Ukraine war: Shocking number of Russian corpses a grim illustration of Ukrainian battlefield success
Ukraine war: Tears of relief and joy in Kherson as oppressed Ukrainians cling to their liberators
One woman who had to endure nine months of Russian occupation said "we were afraid of using telephones, we were hiding everything, we were hiding our kids". International correspondent @alexrossiSKY Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player With the magnitude of the moment still sinking in, a girl in a red coat ignores several cars and runs through traffic to throw her arms around a Ukrainian soldier. It is a scene of celebration that is being repeated across Kherson, now liberated from Russian control. Everyone in a uniform is being given a hero's welcome - liberation clearly feels good and they are holding on to it tight. This plays out as Ukraine's national anthem banned under Russian occupation blares across the central square. 'Panic' emerging in Russian ranks - Ukraine war latest A woman, who tells me her name is Babushka Alla, is overjoyed - and wants to thank the armed forces. "We are so happy that our strong men returned to us and liberated us from the occup
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Ukraine war: More Ukrainian towns and cities will be liberated, vows Zelenskyy, amid jubilation in Kherson
The Ukrainian leader said that after months of Russian occupation and "mockery of our people", there is a "sea of Ukrainian flags on the streets". News reporter @luciabinding Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said more Ukrainian cities and towns will be liberated amid jubilation in the recaptured southern city of Kherson. The Ukrainian leader said that after months of Russian occupation and "mockery of our people", there is a "sea of Ukrainian flags on the streets". "The world sees it now. It sees what it means when Ukrainians meet their own people. It sees what the unity of Ukrainians means. And it sees why we should liberate our entire land from the invaders," he said in his nightly address. Mr Zelenskyy continued: "We will see many more such greetings. In those cities and villages that are still under occupation. We don't forget anyone, we won't leave anyone. "Thanks to our defence operations and diplomacy, we will definit
Ver video "Ukraine war: More Ukrainian towns and cities will be liberated, vows Zelenskyy, amid jubilation in Kherson"
Again and again ghosts of Chernobyl return to haunt Ukraine war
This week as Russia again targeted Ukraine's energy infrastructure with more missiles, Ukrainian officials moved to power down reactors within some of the nation's nuclear plant network. Ukraine's nuclear power stations need round-the-clock electricity to prevent reactors from melting down. But the under-fire Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear station - which was again rocked by shelling last weekend - cannot be made safe by this measure alone. Click to subscribe to Ukraine War Diaries wherever you get your podcasts Since the early months of the war, the station - the biggest of its kind in Europe - has found itself bombarded almost to the point of disaster, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. Both Russia and Ukraine blame each other. But while the threat of Russian nuclear escalation in the form of tactical or thermo-nuclear weapons has continually stalked the conflict, many Ukrainians, like Ilyas Verdiev, believe the Kremlin will first engineer a nuclear disaste
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#Russia-#Ukraine War: Kharkiv holds out; Russians claim to control Kherson
El asalto de Rusia a las ciudades ucranianas continúa, incluyendo la disputada afirmación de Rusia de haber tomado el control de su primera ciudad importante, Kherson, y un ataque a la segunda ciudad más grande de Ucrania, Kharkiv. El número de víctimas de la guerra sigue aumentando, y se espera que el número de ucranianos que han huido de su patria alcance pronto el millón.
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Ukraine war: Under the threat of a nuclear strike and a long looming winter, indomitable Ukrainian spirit holds
Torske is a chaotic, muddled mayhem reeking of panic and fear, but pockets of humanity remain. After all, both sides have lost young men to a war they never chose to fight in. Special correspondent @AlexCrawfordSky Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player There are a quite shocking number of Russian corpses left in the wake of the Ukrainian blitz on their eastern front. Kyiv's troops are moving so fast and methodically, there's no time to collect the enemy's dead. It's a grim illustration of Ukraine's current battlefield successes. As we followed their route through the village of Yampil and on to Torske on the edge of the Luhansk border, we saw scores of burnt military vehicles and scorched forest trees, which highlighted the ferocity of the battle. There are repeated signs the Ukrainians have ambushed their enemy, often it seems, laying in wait for them and attacking them from the front as the Russians try to flee to their defensive positions deeper into the Donba
Ukraine war: Missile strike appears to be 'unfortunate accident', Poland's president says
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has also spoken about the incident and says whatever the outcome of the investigation into the blast, Russia "bears ultimate responsibility as it continues its illegal war against Ukraine". The missile blast that killed two people appears to be an "unfortunate accident" and not an "intentional attack", Poland's president has said. Andrzej Duda tweeted that officials had "no proof at the moment that it was a missile fired by the Russian side". He added: "There are many indications that it was an air defence missile, which unfortunately fell on Polish territory." NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in a statement to media: "Yesterday's explosion took place as Russia launched a massive wave of rocket attacks across Ukraine. NATO says Russia 'bears ultimate responsibility' - Ukraine war latest "An investigation into this incident is ongoing, and we need to await its outcome. "But we have no indication this was the result of a deliberate atta
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Ukraine war: Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko hits back at Volodymyr Zelenskyy criticisms
Vitali Klitschko tells Ukraine's president after he publicly criticised him - his dispute is "senseless" at a time when the country is facing Russia's military campaign. The mayor of Kyiv, former professional boxer Vitali Klitschko, has traded rhetorical punches with Ukraine's president over how to help residents withstand power cuts. Volodymyr Zelenskyy last week criticised Mr Klitschko over the provision of emergency shelters, in a sign of discontent rarely seen between Ukrainian leaders since the start of Russia's invasion. The president implied Mr Klitschko, the boxing legend turned politician, had not done enough to help the capital's residents cope with Moscow's most devastating strikes of the war. In his nightly address to his nation, Mr Zelenskyy said most regions across Ukraine had been impacted by blackouts, but that some of "the biggest problems" were in Kyiv. "Unfortunately, local authorities have not performed well in all cities," he told the country. He also said there we
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Released Ukrainian prisoner of war reveals torment at the hands of Russians
Recent deals with Russia saw the release of 215 Ukrainian prisoners of war. Speaking for the first time to Sky's Sally Lockwood, one former marine tells of being treated "like animals" - stripped, beaten, duct-taped, shocked and humiliated. News correspondent @sallylockwood Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player When Ukrainian marine Mikhailo Dianov was released from Russian detention, his photo shocked the world. His body was emaciated after four months as a prisoner of war. When I met him, he was unrecognisable from the photos I'd seen of the well-built fighter in Mariupol, Ukraine. His clothes hung from his frail frame. His gaunt face seemed far older than his 42 years. I had so many questions. Crucially, did you worry you wouldn't survive? "We thought about this every day," Mikhailo tells me. "We first started having those thoughts at the Azovstal steel plant. "At Azovstal we thought it was the end." Ukraine forces Russian troops out of critical town - live up
Ver video "Released Ukrainian prisoner of war reveals torment at the hands of Russians"
Ukraine war: British Army veteran Scott Sibley died in drone attack, inquest hears
Scott Sibley was the first Briton confirmed to have died while defending Ukraine. He was killed on 22 April in Mykolaiv after a drone dropped mortars on his regiment. News reporter @AishaZahid A 36-year-old British Army veteran was killed while on active service with the Ukrainian army after sustaining fatal injuries, an inquest has concluded. Scott Sibley, from Immingham, North Lincolnshire, died on 22 April after his position in southern Ukraine came under attack from heavy artillery shelling. Senior coroner Darren Salter said the father-of-three was "killed while on active service with the Ukrainian army". Mr Sibley's family members watched the Oxford Coroners' Court hearing via videolink. Mr Sibley travelled to join the frontline on 13 March, travelling from Manchester to Poland before crossing the border into Ukraine. The former soldier joined the International Brigade of Ukraine and was fatally injured after "volunteering" for a sniper mission while defending the southern Mykolai
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Heartbreaking: Ukraine Euro 2024 players share devastating impact of war on their hometowns
Ver video "Heartbreaking: Ukraine Euro 2024 players share devastating impact of war on their hometowns"
Ukraine war: Dozens of missiles hit Kyiv and at least eight people killed
Ukraine's top general said 75 missiles were launched on the country and 41 of them "were neutralised by our air defence". News reporter Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player At least 11 people have been killed and dozens injured after Russian missile strikes hit cities across Ukraine. Explosions have hit Kyiv, Lviv, Ternopil, Dnipro, Zhytomyr, and Zaporizhzhia. Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a video post that showed him outside his presidential office: "They want panic and chaos, they want to destroy our energy system. "The second target is people. Such a time and such targets were specially chosen to cause as much damage as possible." Air sirens across Ukraine as multiple cities hit - war latest Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player Kyiv's mayor Vitali Klitschko said some critical infrastructure had been hit, adding: "The capital is under attack from Russian terrorists! "The rockets hit objects in the city centre (in the Shevchenkiv district)
Ver video "Ukraine war: Dozens of missiles hit Kyiv and at least eight people killed"
Ukraine war will be over by end of spring, country's deputy defence minister predicts
The retired major general says his nation will never stop fighting until victory and even a Russian nuclear strike would not end the struggle to drive out invading Kremlin forces. Security and Defence Editor @haynesdeborah Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player Ukrainian forces could be back in Crimea by the end of December and the entire war with Russia will be over by the spring, a Ukrainian deputy defence minister has predicted. Volodymyr Havrylov, a retired major general, said his country would never stop fighting until victory and had even factored in the potential of a Russian nuclear strike. The minister, in an interview with Sky News, said he believed the probability of an atomic attack by Russia to be low, but said: "Yeah, it would be drama. Ukrainian traitor 'exposed' by police - War latest "For everybody it will be just - God knows what scenario - but it [a tactical nuclear strike] is not [a] threat which will stop us from... continuing our war." In ter
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Ucrania al borde de una guerra civil / Ukraine on the brink of civil war
Ucrania al borde de una guerra civil / Ukraine on the brink of civil war
29 de enero 2014.
Ucrania al borde de una guerra civil / Ukraine on the brink of civil war
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Ukraine war: Cost-of-living crisis could erode public support for sanctions against Russia
An exclusive poll for Sky News found that 32% would oppose sanctions if they caused energy bills to rise further. By Ben van der Merwe, data journalist Public support for sanctions on Russia remains overwhelming, but could erode if the cost-of-living crisis worsens, an exclusive poll for Sky News has found. The poll by Ipsos suggests that 70% of the public support implementing sanctions on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. However, just 41% of people now say they would still back sanctions if it means a further rise in energy bills. That's a significant decrease since March, when three out of four people (73%) were willing to stomach an increase in energy prices. Since then, energy costs have more than doubled, adding over £1,200 to the annual bills of a typical household. A third of people (32%) now say they would oppose sanctions if they were to lead to a further increase in energy prices, up from just 8% of respondents in March. The poll comes ahead of a special programme on Sky N
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Putin’s Dreaded Wagner Group Fighter Dubbed ‘The Executioner’ Killed By Sniper In Ukraine War
Putin’s Dreaded Wagner Group Fighter Dubbed ‘The Executioner’ Killed By Sniper In Ukraine War
Ver video "Putin’s Dreaded Wagner Group Fighter Dubbed ‘The Executioner’ Killed By Sniper In Ukraine War"
Ukraine war: One man's perilous mercy mission to ease plight of civilians on frontline
The conditions for people on the ground are becoming unbearable, and Russia's targeting of energy and water infrastructure is a cruel escalation with the onset of winter. International correspondent @alexrossiSKY As the cold autumn rain drizzles down, volunteer Andrei Seletskii loads his car with humanitarian supplies. He is now the only help getting through to the frontline villages in this part of Kherson region, but getting the food, medicine, water and warm clothing to the people there is not easy. Iran admits sending weapons to Russia after denials - Ukraine war latest He said: "There is daily shelling almost every hour, because the frontline is located near Dudchany. "It is the hottest and hardest there. "We had the same situation around August when the frontline was in Novovorontsovka. "We had casualties, there was a lot of destruction." Ukraine war: Putin orders Kherson evacuation as Ukrainian forces close in on key city Drone strikes leave 4.5m Ukrainians without power, as Put
Ver video "Ukraine war: One man's perilous mercy mission to ease plight of civilians on frontline"
Ukraine war: Volodymyr Zelenskyy criticises Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko in rare sign of discontent
Most regions across Ukraine have been impacted by blackouts this week, and while the six million people currently affected is down from its peak, President Zelenskyy said "the biggest problems" were in Kyiv. Volodymyr Zelenskyy has criticised the mayor of Kyiv over the provision of emergency shelters, in a sign of discontent rarely seen between Ukrainian leaders since the start of Russia's invasion. The president indicated that Vitali Klitschko, the boxing legend turned politician, had not done enough to help the capital's residents cope with Moscow's most devastating strikes of the war. Putin's warning for Russian mothers - live war updates Most regions across Ukraine have been impacted by blackouts this week, and while the six million people currently affected is down from a peak of 12 million a few days ago, Mr Zelenskyy said "the biggest problems" were in Kyiv. "Unfortunately, local authorities have not performed well in all cities," he said in his nightly video address. "In partic
Ver video "Ukraine war: Volodymyr Zelenskyy criticises Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko in rare sign of discontent"
Russia Says Ukraine Generals Killed In Kalibr Missile Strike, NATO Chief Sees War Lasting 'Years'
Russia Says Ukraine Generals Killed In Kalibr Missile Strike, NATO Chief Sees War Lasting 'Years'
Ver video "Russia Says Ukraine Generals Killed In Kalibr Missile Strike, NATO Chief Sees War Lasting 'Years'"
Ukraine war: Why is Crimea so important to Russia and can Zelenskyy's troops recapture it?
Russian politicians have been discussing the possibility of an attack on the critically important peninsula that was illegally annexed in 2014. Foreign news reporter @MikeRDrummond As Ukrainian battlefield victories continue with the liberation of the city of Kherson, the spotlight once more falls upon the question of Crimea. In the last few days, various Russian politicians have been discussing a possible attack on Kremlin positions on the key peninsula. They range from Viktor Bondarev saying that Ukraine has "neither the resources, nor the military potential" to retake Crimea, to Russian MP Andrei Gurulyov urging Moscow to calculate the possibility of a Ukrainian attack supported by NATO. Fellow Russian MP Mikhail Sheremet warned that Ukrainian troops will experience a "final crushing blow" if they launch a major offensive on Crimea. Moscow doesn't want regime change - Ukraine war live updates Once the jewel of the Russian Empire, the strategically important territory on the Black Se
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Ukraine war: The British man dodging Russian artillery fire and evacuating civilians in a van
Chris Parry was working as a running coach in Cheltenham. Now he's racing into recently liberated villages in eastern Ukraine and rescuing injured people. Foreign news reporter @MikeRDrummond Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player Dodging artillery fire and Russian drones, a British man is part of a team racing into recently liberated villages in eastern Ukraine to evacuate civilians and get them to safety. "The destruction is just ridiculous," Chris Parry tells Sky News after a recent mission to a village east of Lyman that saw them fired upon by Russian forces. "We were being shelled by artillery because they were watching us with a drone, and then waiting for us to park up and then they had a minute or two to try and hit us." Once in the village they knock on doors and try to explain through a translator that they are here to help and not Russians going to take them to a forest and kill them. "And today there was a pretty major artillery fight between the Ukrai
Ver video "Ukraine war: The British man dodging Russian artillery fire and evacuating civilians in a van"
Ukrainian First Lady Olena Zelenska on Russia's war, educating Ukraine's children and her country's future
Ukraine's first lady, Olena Zelenska, called it terrorism when she was told about the bombing of two schools, a library, a hospital and a soccer stadium in the city of Chernihiv. "[The Russians] try to frighten people to make them run, to have towns and villages empty so they can occupy these territories," Zelenska told correspondent Scott Pelley for this week's 60 Minutes. "Definitely, terrorism. The war is being waged using modern means, but from the moral and ethical point of view, [it's] the Middle Ages." Zelenska has embraced the pain of 44 million people since Russia began their attacks last February. And even as Ukraine is gaining ground, half the country's families have been separated, according to Zelenska. "Someone is at the front, someone went abroad to save their children, someone is under [Russian] occupation," Zelenska said through an interpreter. "People are afraid to leave their [homes] because of shelling. They're afraid even to try to evacuate. We have thousands of de
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Putin's Daughter Katerina Tikhonova Sparks Talk Of Political Foray With New Role- Russia-Ukraine War
Putin's Daughter Katerina Tikhonova Sparks Talk Of Political Foray With New Role- Russia-Ukraine War
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Russia’s Sarmat Nuclear Missile Mass Production Soon l Putin’s Message To West Amid Ukraine War-
Russia’s Sarmat Nuclear Missile Mass Production Soon l Putin’s Message To West Amid Ukraine War-
Ver video "Russia’s Sarmat Nuclear Missile Mass Production Soon l Putin’s Message To West Amid Ukraine War-"
Ukraine war: Czechs donate £1.1m to buy Soviet-era tank to help fight against Russia invasion
The T-72 Avenger has been modernised to improve its protective systems and to add modern night-vision and communications equipment. A crowdfunding campaign in the Czech Republic has raised more than 33 million crowns (£1.1m) to buy a modernised Soviet-era T-72 tank that will be sent to the Ukrainian army to help it fight Russia's invasion. Run by the Ukrainian embassy in Prague, more than 11,200 people donated money. Ukrainian deputy foreign minister Yevhen Perebyinis said on Twitter: "The Czech Republic became the first country where ordinary people bought a tank." The T-72 Avenger has been modernised to improve its protective systems and to add modern night-vision and communications equipment. Ukraine latest news: Putin admits 'mistakes' Fundraising is continuing to provide ammunition, the campaign said on its website. The Czech Republic, a NATO and European Union member, has been a strong backer of Ukraine. Police turn 200mph Ferrari seized from criminals into patrol car One person
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Ukraine war: At least one person killed as residential buildings hit by airstrikes in capital Kyiv
Tuesday's attacks come after the biggest Ukrainian victory of the nine-month conflict so far - the withdrawal of Russian troops from the southwestern Kherson region. Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player Airstrikes have left one person dead after at least two residential buildings were hit in Kyiv following the Ukrainian victory in Kherson. Two apartment blocks in the Pechersk district of the capital were hit on Tuesday, mayor Vitali Klitschko said. "Several missiles" were shot down in response, he added. Air raid sirens heard across country - Ukraine latest Video footage showed a five-storey block of flats on fire. Mr Klitschko said medics and rescuers were being scrambled to the scene and a body had been pulled out of one of the buildings. The attacks come after the biggest Ukrainian victory of the nine-month conflict so far - the withdrawal of Russian troops from the southwestern Kherson region. Traces of explosives found at site of damaged Nord Stream pipelin
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Ukraine war: Stalemate in talks over disputed Zaporizhzhia power plant leaves an accident waiting to happen
Europe's largest nuclear plant has been under Russian control since March and sits near the frontline of the war in territory President Putin has said has been annexed by Russia. Science and technology editor @aTomClarke Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is strategically critical to both sides of the Ukraine-Russia conflict. But in terms of nuclear safety, the ongoing stalemate is perilous. It's the closest major electricity generator to the parts of Ukraine annexed by Russia, and Moscow wants the plant's power to control its territory there. It has also expressed a desire to re-route Zaporizhzhia's power to Russian cities as well. On the other side, Ukraine can't afford to lose the asset - the largest nuclear plant in Europe which once supplied 20% of its electricity - at a time when Russia has a stranglehold on its civilian infrastructure. Ukraine updates - Putin 'moves Iranian drones into Belarus' The site is currently
Ver video "Ukraine war: Stalemate in talks over disputed Zaporizhzhia power plant leaves an accident waiting to happen"
Ukraine war: Bittersweet victory in Lyman as battle has come at a significant cost to civilians
The recapturing of Lyman was a significant victory for Ukraine, but as troops move on and target new Russian positions, the locals left behind face a difficult journey to rebuild. Special correspondent @AlexCrawfordSky Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player Success on the battlefield translates into a very different language for the residents of Lyman - and has come at a significant cost to the civilians. The eastern Donetsk town is a husk of its former self, pummelled to bits with the heart ripped out of it and the few residents still there living beneath ground "like moles", one told us. "We don't care who's in control here," one woman told us. "It could be the devil. We just want them to stop shooting." Maps posted four hours apart show how rapidly Putin's troops are losing land - Ukraine latest We saw the corpses of Russian soldiers strewn on the road into Lyman, their burnt-out and wrecked vehicles beside them. Their bodies were bloated and their faces wax-ye
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Microinformativo | Sucesos WuanPlus | Marzo 11 - 2022
-Cinco muertos por caída de un ascensor en #Quito
-#Senescyt se reunió con estudiantes que llegaron de #Ucrania
-Precio del galón de la #Gasolina súper subirá el 12 de marzo.
-Casas del cerro Nueva Prosperina en riesgo por falla geológica.
-#FiscaliaEc pide detención de Danilo Ch. para investigaciones.
-Hallan una serpiente en el Hospital #TeodoroMaldonado #IESS
-#KamalaHarris visita #Polonia
-Sin acuerdo #Rusia - #Ucrania
-Más refugiados llegan a Polonia.
-Los cereales de Ucrania.
-Altibajos del #Petroleo
-Atrapados en fuego cruzado.
#Russia #Ukraine #WarVer video "Microinformativo | Sucesos WuanPlus | Marzo 11 - 2022"
Ukraine war: What are Iranian kamikaze drones and will the US send the deadly MQ-9 Reaper?
From the famed Bayraktar TB2s to small UAVs you can buy in shops, thousands of drones are being flown in the war in Ukraine - to lethal effect. Foreign news reporter @MikeRDrummond Ukrainian soldiers are using shop-bought drones as their eyes and ears in the trenches or flying them above Russian tanks and dropping grenades through open hatches. Meanwhile, back in Kyiv swarms of Iranian-made kamikaze drones are wreaking misery and plunging citizens into darkness. What are the main types of drones being used in Ukraine? Will the US ever send its feared Reapers and Predators to the battlefield? Sky News takes a look at some of the drones being flown by both sides, and answers some of the key questions. Shop-bought drones giving soldiers an edge in the trenches Everyday shop-bought drones are being used to great effect by Ukrainian soldiers as their "eyes and ears", Stuart Ray from McKenzie Intelligence Services told Sky News. Soldiers fighting in trenches can use a drone - often the Chine
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Ukraine War l Why Russia Needs Iran’s Drones & Will A Deal Be Sealed In Putin’s Tehran Visit-
Ukraine War l Why Russia Needs Iran’s Drones & Will A Deal Be Sealed In Putin’s Tehran Visit-
Ver video "Ukraine War l Why Russia Needs Iran’s Drones & Will A Deal Be Sealed In Putin’s Tehran Visit-"
Ukraine war: 'Soon we will return' - sinister message from retreating Russians who turned school into military base
International correspondent @sparkomat Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player As the Russians retreat from communities in the Ukrainian region of Kherson, residents have been left with reminders of their stay. Vast swathes of destruction afflicted places like Velyka Oleksandrivka, a quiet market town that would spend months on the frontline. The Russians were pushed out by the Ukrainians in the first week of October, and evidence of fierce fighting is all round. With a strategic position on the Inhulets River that was prized by both sides, its three-storey community school found itself at the heart of the battle. Putin 'won't use nukes' - live updates on Ukraine war The local fire chief, Volodymyr, suggested we go and have a look. "Have you got a torch?," he said. "You are going to need a torch." Ukraine war: 'There is only us and them - enemies' - Ukrainians dug in trenches on Belarus and Russia frontline Claims Russian troops need to 'de-Satanise' Ukraine critic
Why Russia’s Warning To US Before Strike On Syria Base Holds A Signal For The Ukraine War
Why Russia’s Warning To US Before Strike On Syria Base Holds A Signal For The Ukraine War
Ver video "Why Russia’s Warning To US Before Strike On Syria Base Holds A Signal For The Ukraine War"
Ukraine war: Russian missile strike on humanitarian convoy kills 25 - as Putin faces defeat in key city
The assault came as Russia moved to formally annex four Ukrainian regions including Zaporizhzhia - as Kyiv forces have reportedly encircled the Russian stronghold of Lyman in the Donetsk region. Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player A Russian missile strike has hit a humanitarian convoy in the southern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, killing 25 people and injuring dozens more. The convoy had been preparing to leave Ukrainian territory controlled by Kyiv to visit relatives and deliver supplies in an area occupied by Russia, officials said. The assault came as Moscow moved to formally annex four Ukrainian regions including Zaporizhzhia - and amid reports Volodymyr Zelenskyy's forces have encircled the Russian stronghold of Lyman in the Donetsk region. Ukraine war live updates Highly stage-managed referenda in the Ukraine regions including Donetsk, Luhansk and Kherson were held last week after which it was claimed residents had overwhelmingly voted to join Russia. T
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Defence chief has 'serious' talks with PM and chancellor in face of cash squeeze and Ukraine war
Admiral Sir Tony Radakin tells Sky News's Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme that Rishi Sunak "absolutely" understands the UK cannot have economic stability without security - and that comes at a price. Security and Defence Editor @haynesdeborah Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player The head of the UK's armed forces and the defence secretary have held "serious" talks with the prime minister and chancellor about the need to invest in defence at a time of war in Europe despite grave economic pressures at home. Admiral Sir Tony Radakin told Sky News' Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme that Rishi Sunak "absolutely" understood the UK cannot have economic stability without security - and that comes at a price. But he would not be drawn on whether he and Ben Wallace had managed to secure an extra £8bn over the next two years - the amount needed to protect their budget and modernisation plans from inflation and a weak pound. The military is vulnerable to foreign exchange rates
Ver video "Defence chief has 'serious' talks with PM and chancellor in face of cash squeeze and Ukraine war"
El nuevo guardián de Ucrania
Rambo es un verdadero perro guardián
Ver video "El nuevo guardián de Ucrania"
Salir de Ucrania con su perro
Una pequeña alegría en medio de la tragedia
Ver video "Salir de Ucrania con su perro"
Residentes protestan cuando las fuerzas rusas llegan a la ciudad ucraniana de Slavutych
Los residentes de UGC de Slavutych salen a la calle, llevan una gran bandera ucraniana azul y amarilla y se dirigen hacia el hospital, mientras Kiev anuncia que las tropas rusas han entrado en la ciudad.
Unas 25.000 personas viven en el pueblo 160 kilómetros (99 millas) al norte de la capital, construido después del accidente de la central nuclear de Chernobyl en 1986. IMÁGENES UGC CREDIT: @NADEZHDA SARANAVer video "Residentes protestan cuando las fuerzas rusas llegan a la ciudad ucraniana de Slavutych"
Ukraine war: What is a 'dirty bomb' and is Russia planning to blow up the Nova Kakhovka dam?
Sky News takes a look at some of the key questions as Moscow accuses Kyiv of planning an attack on its own territory. