Russia Attacks Ukraine - 23 Feb 2022

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  • #461
One of the most heart melting pictures...a sign of hope. So much hope for our younger generation....wow...
1uwx4u2awrlm_wd1280.jpg


Imagine, being in the subway underground to shelter for bombs....wow....just wow....love will guide you...light will follow you to your destination....your faith...you can't deny it.....
 
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  • #462
sbm

You're joking, right?
Even Russians hate him rn.


I'm sure some do. But, overall, he has a lot of support in Russia, eastern Ukraine, and Crimea.
 
  • #463
o/t For the first time my dear mom spoke of her experiences as a child in wartime, it shocked me to hear her tell of how afraid she had been, the scarcity of food, how they trembled in the dark as planes roared overhead. Then she said she was tired of living. i will not ever ask her again.
God bless your Momma <3
 
  • #464
British Telecom announcement:

For anyone wanting to contact loved ones in Ukraine, we’ve made mobile and landline calls, texts and data to and from the region free from today, 25 February.

Please be aware that signal in the area might be affected by damage to local networks and equipment.

Pleased to see other global telecoms providers have done the same, including T-Mobile US, Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom.
 
  • #465
Russian officials announce 'partial restriction' on Facebook access

Russian officials announced Friday that there will be a "partial restriction" of access to Facebook following the social media platform's decision to suspend the accounts of several Russian state-run media organizations.

Russia invasion of Ukraine makes 'limited progress,' forces start attack on Kyiv: LIVE UPDATES

I believe Putin has viewed the internet and social media as one of the greatest threats to his strength for some time. I would not be surprised to see the “partial restriction” flow to other forms of social media and general internet access. It comes down to feeling threatened and controlling perspectives.
 
  • #466
This is insane
A radiation spike has been recorded near Chernobyl's nuclear power plant which has been seized by Russian forces, monitoring data shows.

Invading Russian troops took control of the plant - the site of the world's worst nuclear disaster in 1986 - on Thursday, Ukraine said.

Radiation levels increased about 20-fold on Thursday, monitoring stations there reported.

The rise was caused by heavy military vehicles stirring contaminated soil in the 4,000-sq-km (2,485 sq-mile) exclusion zone surrounding the abandoned plant, Ukraine's State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate reported .
Chernobyl: Radiation spike at nuclear plant seized by Russian forces

and:
As we (CNN reporters) left Mariupol for Zaporizhzhia...
....we (hotel staff) wanted to make sure you had a good stay. But also to tell you, did you hear about Chernobyl?” He went on to tell me that the Zaporizhzhia municipality has told him their water is already showing higher traces of radioactivity following the fighting and capture by Russian forces.
Russia invades Ukraine: Live updates
 
  • #467
o/t For the first time my dear mom spoke of her experiences as a child in wartime, it shocked me to hear her tell of how afraid she had been, the scarcity of food, how they trembled in the dark as planes roared overhead. Then she said she was tired of living. i will not ever ask her again.

There will be a time again....I'm sure....love and light to the both of you.
 
  • #468
This is insane
A radiation spike has been recorded near Chernobyl's nuclear power plant which has been seized by Russian forces, monitoring data shows.

Invading Russian troops took control of the plant - the site of the world's worst nuclear disaster in 1986 - on Thursday, Ukraine said.

Radiation levels increased about 20-fold on Thursday, monitoring stations there reported.

The rise was caused by heavy military vehicles stirring contaminated soil in the 4,000-sq-km (2,485 sq-mile) exclusion zone surrounding the abandoned plant, Ukraine's State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate reported .
Chernobyl: Radiation spike at nuclear plant seized by Russian forces

and:
As we (CNN reporters) left Mariupol for Zaporizhzhia...
....we (hotel staff) wanted to make sure you had a good stay. But also to tell you, did you hear about Chernobyl?” He went on to tell me that the Zaporizhzhia municipality has told him their water is already showing higher traces of radioactivity following the fighting and capture by Russian forces.
Russia invades Ukraine: Live updates

This is pure craziness....
 
  • #469
Prominent Russians join protests against Ukraine war amid 1,800 arrests

Prominent Russians shocked by the invasion of Ukraine have gone public with their opposition to the war, despite the professional and personal risks that come with dissent on such a sensitive issue in Russia.

(...)

When Elena Chernenko, the veteran diplomatic correspondent for Kommersant newspaper, found out that Russia was invading Ukraine, she said she was stunned.

