tv [untitled] February 10, 2023 5:30am-6:01am EET
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[000:00:00;00] in the morning, that is, the consciousness of the people, unfortunately, at such a price, but the consciousness of the people has changed very much, that is, the mood of the citizens is very uh-uh, that is, once upon a time, someone was there . well, the conflict in donbas , some related to this. so, this is a full-scale war . that is, some people generally told us that this does not concern us, this is not ours, some people continued to live their usual lives. but after the invasion , the consciousness of many people changed very much, very much. we pay. she is really great. but do you have a sense of pride for the fact that by your actions and your knowledge you are bringing victory day closer ? i wouldn't say it's a feeling of pride, but i
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'm glad to understand that i can somehow influence , as you know, a small cog in a huge mechanism, but all the same, i do. i bring benefit with my actions. i do something so that there is a victory, but you said that you are a small cog , but you realize that the life of every person who goes to the front after you depends on this small cog. so this is very high responsibility i am sure that you cope with the mission in accordance with
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important i was glad to my wife i defend my ukraine we are independent ukraine, i defend, i defend, i defend, i defend, i defend the soldiers of the offensive guard, who have repeatedly proven themselves in battle in our brigade, no one needs to be convinced , people go there on their own, motivated, have already chosen their direction, the liberation of ukraine, the task is to see this matter through to the end, drive the gun over the edge stanislav petryakov, national guard brigade, crossing the border today at 19:30, a journalist currently living in kyiv. please tell me a few words about what you do in kyiv. i have been working
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as a journalist for 25 years. i have been in various places of the world in different war zones when the war in ukraine started as a member of the london club called the front line club for olx journalists a few weeks into a full-scale invasion many journalists died on the front lines of the clubhouses london we him in london we looked at this situation with horror we just thought that there should be something that we can do to train people, you know. we have a lot of experience on the front lines , so we tried to get to ukraine to teach people, to teach them basic skills, how to survive on the front lines. journalistic skills, how to do basic things safely, and also conduct training for them on the basics of tactical medicine, which could also
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be useful in the front line club. we collected 30 thousand pounds, which we spent on sending me to lviv, where we conducted the first trainings on public television. and i returned to england several funds gave us more money that you return to these courses is it come are you alter now we are doing it in kyiv i believe that this is the center where there are many more journalists i will be here is as much as we have enough funding to continue training people. i think there is a difference. i want to pass on a small part of my experience on the front lines. how many journalists have you trained in ukraine? i think in lviv. we trained 140-150 people in kyiv. we just started. i just returned. we
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taught 25 people last week 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 pricing so i went out with the commander and set targets 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 gallants enough knowledge of heavy artillery gives you an advantage a small advantage you know how these people think he knows plastirivskoy, little man, i can imagine how the gunner thinks, you said that you just returned from bakhmut and soledar, please tell me about what you
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saw there, what is happening for me, bakhmut and soledar are places where you don't need to explain what you are in a very dark and dangerous city, you know where the forces are at this moment, you can go on this road, and is there an attack? no, there are a lot of shells flying overhead and departures and arrivals, perhaps the most dangerous place among those where i have been in ukraine is bakhmut, you are bald unpredictability you know you worked in such places when you look out of the car and you hear this silence and this silence then something breaks my advice to all the people there i was there with
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the people who delivered watering cans body armor and helmets don't stay longer than two or three minutes in no place because now this war is different from any other shift i've been on because there are drones and not only eagles there are mavics you have the impression that you are being watched all the time watch uh, it's notes, tay, less than another dimension, you not only do you have to play and listen now you have to look up especially the home made drones with c4 feet and metal balls for damage they can do a lot of damage and there is so much going on my advice if you are in bahmut and soledar keep your eyes open more than
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look for shelter anywhere, for example, a bridge, get out of sight because drones are deadly. do you think the russians have good tactics in bakhmut? and fellow soldiers, what are they doing there ? russian tactics went back to 1918. it can’t really be called deva’s tactics . less like this is wagner’s company. they send numerous infantry wave after wave and they don't care if the people they send die and that's how it is, it's an old soviet trick , just keep pressing and pressing and pressing with numbers on us. i'm not even falling yet, you see bodies on the field of pain well, zelenskyi still has that chlaminal zelenskyi said that they look at each other's heads to get to the place where they are sent, they use tactics from another century of the first world war , they just continue to send numerous people during i don't understand because if you remove
