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tv   [untitled]    December 23, 2022 2:00am-2:21am EET

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and the monitor, there are three control options: just a remote control, visual control of the remote control via a monitor and antennas in transport, this mobile version is enough, and in a more stationary version, it’s the same, but we simulate the situation a little more near me, a mortar, a mine behind me, a training projectile, it’s all near the road from here this explosive must be transferred to a place that is safe for people, the transportation of projectile mines is not the only function of this model, the robot can be attached to a metal sapper. these are harrows, and then it will turn into a kind of harvester
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that is capable of clearing the terrain of the field or homesteads very well, even some stones it crushes are too small, the speed is really too low, and the combine itself is not very big, but we have what we have, let’s at least say something to the partners, thank the partners . anti-personnel mines, however , european manufacturers also create more powerful units, somehow, here is this one. our partners help us a lot with the same courses with the same trainings. the guys went to france to the vanja center. there is a very powerful center of the united states. they went there for a special they built a school for explosives technicians. and this is a kind of museum. well, russians are on ukrainian soil, debris from hurricanes, hail, high explosives, cluster
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bombs, all this was collected in kyiv and the regions in order to collect what was sown in ukraine , it takes years to unravel, experts say, and not one, but hundreds of robots, this is the first such unit uh, from this company, the german gsm company, and they promise to supply us with several more options there next year, and a larger option of two hundred. and i understand that in the projects it is still supply supply supply because we have a vital need for them roman ba volodymyr dedov details tv channel inter marathon the only news in the liberated villages near kharkiv that the russians did not spare fire even after they retreated , people still live in mutilated houses without light and heat, they are trying to survive themselves, they are still rescuing the animals that remained here in the village of ruski
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stezhki near kharkiv, a woman feeds and takes care of almost a hundred four-legged animals, although she herself lives in the basement in order not to freeze, about the great humanity of ukrainians who did not break under shelling and still find the strength to save of animals in the story svitlana shekery so this patriot brought it my neighbor has it klychka patriot we called him a patriot mrs. olena knows by name all 67 dogs that live in her yard and basement. the woman kept dogs before the war and fed those abandoned in a separate house and during during the occupation, it burned down, some of the dogs died, and i had 38 dogs. i took them to where we lived in an apartment here in the basement. i put them in the basement because of the bombings, and then over time people started to come and disperse because i was afraid of shelling. people began to disperse and the dogs they began to come here, and the corners who came
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here themselves, the village of ruski tyzhky was under occupation on the very first night of the war in may, the village was liberated, and until september 11, until the rashists were driven to the border, it was mercilessly shelled with hail and mortars. elena spread animal feed on the street, here i had them here, and they all ran here themselves, and cats and dogs ran here with big dogs, mrs. olena settled them in the neighboring empty doors , well, here we are, people trust us, here is echo and the dogs , the house burned down, and they will put a mole in this house for me aviary and now i'm feeding her here and it's high oh good let's cook porridge for the dogs very near the house on the fire, volunteers bring a lot of fodder here are fellow villagers who left the village brought fodder olga takes out bags and tears in her eyes her house burned down during the occupation,
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you come to the village they even help no one but us will help a girl with a small child fled from shelling along with her neighbors through russia and europe. they returned to kharkiv . my neighbors took me. we all left together in a car. yes, then we got to the hospital with the child. we lay there in the garden for a very long time. lepetsk, our temperature rose to 43. she was already blue, then in poland to my sister from poland, she already helped to kyiv from kyiv to kharkiv home the same you are in the garage garages here at home the house did not burn down for the night mrs. olena goes down to the basement she lives here and her sick mother made a bed, warmed by a kerosene burner during the war, this became our refuge, our home, we are here and sleep, listen to the radio, it's hard, it's hard, but my soul hurts. don't ever forget, a
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7-year-old girl was killed in front of my eyes. the dog was swinging on the swing with her brother and at that time there was an arrival. i look at polo, she also fell, her mother picked her up, they took her to the hospital, but she was already dead. he will not leave his animals, he has never abandoned svitlana shekera from kharkiv region oleksandr yanovsky details tv channel inter marathon the only news in peacetime he was a photographer and when the war started he became a volunteer the hero of the following story andriy ushenko, the man drove the humanitarian woman to the newly de-occupied cities and villages of kyiv and kharkiv regions. and now, despite all the risks under enemy shelling, he is helping the residents of bakhmut to survive this difficult winter.