(...)

After Putin announced the military operation, she penned an open letter condemning the attack on Ukraine. “War has never been and will never be a method of conflict resolution and there are no excuses for it,” she wrote. Nearly 300 journalists have signed, including representatives of state-run media.

In retaliation, she revealed she has been expelled from the diplomatic pool, which she has covered for more than 11 years, for “unprofessionalism”.

(...)

On Thursday, Ivan Urgant, the host of a popular talk show on state-run Channel One, posted a black square on Instagram with the caption “Fear and pain. No to war.” His show has not gone on air since. Channel One has claimed it is just a scheduling issue, although several reports in Russian media say that they have been blacklisted.

Elena Kovalskaya, the director of the Meyerhold Center in Moscow, quit her job at the state-financed theatre in an act of protest over the war. “It’s impossible to work for a murderer and receive your salary from him,” she wrote of her decision.

(...)

While the acts of dissent may not change Kremlin policy, they could point to significantly less public or elite support for the current military operation in Ukraine than the annexation of Crimea eight years ago.

Hours after Putin announced the military operation, protests broke out on the streets of Moscow and St Petersburg and more than 50 other Russian cities on Thursday evening.

(...)

One young man held up a sign that said “🤬🤬🤬🤬 the war!” Within seconds, four police officers had fallen on top of him, dragging him roughly to a police van as media and photographers crowded around.

That scene repeated itself dozens of times, as protesters mostly waited their turn for police to arrest them. As the protesters were pushed off the square, they began to march down the broad pavement of Tverskaya Street, chanting “No to war.”

(...)
 
  • #470
My word, I’ve never even heard of thermobaric weapons before now, but this is terrifying:

Furious Putin prepares to use 'father of all bombs' as brave Ukrainians hold up advance | Daily Mail Online

Russia could use savage superweapons that vaporize bodies and crush internal organs if their assault of Ukraine becomes bogged down, Western officials warned tonight. They fear Vladimir Putin could resort to high-power thermobaric weapons - dubbed the 'father of all bombs'.

Thermobaric weapons - also known as vacuum bombs - are high-powered explosive that use the atmosphere itself as part of the explosion. They are among the most powerful non-nuclear weapons ever developed.
 
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  • #471
Just shown on Global TV that City Hall in Ottawa, Canada's capital, in a small and perhaps not that noticeable gesture, is flying the blue and yellow Ukrainian flag.

giphy.gif
That is comforting ( albeit won’t stop Putin obv ) but it’s comforting to the people of the Ukraine to know that we are with them in hearts and minds ❤️
 
  • #472
  • #473
  • #474
Heroic Ukrainian marine blows himself up with bridge to hold off Russian troops at Crimea

A heroic Ukrainian marine blew himself up along with a bridge in Crimea on Thursday to hold off advancing Russian troops and allow his battalion to regroup and redeploy.

Vitaly Shakun was manning the Henichesk bridge in the Kherson region when Russians advanced.

According to a post on the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine's Facebook page, the battalion decided the only way to stop them was to blow up the bridge. It was mined, and he had no time to get out.

Shakun texted them and told them he was going to blow up the bridge. Seconds later, they heard an explosion, the post said.

His efforts dramatically slowed down the Russian advance and allowed his comrades to regroup and re-deploy.

He is believed to be among the at least 137 people who died on the first day of the war yesterday.

'On this difficult day for our country, when the Ukrainian people are repelling the Russian occupiers in all directions, one of the most difficult places on the map of Ukraine was the Crimean Isthmus, where a separate battalion of marines met one of the first enemies.

'To stop the advance of the tank column, it was decided to blow up the Genichesky road bridge.

Vitaliy Volodymyrovych Skakun, an engineer of a separate battalion, volunteered to perform this task. The bridge was mined, but he did not have time to leave.

'According to the brothers, Vitaliy got in touch and said that he was blowing up the bridge. An explosion was heard immediately. Our brother died.

'His heroic deed significantly slowed the advance of the enemy, which allowed the unit to redeploy and organize the defense,' a translation of the post reads.


Putin prepares to use 'father of all bombs' as Ukraine fights advance
 

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  • #475
I am keeping 2 women in my prayers that I know who lived in kyiv 10 years ago that I met though their sister Olga who I met and helped her in her time here when her husband died and then she got cancer.
 
  • #476
'Stop the war': Crowds protest at Russian Embassy

Several hundred people have taken part in a protest outside the Russian Embassy in Dublin, calling for an end to the invasion in Ukraine.

