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Jepjeo, ryssä ampuu kaupunkia kaikella mitä sillä on ja sitten valkkaillaan mikä talo on laillinen maali ja mikä ei.Se valokuva jossa autot on kauppakeskuksen katoksessa oli helmikuussa otettu, päivämäärää ei ilmoitettu:
" In February, the man posted a video showing Ukrainian military vehicles parked near the shopping mall in northern Kyiv. On March 20, Russians shelled and destroyed the mall, killing 8 people."
Mitä hemmettiä? Eikö noissa mil-varjoissa ole irtipäästöä? Tai eikö se sulkeudu jarrusta kiskomalla?
Venäjän laskuvarjohyppääjällä huono päivä.
tiivisteet, laakerit, elektroniikka, ilmanpuhdistimet, liittimet, sähkömoottorit... Vaunussa varmaan tuhat ja yksi sellaista pikkukomponenttia, joita ei joko valmisteta Venäjällä ja/ tai joihin heillä ei ole helppoa saatavuutta.
Ruthenia Alba. Ei tarkoita Valko-Venäjää vanhassa historiallisessa yhteydessä.Niin no joo, se käsittäisi myös VV:n ja UA:n
En vain löydä venäjälle muuta latinankielistä nimitystä.
Miksi sitten kutsut ryssän sotilaita venakoiksi?Ukrainan sotaa koskevassa uutisoinnissa en ole huomannut venalaisia naissotilaita.
Miksi postasit lähes 10 vuotta vanhan videon tähän ketjuun? Ei liity tähän sotaan mitenkään.
Venäjän laskuvarjohyppääjällä huono päivä.
Miksi postasit lähes 10 vuotta vanhan videon tähän ketjuun? Ei liity tähän sotaan mitenkään.
En minäkään ole. Silti on postauksissa "venakkoa" siellä ja täällä...Ukrainan sotaa koskevassa uutisoinnissa en ole huomannut venalaisia naissotilaita.
Kauppakeskuksen kuva vain taisi olla telegram videolta helmikuulta, eli kehitys on mennyt huononpaan suuntaan. Oikeastihan tällä ei ole ryssälle väliä, laittavat vain ohjusta kohteisiin joissa joskus on havaittu armejan toimintaa... joku osuu joskus kohdalleen tai vähintään saa tuhottua infraa ja terrorisoida siviilejä.Tykistöohjusten tulenjohto ei ryssällä tapahdu sillä tapaa kuin elokuvissa, että "what are our options" ja leikkaus monitorin ääreen jännittämään, että osuuko - ja osuuhan se. Georgian sodassa herätti huomiota kylän lanaaminen tykistöohjuksella. Ei muuten mutta siellä meni hollantilainen valokuvaaja samalla. Paikalla oli ollut georgialaisia joukkoja. 24 tuntia aiemmin. Jos menisi vain monta tuntia välissä, se olisi huima parannus Georgian sodan aikaiseen suorituskykyyn.
Aivan turhaan asentavat noita torneja paikalleen, kun vaunut muuttuvat joka tapauksessa urheiden Ukrainalaisten käsittelyssä avomalleiksi.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is primarily Vladimir Putin’s war, but if there is a second man whose name and reputation will be tied to the devastation unleashed by Moscow it is Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov.
His fighters were part of the first wave assault on the country, and died in large numbers around the Hostomel airbase, with one key commander among those killed.
Elite Chechen squads were also reportedly recruited for failed attempts to assassinate key Ukrainian leaders in the first 48 hours of the invasion, western intelligence said.
Unlike Russians, the Chechen troops carry mobile phones, post to social media and call the conflict a war – ignoring the Kremlin’s propaganda ruling that the carnage must be called a “special operation”.
“Kadyrov seems to have been shocked by the scope of Ukrainian resistance, and it seems that dozens if not hundreds of his people have been killed. He has a lot of people, around 12,000, but to stay in power he needs those fighters,” Aslan said.
