tv [untitled] February 4, 2023 4:30am-5:00am EET
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[000:00:00;00] we shot all this together, i was the photographer, he was the cameraman, we were also there with us , the producer vasylisa stepanenko was also in mariupol, and we shot all this, and he completed this film together with the studio, the premiere will be at sanders we want to go to say that this is a very important film that the whole world should see, i thank you very much and wish you all the best and i want your film to be seen by as many people as possible because the whole world really needs to know the truth. thank you for that. thank you. thank you. victory is with you. how are you i keep i keep honest and cover more easily
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it covers a lot the last time it was a story with a dog crimea this story touched me very much then i just sit and cry put my feet shoulder-width apart smoothly raise the right hand and reach up with the edge of the right palm as if you are trying to press it to the sky and with the edge of the left hand reach down into in such a position, take several smooth inhalations and exhalations. imagine that you are a tree that is slowly swayed by a gentle wind . it sways a little while inhaling. slowly come out of the pose and place your palms on your chest. on exhalation , slowly lower them and rest for a few seconds. and do the same thing, but with the other hand, pipe this technique into your self-help first aid kit. those who support russian aggression, are engaged in the spread of russian propaganda, support or hold a referendum in the occupied territories, cooperate with the occupiers to obtain positions, or perform tasks set by the occupying power are considered collaborators here. provided housing to the occupiers, provided them with food
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or passed on information about ukrainian defenders of the authorities or their location, these people receive real terms of imprisonment up to 15 years of imprisonment avation and simply continued to perform her duties without harming ukraine or under the threat of death this does not mean that she is a collaborator of energoprom it starts with your home today millions of old lamps consume more than gb of constant emotions from the energy front every day the european union aid program allows ukrainians to exchange five incandescent lamps for free on a modern economy in any department guaranteed to receive them a simple bag of actions would replace add energy
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to our country lighting together if we our children will fight, protect yours, when the light goes out everywhere , that they continue to fight for life every day, every day, every second, during the war, hospitals became fortresses of light , where they heal not only the body, but also the soul, and the pain does not continue to be preserved. the flame of hope is their reward, our smiles and hug them another saved person they know this every life that's why they keep the light inside us we are grateful to the doctors who continue to save people
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despite the darkness outside the window thank you it's hard to keep the dust when the children are at the front what's up everything is fine. they came out without losses. it’s difficult, but it’s worth it. you found a working store of three letters. there’s no light. please, all the bouquets are so lucky. it doesn’t disappear in our country. so
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the generator on the street is humming. ukrainian veterans background, money, what was possible? why not, the fund helps? veteran enterprises are interested in what is needed for this, only fop and ubd, for example, my husband and i have a family business up to 20 thousand hryvnias. phone number and i am a british photojournalist currently living in kyiv. please tell me a few words about what you do in kyiv. i have been working as a journalist for 25 years. i was in different places around the world in different war zones when the war in ukraine started as a member of the london club, which is called the club front line for
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a magazine for parents first few weeks in a full-scale invasion many journalists died on the front line anne frank in a club in london we watched this situation with horror we just thought what be something we can do to train people you know we have a lot of experience on the front lines of the country's war if we tried to get into ukraine to teach people to teach them basic skills how to survive on the front line and also some journalistic skills how to do basic things safely and also conduct for them trainings on the basics of tactical medicine , which could also be useful in the front line club. we collected 30 thousand pounds, which we spent on sending me to lviv, where we spent the first three days with
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public television. returned to england, several funds gave us more money to return to these courses, this is a combination of certificates, kyiv, now we are doing it in kyiv. i believe that this is a center where there are many more journalists. i will be here as long as we have enough funding to continue training people, an experiment. i think there is a difference. i want to share a small part of my experience on the front lines. how many journalists did you train in ukraine? i think in lviv. we trained 140-150 people in kyiv. we just started. i just returned. i was trained by 25 people.