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mykhailo manyk will tell about the dangerous journeys of the volunteer. here are the shots from the personal archive of the volunteers. this is the indomitable city of bakhmut , which the russian army is methodically erasing from the face of the earth. every journey is always a risk for life on the way. ditches and mud, from which it is difficult to get into your car. well, the exits and exits are excellent, and he takes humanitarian aid to the places where it is needed the most . i woke up in the morning, as they say, and realized that
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i just have to, i don’t know how to explain it, i just felt inside that everything has to go because i have everything. i live in a warm place and there people are freezing and don't eat anything. that's why they don't talk to anyone except themselves and all the problems, that is, i, well, i don't know, well, it's just such an impulse. it's without explanations, without any backstory. it just happened, click, and that's it. with his friend de-occupied villages and cities of the kyiv region, the russians had just retreated from there. i was riding a bicycle, helping to grow something there , delivering medicine and so on, and then later it happened that i met vlad, who is the owner of an inclusive bakery, they bake bread for free, and we started
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riding with him already in the occupied kyiv region, cars used to go there in such numbers that people dismantled them to provide them, and someone started there with 200 primers, and then thousands of earplugs were brought there. he does not stop helping people and now saves them from hunger and cold residents of donbas who live close to the front line have a pulse of 70, i checked 70 in 75 ah, yes , you are worried, yes, it’s scary, but they say that the eyes are afraid of the hands, andriy tells us that water is now the most popular product in the ukrainian market. also, to save space, volunteers take it to the donetsk region in vats. people melt the snow there, collect rainwater
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, but they just sleep under there, five blankets in clothes, they breathe in the basement and it is a normal temperature plus twelve official chain fire 24/7 that is, 24/7 i am not kidding and that is, you walk for 5 minutes you hear well, the exit is the arrival a serious arrival and then you start working to distribute and communicate and so on. it’s normal , the shell flew by, it’s not bad, andrei, don’t say anything, racists are shelling the city with
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everything they have. sector it is and that away from the gray zone it is more or less intact, but it is cut off from all communications. here is the rest of the city. it is completely destroyed, that is, there is not a single house that was not damaged, that is, people they live in basements. i'm frozen. yes , the stove needs to be broken. the dogs don't need to eat their own. let's cook mine with grass. give me coal. the food is good. we'll be good. and we'll have water. despite the fiery hell around here and hunger, people continue to live in their hometown. everyone has his own reason for stopping by . in one family they have a 1.5-year-old child in childhood plus two adults there aged 14-16. they live in the private sector, it is a little further from
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the gray zone. well, let's say there 2-3 km. but nevertheless , they are not they want it because it is, well, it is our house, our animals need to be fed, and so it is for the smaller inhabitants of bakhmut, shortly before st. nicholas day, andriy brought gifts, a lot of books, toys , sweets, there were many sweets that people themselves cooked, baked, decorated. so, we have already prepared a huge, let's say, package for the children. and they are waiting for them. you will be saint nicholas for them. the villages, where the russian peace brought fear, pain and ruin, there is still life until victory, absolutely yes bakhmut, then there will be more because this
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front of work, i think that after the end of the war, a quick finished war, i hope there will be a lot of work for volunteers because it is very important to after the end of the war, he all said oh, everything is great, everything is cool , everyone can have fun there, and that’s why there will be work there for many more years vasyl dandin, details, tv channel, inter marathon, the only news, despite the danger, fear, forgetting about yourself, saving others, this is about our next heroine a children's basketball coach from kharkiv who for the first time on the day of the great war had to single-handedly save her 12 girls on the eve of the full-scale invasion of the russian federation eleonora chek took the team from kharkiv to kyiv for the semi-finals of the ukrainian basketball championship and here at the base in puscha-vodytsia right next to the summer camp gostomeli, which was stormed
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by russian troops. they met the first day of the war. how did the events develop? how did the woman save the children and where did she find strength ? we congratulate you on the air. we congratulate you in return. so , what was the first day of the great war like for you and for the girls with whom you came to the tournament in the capital well, first of all, when the war started, our girls were sleeping in their beds parents, yes, we have housing for six teams in puscha-vodica, and when we got a call, our parents called us, we gathered together as a coaching staff on the first floor and thought what to do with us, and
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it was february 24th. we were in puscha-vodica, but already in the evening we heard it more er ruptures and er at first we went through the bomb shelter to the nearby maternity hospital when you started to hear only the devil in the morning there was nothing in the afternoon what no no no we heard explosions throughout the day but there were fewer of them in my opinion already during the day we uh- they asked for help in the neighboring building of the stork maternity hospital , because in the basement, because without storage, all the children could not be accommodated, and the kyiv
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team, the parents immediately came and took them away, and the team from rivne also had traffic jams. but parents of children, which is equal, too the cars came and took them away from us , the kharkiv team, the dnipro team, and the team with ivan frankivska remained in the vodytsa forest, and that's how long the athletes were, uh, these are children born in 2009-10, that is, 12-13 years old, that's right, at that time, yes, and we first asked for a bomb shelter they let us into the basement of the neighbor's maternity hospital a-ah stork, well, there was very little space there and uh, the security offered us uh, that we should inspect the neighbors , the neighboring school, for sure there
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were no mattresses there at all small then the volunteers would bring mattresses, water, we would settle down in a corner, er, put a dot there , and all night, all night, er, i heard the rumbling upstairs. and what about the children, how did they perceive what was happening around, because well, right next to gostomel, i understand that it was very scary it's loud there, there's a harvest, there's aviation, there's shelling, how come you don't know they were comforted no, grandpa, the children were definitely scared, but they got used to trusting us and listened and obeyed my ukrainian. i told the children, they explained what was happening . grain storage
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i told them to take warm things, uh , at the base, take uh, warm blankets, water , there must be some croutons , cookies, we take everything with us, and we went to the bomb shelter and spent the whole night there, and i think that the parents they just uh just cut off your phone so i think the parents of the whole team called you what to do no and they didn’t blow me up because i’m in a group in viber i wrote every step what we do what we we what we do a-a there are a couple we advised the parents with them, what is the best thing to do when i, well, first of all, the parents they wanted us to turn to the side and not
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the other way, because all the people went to western ukraine, and it was just more difficult for us there. i understand that i built a route from uh dognia to pole myag, because kharkiv was at that time too it was also hot in kharkiv, but my parents decided that we should move in the direction of kharkiv, and we constantly contacted the basketball federation of ukraine, and they helped as much as they could, and they helped the ivano-frankivsk team. the carrier arrived and took analogue and ivan franko's team, they went to safer regions we understand what happened in the kharkiv region. so, where did you and the team end up in the end? we, uh, we were ordered for 11
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o'clock, a carrier bus, but it didn't come to pick us up, and they said to get out if you want, that is, they just left me and that well yes. well, i saw a bus standing there bringing groceries. it had six seats and he said, "you won't get in here." thirteen girls. i told them i don't know how you will do it. well, we all have to sit in this bus and go to the railway station. they sat one on top of the other on the seats in the trunk.
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there were a lot of people at the railway station, i sat down with the children at the bottom of the crossing and probably ran upstairs for about 4-5 hours to see which train was going to kharkiv

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