The event was organised by members of the Ukrainian community in Ireland, who staged a similar demonstration yesterday.

Orwell Road in Rathgar, where the embassy is located, was closed to traffic during the protest with diversions in place, after large crowds turned out.

A diplomatic car, attempting to enter the embassy, was blocked by protesters and partially draped in a Ukrainian flag.

Many of those in attendance sang the Ukrainian national anthem, amid calls for an immediate ceasefire and for further sanctions on Russia.

People also held placards condemning the Russian invasion, with chants to "stop the war".

Citizens of a number of countries in Eastern Europe attended the protest in solidarity with their neighbours.

Many Irish people also turned out to voice their concerns at the situation in Ukraine.

The organisers said they "condemn Russia for invading a sovereign country with its military troops".

(...)
 
  • #477
  • #478
Heroic Ukrainian marine blows himself up with bridge to hold off Russian troops at Crimea

A heroic Ukrainian marine blew himself up along with a bridge in Crimea on Thursday to hold off advancing Russian troops and allow his battalion to regroup and redeploy.

Vitaly Shakun was manning the Henichesk bridge in the Kherson region when Russians advanced.

According to a post on the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine's Facebook page, the battalion decided the only way to stop them was to blow up the bridge. It was mined, and he had no time to get out.

Shakun texted them and told them he was going to blow up the bridge. Seconds later, they heard an explosion, the post said.

His efforts dramatically slowed down the Russian advance and allowed his comrades to regroup and re-deploy.

He is believed to be among the at least 137 people who died on the first day of the war yesterday.

'On this difficult day for our country, when the Ukrainian people are repelling the Russian occupiers in all directions, one of the most difficult places on the map of Ukraine was the Crimean Isthmus, where a separate battalion of marines met one of the first enemies.

'To stop the advance of the tank column, it was decided to blow up the Genichesky road bridge.

n, an engineer of a separate battalion, volunteered to perform this task. The bridge was mined, but he did not have time to leave.

'According to the brothers, Vitaliy got in touch and said that he was blowing up the bridge. An explosion was heard immediately. Our brother died.

'His heroic deed significantly slowed the advance of the enemy, which allowed the unit to redeploy and organize the defense,' a translation of the post reads.


Putin prepares to use 'father of all bombs' as Ukraine fights advance
God bless you dear Vitaly Shakun
May you RIP and your heroic act saved many lives
Thinking of you and your family
 
  • #479
Heroic Ukrainian marine blows himself up with bridge to hold off Russian troops at Crimea

A heroic Ukrainian marine blew himself up along with a bridge in Crimea on Thursday to hold off advancing Russian troops and allow his battalion to regroup and redeploy.

Vitaly Shakun was manning the Henichesk bridge in the Kherson region when Russians advanced.

According to a post on the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine's Facebook page, the battalion decided the only way to stop them was to blow up the bridge. It was mined, and he had no time to get out.

Shakun texted them and told them he was going to blow up the bridge. Seconds later, they heard an explosion, the post said.

His efforts dramatically slowed down the Russian advance and allowed his comrades to regroup and re-deploy.

He is believed to be among the at least 137 people who died on the first day of the war yesterday.

'On this difficult day for our country, when the Ukrainian people are repelling the Russian occupiers in all directions, one of the most difficult places on the map of Ukraine was the Crimean Isthmus, where a separate battalion of marines met one of the first enemies.

'To stop the advance of the tank column, it was decided to blow up the Genichesky road bridge.

n, an engineer of a separate battalion, volunteered to perform this task. The bridge was mined, but he did not have time to leave.

'According to the brothers, Vitaliy got in touch and said that he was blowing up the bridge. An explosion was heard immediately. Our brother died.

'His heroic deed significantly slowed the advance of the enemy, which allowed the unit to redeploy and organize the defense,' a translation of the post reads.


Putin prepares to use 'father of all bombs' as Ukraine fights advance
God bless you dear Vitaly Shakun
May you RIP and your heroic act saved many lives
Thinking of you and your family
Radio Free Europe news updates by the minute::


Live Briefing: Ukraine Under Attack

Check out RFE/RL's live briefing on Russia's invasion of Ukraine and how Kyiv and the West are reacting. Ukraine Under Attack presents the latest developments and analysis, updated throughout the day.
Thankyou @zencompass for the updates
Much appreciated
 
  • #480
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