters everywhere. so we, uh, there were days when we had about 200, 198, 200 even had 150 beds, how did we cope. well, they brought several kamaz or ural trucks of wounded and shell-shocked wounded. and they already knew that there was a hospital and bypassed some of our hospitals, because let’s be honest at first, even some uh civilian hospitals refused to provide assistance to the wounded and no one was a military man. although this is a militia. you see, for the first time we understood what the people’s militia was from our own experience, these were ordinary people, ordinary people were the first people who came out slavic. that's how they stopped the tanks with their hands, guys. you guys are ours. you are our dear sleds. where are you going guys? yes, and the first ones who stood at the checkpoints, guys, someone came with a hunting rifle, someone came with with a gun. someone has someone there. eh, there was some kind of award pistol there. here they were the first, who at these block posts tried
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to prevent the ukrainian army from entering well, but tell me honestly, if bandera’s men would personally bring you to the operating table, we would operate on him. i would save him, for what purpose, in order to then exchange him for our prisoners of war, we had such cases, but i can’t say the benderaites, well, they are the nazis, somehow now they are showing themselves, well, they have more there and battalions already formed, and in the fourteenth year it was a regular army, the armed forces of ukraine also brought prisoners to us, we had a situation when five prisoners were brought to our hospital, one of them was very seriously wounded in both legs, this is uh, then knew. it was an officer lieutenant, in my opinion, but as we later got to talking , he was a simple history teacher, from somewhere, either poltava or the poltava region. and at first, of course, they were all very scared. they thought that now they were right in the yard they would shoot and our wounded guys really wanted to do it. they were so, they were so angry. eh, they are shocked that
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their comrades in arms died, their commanders died, some had their families shot, because those who joined the militia. and if we assume that these are slavs from kramatorsk, these are the cities that were later occupied by the ukrainian army. their families were simply shot, and some were shot. eh, they killed terribly. for example, we had a situation where there was a small regional center in the city, the city of starobeshevo, starobeshevo area. we have one in the donetsk region. uh, there's the son of the chairman of the local council. yes, you were just tied to the tank. and they drove around this city. well, for now, until he died, until he died. and a great, great many such examples could be given, so, of course, there is the horror that fascism carries within itself. this is not a children's game. these torchlight processions are the swastika that they put on themselves everywhere, this is the ideology of the people, and this is the ideology. unfortunately, it is very scary, a very terrible ideology of murder. after all, they
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they don't create anything. they only destroy and simply kill civilians. this, of course, we need to really protect our children from, and i now understand that if you ask, this is what we need now, the most important thing is to focus our efforts on. yes, i would say for children, for teenage children. they must not be missed; they must be educated, the way you raise them in belarus. i've been through these days, and we were in the museum yesterday, in the temple. all saints museums there. uh, under this temple, dedicated to all those who died. dead violence in including victims of concentration camps and those who died in all wars, and we all know the history of belarus. i’m telling us that belarus is very close. we love it very much since childhood and have been to khatyn more than once. this must not happen again. the people must learn this at the genetic level and never in their lives allow what happened in ukraine. because ukraine is an example of what
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so-called democracy can lead to. so-called liberalism. why does all this ultimately lead to the destruction of one’s own people? the disgrace of youth and simply the destruction of the state. now ukraine as a state has practically ceased to exist; it has turned into a terrorist state. this is very painful for me to say, because as i say, i am ukrainian myself. grew up born there raised. i got my education there, and i lived there all my life. and of course, to see how it is destroyed. your country is your earth and it all started small. yes, it all started with some kind of scout camps, where they raised those who are now killing you know us in relation to children. um, when did it start? there was a battle for mariupol. yes , many of our students took part there, including my nephew. and then mariupol was wounded and he told how one sniper held their unit and did not let anyone raise their heads, and he was killed very much.
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well, there are several of them, let’s say half of the platoon was shot by one sniper. well , then it was decided that everything would destroy this sniper, no matter what, when they destroyed they approached this sniper, it turned out to be a girl of 12 years old imagine a 12 year old teenager. this is just a teenager who cynically and cold-bloodedly shot people who defended this very city of mariupol, that is, what they are doing. now they take us as teenage children, and they raise them to be killers. after all, now ukraine is a murder factory , i can’t say it any other way, and belarus needs to really, hmm, you know, try to preserve its country. now i’m taking advantage of the opportunity, taking advantage of the opportunity. i would like to appeal to all citizens of belarus, save your president. save your country differently. otherwise, it’s scary to say what might happen.