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the map from soledar and you will see the scale of the front line, the scale of ukraine and the scale of what they want to control if they win in soledar, maybe in bahmut, which seems to be their next target a small 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 , this battle seems to have no meaning and this defense they only get a one-day victory, this will be felt, you said that you have been working 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
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8 months from the very beginning when people just took up arms to a year of secondment as a journalist of course, it was quite brutal, because everything that was in gaddafi was not there like that, there were just playing launchers bm-21 surrounded the city and destroyed and hoping that they won, but he fought with the rebels who could move quickly and one by one the rebels were taken out all hail launchers out of order and when they ran out of hail they had nothing left they fought only with hail from 20 km until gaddafi was finally killed i was in syria there was a different kind of war
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going on the order of battle from the assad regime was this killing first doctors, then journalists, and thirdly, people with weapons, but you had doctors so quickly that no one could go to the hospital after being injured during the protests, journalists and photographers were killed so that the information did not spread around the world , and in the end, they visited people with weapons, which was madness it was a brutal suppression of people in the end i was blown up by assad forces in the city of holmes can you tell this story who was possibly the best war correspondent of our generation she had a black armband
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because she was wounded by the zerpoga in sri lanka, that she knew what war was like, we made our way through an underground tunnel 3 km long to reach a city called homs, they write payne , that is, it was surrounded by a mechanized division that shelled the city every day with all the available weapons, from the artillery of franz and ons tanks thinks t18 hours a day boom-boom-boom subway 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 were killed every day by our colleagues, do you hear that? 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 . so she was like her own interest together . we decided to do an interview on cnn, bbc and
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channelfa in great britain and we installed satellite the communication that was set up with the rebels we finished it at midnight the next day at 4:30 we tried to leave the city through the same tunnel fu fu and then two explosions at a distance of maybe 100 m and quite large big heavy artillery then there was 30 a second pause, people cursed and began to crawl faster, fixing their bulletproof vests, then two more explosions at 50 m . i thought that we were being cornered. this is how artillery works to hit the building. i knew that we had 30 seconds, and people started shouting, get out into the street, and i say
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not if you are on the street, when one of the shells hits you, you will be torn to shreds, and another one of the shells hit the building and the roof fell in. i tried to take my camera, and at that time another shell hit the street where the children were standing and a belt, another one of our friends killed them instant explosion i passed through them. i thought i was fine. i didn't feel any debris. for a few seconds, i just stood there and felt that a stone hit me in the leg. open and seagull for ukraine. i began to check if everything was in order and began to touch
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the leg with my hand, that the hand passes through the leg. all over the place and thought okay i got hit in the eye too yeah the stumps are on new rules i knew i only had a few seconds i put my hand into the wound and felt the artery to check if it was intact i felt the bone it was fine check now i took the scarf and quickly wrapped it around the leg and pulled it tight yes it happened but then they started shooting again to the place where marie was lying and i checked she was dead as well as the belt so i realized that i had to save myself because of the ongoing shelling i had to lie low for the next 10-15 minutes i saw a whole pool around me
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of blood so the self-made tourniquet didn't work before that, let's not call it a clamp, i picked up an internet cable , wound it on my leg, took the broken trees from the destroyed building and twisted it , stopped the bleeding even. of the home 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, he was so funny, this doctor, i told him i had a hole in my leg, but what i he looked and said yes and it is and then took a medical saw i asked what you are doing i know never i am going to cut off your
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leg do you have a pain reliever paracetamol no no you will not cut off my leg under thinking paracetamol tablets his argument was in because it's easier to heal it's easier to keep such a wound clean it's easier to avoid infection cutting off the leg will be easier than healing a big hole in the leg full of germs but i told nina that the stylegun stapler is an 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 traveling through the city and then lebanon with a leg hanging without any painkillers except for cigarettes that
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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 i'm fine now i can walk in insects it's been really cold or when there's heavy loads it causes problems but it works you know what you're doing i mean teaching people how to help themselves when injured but let's talk about the war in ukraine how many wars have you worked did you work in yugoslavia day yes i think that's 25 wars during
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my career iraq afghanistan syria jordan a lot of low-intensity wars, wild places, really bad things, that is, you can compare what are the differences in the war in ukraine, that is, the russian invasion of ukraine, what are the differences between this war and , for example, the war in syria, afghanistan and cancer , this war in ukraine is as close as possible to a total war. i'm talking about the second world war, because you know that most of the wars that my friends and i covered were uprisings, where there are very small groups and a government that has enough strength to come and