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i think we will have a lot of groups of 25 tell me a few words about your military experience i served in the artillery i was an artillery adjuster my job was to determine the target so i went out with the commander and determined the target er clean the artillery experience helps a lot when i was in bahmut and soledar when you hear the artillery work from both sides even if it was a long time ago uh knowing heavy artillery gives you an advantage a little advantage you know how these people think he learned the trait of being small i can imagine how a terrorist thinks you said that you just returned from bakhmut and soledar, please tell me what you saw there , what is happening for me bakhmut and soledar are places where you don't need to explain that
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you are in a very dark and dangerous place of movement of forces, you know at any moment you can go on this road and the offensive is already no, there are many shells flying overhead and departures and arrivals there, the display is possibly the most dangerous place among those where i have been in ukraine , it is bagmouth, how about you, this unpredictability, you know. you worked in such places when you you look out of the car and you hear this silence and this silence then something breaks my advice to all the people out there i was there with the people delivering the medicine bulletproof vests and helmets don't stay longer than two or three minutes in any place now this war is different
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from any other changes that i have been to because there are drones and not only orlan , even you have the impression that you are being watched all the time . damage they can do a lot of damage and there's a lot going on my advice if you're in bakhmut and soledar keep your eyes open more than anywhere else look for cover like a bridge get out of sight because drones are deadly do you think the russians have good tactics in bakhmut and soledar what are they doing there, russian tactics went back to 1918, it can’t really be called
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tactics, where there is a moment such a mood , wagner’s company, they send numerous infantry wave after wave and they don’t care if they are sent by them people will die anyway, it's an old soviet trick of science, just keep pushing and pushing and pushing the number. and you see bodies on the battlefield. well, i have zelensky, and that zelensky said that they look at each other's bodies to get to the place where they are sent , they use tactics from another century of the first world war they just keep sending numerous people, i don't understand because if you move the map away from the soledar and see the scale of the front line, the scale of ukraine and the scale of what they want to control
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if they win in soledar, maybe in bahmut, which seems to be their next target, he is a tiny one, amen, and they will hand it over to moscow and present it as a huge victory in the history of mankind, they took a town with ten thousand people somewhere in the donetsk region, it seems that this battle has no meaning and this defense they only get one day's victory it's desperation you said you work as a war correspondent for about 20 years you worked i worked on all the events of the arab spring it was tunisia libya egypt i was in libya for 8 months from the very at the beginning, when people just took up arms, this was my longest business trip as a journalist. socially, it was quite cruel, because everything
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that was in gaddafi was not like that. they just played there . bm-21 launchers surrounded the city and destroyed it, hoping that they defeated this brother but he was fighting the rebels who could move quickly and one by one the rebels disabled all the hail launchers and when the hail was gone they had nothing left they fought only with hail from 20 km until gaddafi was finally i was killed. i was in syria. there was a different type of war going on. the order of battle from the assad regime was to kill first doctors, then journalists , and thirdly, people with weapons, but they dance quickly. they had doctors so that no one
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could go to the hospital after being injured during the protests. they killed journalists and photographers so that the information did not spread around the world and in the end they visited people with weapons that was madness it was brutal suppression of people in the end i was blown up by the forces of assad in the city of holmes there you can tell this story that was possible the best war correspondent of our generation. she had a black armband because she was wounded by an rpg in sri lanka , what did she know about war?
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which bombarded the city every day with all available weapons hails artillery tanks franz a ons thinks t18 hours a day boom-boom-boom subaru forever we made reports from there but it got worse and worse they released more and more shells many people who entered the city were killed by that nel. they killed our colleagues every day. you hear what i told them, marie. if we don't do something, now we won't be able to write our story in the sunday time from sunday, and we'll be dead. how did she get her interest together we decided to do an interview on cnn bbc and channelfa in the uk and we established a satellite link that was set up in the rebels we finished it
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at midnight the next day at 4:30 we tried to leave the city through the same tunnel and then two explosions at a distance of maybe 100 m and fairly large heavy artillery, then there was a 30-second pause, people cursed and began to stand up faster , fixing their body armor, then two more explosions at 50 m, i thought that we were being cornered . this is how artillery works to hit a building. i knew that we have 30 seconds and people started shouting get out into the street and i say no if you are outside when one of the projectiles hits you in pieces and they leave ambifovanie van hepp one of the projectiles
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hit the building and the roof collapsed i tried to take my camera and in this time for another projectile hit the street where marie and the belt were standing, another one of our friends killed them instantly, the explosion went through them. i thought i was fine, i didn't feel any debris from it for a few seconds , i just stood there and felt that a stone hit me in the leg. open and seagull for ukraine i started to check if everything is okay and i started to touch the leg with my hand that the hand goes through the leg and i thought ok i got hit too ok yeah stumps and on new year i knew i only had a few seconds i put my hand into
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the wound and felt the artery to check whether she was whole felt the bone she was fine check and boun-sel tabounhive i took the scarf and quickly wrapped it around my leg and pulled it and read but then they started shooting again to where marie was lying and checked she was dead as well as the belt so i realized that i have to save myself because of the shelling that continued, i had to lie low for the next 10-15 minutes, i saw a whole pool of blood around me . so the homemade tourniquet didn't work until then, let the kibu crewman pick up