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every week the heroes of the project go in search of adventure, don’t be surprised , the next task brought me here into the thicket . they don't even realize it. where will fate take them this time? today you are leaving. in osipovich. imagine how historical this city is for the first time in written sources. it is mentioned on february 25, 1593 along with them and follows interesting places and attractions of belarus there was a stunning view namely here two rivers merge, the svisloch and the berezina , and it fulfills the wish of someone seeing
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the face of the mother of god on a stone. they caught up with them from different parts of the world, i knew about belarus then. it's not enough to say. considering what i already know, there’s probably nothing to say to belarus and our university is already my second, so everyone has found it. here is something for yourself grateful to the belarusians and belarus for remembering the great victory and for all those who forged this victory here holy honor i found a lot of uh friends. i soon china will return but belarus will remain in my heart. each hero always has his own unique story and his own view of
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belarus, here the audience is native urians. i really appreciate his art, i want to become as famous as he is, and the musicians are convinced that it’s a wonderful country where wonderful people live , kind, sympathetic, tolerant chassis, watch on the belarus 24 tv channel . here is a wound that could not have happened. yes, you can’t help but ask about this, you encountered this with the supply of cluster munitions to ukraine.
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now this is a crime against humanity without a statute of limitations. yes, we talked a lot with experts, yes with the military, but i have never talked to a doctor about this topic, you have seen such wounds, yes you have seen them, and we see them every day in what? the horror of these uh, you know, as they say, lethal weapons. when i hear, uh, we will deliver, but not fly. yes, any weapon is lethal . this lethal weapon initially implies that any lethal outcome will be in the form of this bladed weapon. there is a knife there, a bayonet, and so on, there will be a hot firearm there, uh, an artillery woman. which whatever. this lethal weapon is all cynicism and horror. this cluster weapon is that exploding in the air in the air or, let’s say on earth, uh, it spreads at high speed, flying out small parts, these can be anything, nails, nuts, hinges,
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some sharp metal needles, but on high speed. it's, uh, a weapon that affects a lot of people. and as a rule, they use it where there is a big one, but i’m already silent about the army that is there to destroy with the help of these weapons. i'm taking civilians now. no, because of this children are dying, old people are dying. well, it’s just that our civilian population is dying when the petals are scattered. nowadays there are more cassette players. yes, these are cassette tapes, but there was a period when uh instead. these cassette players were scattering petals, such little nonsense. yes mine, which well, just think there. well, whatever, it won’t do much harm. no , a child’s leg will be torn off, but an adult will lose a foot or lower leg and the person will be disabled. and they are small. they are like leaves, unnoticed. uh, moreover, we had situations when let's say they flew in, uh, somewhere over some village these petals were scattered. they called
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the emergency services. the sappers cleared it all, but these petals got stuck in the branches of trees on the roof somewhere, and then they fell . the man is sure that his yard has been cleared of mines. he goes out onto the porch in the morning, and under his feet lies this petal that fell from his roof. , and there, let’s say, they didn’t see, didn’t notice, didn’t clear the mines. i have one very good former patient of ours who is fighting. he has already suffered a lot of shell shock, the guy. denis him name. he doesn’t know, although he is not a professional sapper. but you know him, he’s such a warrior; by the way, he’s a russian volunteer. we have a fifteen year old. he said that when after the next one. i don’t remember whether it was the ninth or tenth concussion. he was sent to a medical and psychological center for treatment. he arrived there at that moment, our psychiatric hospital was shelled with cluster shells. well, stuffed with petals uh-huh and he came to him, they said, you know, we can’t hospitalize you. everything here is mined. he says where he says, well, here he says, well then i went to clear the mines. he took this huge
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shovel. i even have pictures when he counted 64 petals, which he collected on the territory literally near the buildings of this uh psychiatric hospital. hmm and here is this information that the united states is going to, following great britain, which has already done this, uh, supply it to ukraine projectiles combined with uranium. well, that's what it is from a medical point of view in the short-term long term for the population. well, let's start with the fact that this is all again from the evil one, because it cannot be, uranus is good, kind and not dangerous. in any case, it is radioactive; in any case, it is radioactive and in the periodic table it occupies a certain cell and is defined, like any radioactive element, by a high degree of radioactivity. and, of course, it carries a great danger. if we take a short-term perspective, let's say short-term , well, this is destruction, as they say, well, yes. well, like the sky concerns people there, well