“If they suffer too much serious damage in Ukraine, this could backfire for Kadyrov. This might explain some of the rumours he rolled back some of his forces.
“He wants to show himself as a tough leader of these tough fighters who are willing to self-sacrifice. But I’m not really sure if they are willing to give up their lives.”
Finland’s Nokian Tyres has said it would continue production in Russia to retain control of its local factory.
Nokian’s chief executive, Jukka Moisio, told Helsingin Sanomat in an interview that the company did not want its Russian factory to end up “in wrong hands” to avoid its Russian factories being used to make tyres for the military.
“In our opinion it is better that the factory is in our control than in someone else’s,” Moisio told the paper.
Anne Kauranen reports for Reuters that shares in Nokian fell as much as 13% on Monday, after Finnish media reported that the company had seemed to tell analysts in a call last week that it would seek to win market share from rivals that are exiting Russia. Nokian denied this on Tuesday.
Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has been found guilty of large-scale fraud by a Russian court, report Reuters.
Russian prosecutors are seeking to move Navalny to a maximum security penal colony for 13 years on charges of fraud and contempt of court.
A quick snap from Reuters here that Russian energy giant Gazprom said on Tuesday it was continuing to supply gas to Europe via Ukraine in line with requests from European consumers. The company said requests stood at 108 million cubic metres for 22 March, up from 104.7 million cubic metres for 21 March.
Japan has criticised Russia’s decision to withdraw from bilateral peace treaty talks to formally end World War Two hostilities between Moscow and Tokyo.
Russia and Japan have still not formally ended hostilities because of the standoff over the islands located off Japan’s northernmost island of Hokkaido. They are known in Russia as the Southern Kurils and in Japan as the Northern Territories.
Moscow’s decision to withdraw from the talks come in retaliation to sanctions imposed by Tokyo over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The islands were seized by the Soviet Union at the end of World War Two, and Russia claims the acquisition was as fair as any international change of boundaries after the war. Japan has disputed this.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Monday:
“Under the current conditions Russia does not intend to continue negotiations with Japan on a peace treaty” citing Japan’s “openly unfriendly positions and attempts to damage the interests of our country”.
During a parliamentary session on Tuesday, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida responded:
This entire situation has been created by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and Russia’s response to push this onto Japan-Russia relations is extremely unfair and completely unacceptable. Japan would like to protest this move.
We will unite with the international community and take resolution action so Japan can continue following the foundation of the international order.”
Japan has imposed sanctions on 76 Russian individuals, seven banks, and 12 other bodies, including defence officials and the state-owned arms exporter, Rosoboronexport.
The Russians were hunting us down. They had a list of names, including ours, and they were closing in.
We had been documenting the siege of Mariupol by Russian troops for more than two weeks and were the only international journalists left in the city. We were reporting inside the hospital when gunmen began stalking the corridors. Surgeons gave us white scrubs to wear as camouflage.
Suddenly at dawn, a dozen soldiers burst in: “Where are the journalists, for fuck’s sake?”
I looked at their armbands, blue for Ukraine, and tried to calculate the odds that they were Russians in disguise. I stepped forward to identify myself. “We’re here to get you out,” they said.
The walls of the surgery shook from artillery and machine gun fire outside, and it seemed safer to stay inside. But the Ukrainian soldiers were under orders to take us with them.
Sotilaat jotka tietävät kuolevansa puolustaessaan kaupunkiaan viimeiseen mieheen, auttavat muita pääsemään pois elossa. Siinä on jo ero ryssän ja Ukrainalaisen sotilaan välillä.Pitkä artikkeli keskeltä sotarikosten vaivaamaa Mariupolia. Ei ole helppoa luettavaa.The Russians were hunting us down: the war on journalism in Mariupol
A reporter describes life under siege in the Ukrainian city and why it was so important to break the silencewww.theguardian.com