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just look at it mainly civilians fighting the military the number of heavy artillery heavy weapons strategic bombers submarines launch cruise missiles tanks trenches francis inozesten region all this takes us back to 1930-1940 to that kind of war i think every journalist i know with whom i was working, would you say it yourself somewhere like this , this is the type of war that our parents could make reports about i think many people and many journalists with whom i work are amazed by how ukrainians manage access to the combat zone. you ca
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n't just drive to the front line. it is the most covered in lviv. i could go and do whatever i wanted at any time. to go to any place on the battlefield, but this is not a necessity and something good in this situation, 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. time the information was only in the phone or in the document and now the enemy can have access to this information in a matter of seconds it is important if the photo shows a high-mar building there and
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a building here the place can be geolocated this is a big threat you could lose this valuable piece of equipment if let people in for as many settlements as i have infomenish football information can now spread widely and quickly but i believe that they are doing a good job, they continue to inform people but keep boundaries angelina at all times you know secrecy is also weapons in the war i think it is correct it is patchy what do you think people in great britain understand that we are fighting for our own freedom but we are also afraid to protect europe from the russians and this i am sure that people in britain understand they are aware they don't need to be told
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look people ukrainians are fighting against the russians it's a general the closer you get estonia lithuania latvia poland people there really understand it because if the front line moves forward they are next and here is tanei veliana action film although geographical great britain is very far away we are still we understand because it happened in 1939, a student if he wins here if you ask people if he can win here, people will say absolutely categorically, we are coming to no one, they cannot win ukraine when you have people with such an attitude, and not a solution, it is interesting to send less,
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more weapons, more dangerous weapons and the cants are less, but they cannot destroy this attitude , it is impossible, he cannot win this war . i am trying. yesterday you told me that you want to stay in ukraine and you want to have a ukrainian passport. you can ask president zelenskyi to give you a passport this is a great opportunity how do you feel about being in ukraine i mean if you want to stay here do you like something here why do you feel better here than there a little pushed us away from our closest allies in europe i can now go to europe for only three months. although before that i could live in europe all the time, the questions
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became a place where it is very uncomfortable for me to live correctly in my work situations. when you come to ukraine, which is united against common enemies here i am greeted kindly i have never been greeted so kindly anywhere i am well received here everywhere and i like it and i like the fact that you will win come on this is ukrainian women is the beer cheap enough compared to liverpool it is getting cheaper people smile more more yes you will win you are on your way to the great victory
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i will make my coffee for this continue and do what you are doing he often the country succeeds in uniting correctly uniting all the time attempts are made to divide this unity but i think it is very strong now this is one of your most valuable assets now this unity to stand together and stick together this is free people settling along the borders we are now on the border between ukraine and russia but at the same time it is the border of two worlds of the west and the east during this war i think we can join the western world because we are protecting it right now, just me , however, just before this invasion , there was a discussion about whether ukraine should join nato , i have a great answer to that, i think
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nato should join ukraine, i think so the best ending to the interview, thank you psychological help for a child during an air alarm children always take over the condition of adults, so it is important to remain calm if the child is nervous explain that it is safe in the shelter and that there is no need to be afraid to reduce the level of stress, try to occupy the little one with moving games, you can involve other children who are nearby do not forbid the child to ask questions or share memories allow him to speak and show emotions and after that calm the baby tell us
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about the strength of our army and the victory states now there are children's fairy tales about the air defense of ukraine, in no case raise the voice of the country , it is difficult to hold the rear when children are at the front, what is there ? but everything is fine . winter over a million ukrainians need housing do you have the opportunity to accept refugees from the war zone i leave an ad on the website of the shelter victory is one
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for all the style of yours what was the scariest moment for you on the battlefield when they ended ammunition again, the first battle was accepted, there was a pistol for two we have several doctors, hunters were brought in rifles, later we stopped the ticket of 130 cars heroes are not born quite expensive, i would have already had a hand and would have already started to recover the goods of heroes there are few wounded, many brothers, we are losing the best how to sit at this table without brothers and there will be a dozen covered castles with black bread we die but we are not afraid without fear you have already won from monday to friday 23:00 in
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