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, this weapon won’t kill. this is the first , the second is long-term, but belarus is like no one else the other suffered from the chernobyl disaster. there also seemed to be a peaceful atom. yes, there was peaceful atom, a nuclear power plant that provided good, cheap electricity. eh, high power and so on. and what we have as a result is how many generations suffered as a result of the accident at the chernobyl nuclear power plant in ukraine and belarus and russia. i have my uncle, who lived in gomel, he was a builder for a long time, nikolai kimovich’s hat. he hmm was one of the first to take part in the liquidation of the consequences. that is , he is like a builder. he's directly in at chernobyl they poured concrete there, i don’t know how. some kind of technology was there, but i know that he was one of the first from gomel to be sent there, so to speak. e, called in and provided assistance there in eliminating all these consequences. he died within a few years of the chernobyl disaster. he had radiation sickness, a real one, and uh, he had terrible headaches
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, headaches, high blood pressure and everything. it's connected. naturally, with the dose of radiation that he received during the liquidation of the chernobyl nuclear power plant power plants. this is also the case with the so-called depleted uranium, it is not united, it is uranium . that is, yugoslavia has already shown that i have already shown the consequences. why go far? here is hiroshima nagasaki how many generations how many generations uh, sick people are born, if they are born at all, because any radioactive drug. it hits the reproductive system of both men and women very sharply. that is, it affects reproductive cells. that is, not only will there be a large percentage of infertility in people who will live in this area. but it will not happen yet, at least the half-life of this element. he will not stop his activity. a question that may not be related to your area of ​​work, but you
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, the future minister of health , were in one way or another a politician, yes, a political figure. they say that there will be no elections in ukraine. well, at least zelensky voices things that even the west doesn’t like. yes, that is, maintaining martial law, for example, and accordingly, you can refuse. to me i liked his phrase. if you pay us this money, and in addition, and not 300 million, which is actually needed to hold elections, again billions in order to also steal some additional money, perhaps, then we will think about how they perceive you. yes, how do people in donbass perceive these statements and could he now, with the current water conditions, win? in ukraine why is he so afraid? in your opinion? well, first of all, we all understand perfectly well that zelensky is a puppet. this is a puppet in the hands first of all the united states of america, which is pursuing its policy here, and until the owners from
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washington give the go-ahead. the same zelensky will not start peace negotiations. i think he, first of all, he's great when he's not under the influence of drugs. he's great. then, perhaps earlier, he was aware that he was signing, because now, judging by his appearance, he had degenerated very much. as a doctor, i see that he has deteriorated under the influence of drugs, maybe be alcohol, i don’t know, but he has the typical appearance of a drug addict, carelessness in clothes and so on, but the worst thing is the sin that he took upon himself, this is the sin of killing millions of people, already millions. we can speak because these are broken families. these are not born. children. this is the destruction of the gene pool. nations gene pool. after all, the first who went first were the most yes, the strongest, the most courageous, the most patriotic people, and most often these were young people and, uh, men and women of the middle generation, followed by our people
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older generations who, well, how is it that they are destroying my homeland, and i will sit at home. no, of course not, i’ll go protect her. and then who will continue to give birth if young people die, and young people die both on our side and on the other side, that is, in fact, zelensky is destroying his own people. i don’t know what else the ukrainians need for them to wake up and uh, as they say here, the ukrainians are crazy. this is what else needs to happen for them to sober up from this, to take these curtains off their eyes and understand that the president is simply destroying them your own. people. probably, well , it comes, maybe this is awareness, but not for everyone, and it still takes time. how can you stop a war in one day? you can stop it here at the negotiating table ; we all know very well that any bad peace is better than a good war. well, it seems to me that it definitely depends on him to a lesser degree, because well,
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who gets the extra profit. let’s say from a political point of view, she’s also an american. yes , i don’t think that even in europe it can even be, of course, they get some there too, but anyway, they are interconnected with america there. i never thought that i would believe in trump, but i believe him that the war can be ended in one day. if america makes such a decision, i too, you know, i believe him. well, look olga nikolaevna, we talked a lot about problems and hopes in these difficult moments. yes, but we are in belarus now with you, well, really, and i’m glad that you came and came a little, even to exhale somewhere right away. perhaps, if possible, we help children from donbass here. yes, we have a whole the program is organized that allows you to bring children specifically so that they can rest and rehabilitate, including psychological ones. yes, things matter. here, although our poor people are for this. sorry for such a term, yes
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, who went to the west, they have already sued us in belarus yes , like for the theft of ukrainian children, but nonsense is nonsense, yes, but you understand, this nonsense is cultivated in the west and is perceived as something truthful. okay, here's the conscience. let them have the truth, god sees everything. but what can belarus and belarusians still help? donbass come on. do you know what you are already doing, inviting our disabled children to your place to improve the health of children of athletes for sporting events? yes, uh, just visiting belarus is already a lot. why have i met with different people over these days, including i met with your first sector of the central committee of the belarusian republican youth union, alexander lukyanov, and we discussed many issues with him, the joint possibility of joint activities specifically on
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education of young children and youth. what i saw here, i would really like it to be here, and we have that patriotism that is instilled in belarusian children from this age, and we now have it in our children too. do they also understand what the homeland is? what does it mean to defend the motherland from enemies? what does it mean to defend your city? they tell me, why are you leaving donetsk, there is a war there? different people told me something like that too. well, if there ’s a war there, why don’t you leave? i say, you know, if we all leave, who will be the city? protect? no, i won’t give my donetsk to anyone. i am ready and not only i and my family are ready to lay down their lives for him and raise our children this way. and when our children come here, they see that you have the same policy of instilling patriotism. children have pride in their homeland and their people. uh, that's what they see. they understand that we are not alone.
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they see this in russia and they understand and see a completely opposite example in ukraine , of course, our children understand all this perfectly well, where they will go and with whom they will be friends, saying, in simple children's language. yes, and who will they look up to? so i think that such trips are, uh, exchanges of youth, but i understand that they are coming to us now. not particularly convenient, because we are under shelling, but over time. i hope that they will stop and that these mutual trips will be possible as before. eh, i really like the level of your medicine , as a gynecologist myself. once upon a time in 1910 we were here at your conference at your center for maternal and child health , and i really liked it then. your uh, fetal medicine is precisely the opportunity to perform operations in utero. there is a twin, for example, when there is one fetus there is such a phytofetal syndrome, uh, various manipulations
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that can be carried out in utero , your young doctors demonstrated this to us, and then we were jealous of belarus in a good way and then there was no war yet. quite how cool it is. i should go to belarus for an internship. this could be an internship for our young doctors, which i liked. uh, what i i also saw what alexander lukyanov told me was building nearby. i am building a squad myself. i am from the first year to the last year of medical school. we went to construction teams at the beginning in donetsk, kaluga region and tyumen region. that is, this is how, firstly, it unites young people. secondly, the most important thing is where you can unite. this is joint work, joint work of adult children and youth, when a person sees that this is the result of my work. yesterday we were told how together, through the efforts of not only young people, of course, also deputies and uh, the governors were restoring the khatyn complex. yes, when everyone there either planted a tree, or repaired some tile, or
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made some other passive contribution, this is education in practice, and you should have it. a very powerful youth organization. i really liked it, but in any case, it will be necessary to restore the republic later, and i think that in this we will definitely not be superfluous. little belarusian girl, i’m really happy because i saw the island of the soviet union. yes, you know, this equipment modern, but relevant to people. uh, the opportunity to provide any assistance. here it is, hardening. i am a soviet man , you understand, soviet training. i can say for sure that the soviet healthcare system was the best healthcare system in the world. you are like a professional for sure. you can compare this with me nikolaevna; unfortunately, i will ask the latter. eh, not philosophical questions at all. this is when the patient is more alive than dead. yes , even the most experienced doctors. they are collecting candy. yes, to assemble a consultation on ukraine.
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and if in our opinion, that is, at the negotiating table, our president proposes. for a long time he has been constantly talking about this precisely so that people can live and sometimes, in order to live, something needs to be amputated. now, as a doctor , you know this, yes, but something can be healed. you see, uh, such a consultation on ukraine will finally become possible, we all really dream about it. we really dream of becoming great powers. i don't mean ukraine, but the great powers will sit down at the negotiating table. russia is always open to this and vladimir vladimirovich putin talks about it every time a year ago they are constantly you see, in fact, in minsk there were agreements that were then we were so happy and so grateful to alexander grigoryevich lukashenko who proposed, he says, okay, let’s not in moscow, not in donetsk, not in kiev, in minsk thank you

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