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the internet cable, wound it on my leg and took it in pieces tree from the destroyed building and twisted it, stopped the bleeding, even the damn thing stopped in about 10 minutes, the shelling stopped, the army came and pulled me out of there and brought me to the field hospital , which consisted of one room, one doctor and several bandages, i don't know. he looked at me and asked everything ahead. this doctor was so funny, i told him i have a hole in my leg, but what am i? he looked and said yes it is and then took a medical saw i asked what you are doing and two more children and never again i am going to cut off your leg and you have painkiller paracetamol no no you won't cut off my leg trick with paracetamol tablets this couple is not enough his argument was that it is easier to heal
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easier to keep such a wound clean it is easier to avoid infection if you cut off the leg it will be easier than to heal a big hole in the leg full of germs but i said nina stylegun stapler office stapler and stapled my leg for 13 days we had to wait five or six days i had to wait in that room that was just being torn to pieces by artillery then there were 5 days of travel across the city and then lebanon with my leg hanging without any painkillers except cigarettes which only worked psychologically but i managed when i came back to the uk i had 25 operations to fix my leg what they could but now i'm fine i can
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walk in insects they it is very cold or when there are heavy loads it creates problems but it works well you know what you are doing i mean teaching people how to help themselves when they are injured but let's talk about the war in ukraine how many wars did you work did you work in yugoslavia days yes i think it's 25 wars during my career iraq afghanistan syria jordan a lot of low intensity war horse place went wild really bad things your ken kemper that is you can compare what are the differences in the war in ukraine i.e. the russian invasion
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in ukraine, what are the differences between this war and, for example, the war in syria, afghanistan, iraq, iraq without writing, this war in ukraine is as close as possible to total war. i am talking about the second world war, i am robbing you of this because you know this most of the wars that me and my friends covered were paine's rebellion where he was in apple pen very small groups and the government that has enough power to come and just watch it is mostly civilians fighting the military the amount of heavy artillery heavy weapons strategic bombers submarines boats launch cruise missiles tanks trenches from inozestynska olpan all this takes us back to
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1930-1940 to that kind of war i think every journalist i know and who i worked with would say the same thing what is this type a war about which our parents could shoot reports. do you think that this war is one of the most covered by the media, or is it sufficiently covered by foreign and ukrainian journalists ? i think many people and many journalists with whom i work are amazed by the way ukrainians manage access to the combat zone. just go by car to the front line picas ai hecounty is the most highlighted in lviv its go and do whatever i want at any time i could go to any place on the battlefield but it
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is not a necessity and something good in this situations where i think that the ukrainian military and everyone who provides access is right because we have to admit that now there is instagram and twitter , at one time the information was only on the phone or in a document. hi-mar the building there and the building here the place can be geolocated this is a big threat you could lose this valuable piece of equipment if you let
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people in how many settlements i have information now can spread wide and fast but i i think they are doing a good job keep informing people but keep the prices down go for all time you know secrecy is also a weapon in the war i think it is right what do you think people in the uk understand that we are fighting for our own freedom but we are afraid too to protect europe from the russians. i am sure that people in britain understand . they are aware. they don't need to be told. look , the ukrainian people are fighting against the russians. fedemsa, the general , the closer you get. estonia, lithuania, latvia
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, poland. people there really understand it, because if the front line will advance, they will be the next ones. and here is tanei veliana action nine crazy, although geographically great britain is very far away, we still understand because in 1939 it happened to me there, putin, if he wins here, if you ask people if he can win here, people will say absolutely categorically no, they cannot defeat ukraine when you have people with such an attitude and not a solution, it is interesting that they can send more weapons, more dangerous weapons, and the smaller ones, but they cannot destroy this attitude, it is impossible, he cannot win this war i am trying yesterday you told me that
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you want to stay in ukraine and want to have a ukrainian passport i insist on this you can ask president zelenskyi to give you a passport this is a great opportunity how do you feel when you are in ukraine i mean that if you want to stay here you can stay here something like why do you feel better here than there pushed us a little away from our closest allies in europe i can now go to europe only for three months although before that i could live in europe all the time questions has become a place where i feel very uncomfortable living in my work situations . when you come to ukraine, which is united against a common enemy
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, i am greeted here warmly, as if i have never been greeted so warmly. i am well received here everywhere, and i like it and i like that you will win, please cheap enough compared to liverpool everything cheaper people smile more more so you win you on your way to the great victory i'll make my coffee for it so you want to add for our audiences we go fact and on offeng keep doing what you are doing he often the country succeeds in uniting properly uniting all the time attempts are made to divide this unity but i think it is very
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strong now this is one of your most valuable assets now this unity stand together and stick together this is a free people settle along the borders we are now on the border between ukraine and russia but at the same time it is the border of the two worlds of the west and the east during this war i think we can join the western world because we are protecting it now this invasion was a debate about whether ukraine should join nato i have a great answer to that i think nato should join ukraine i think this is the best
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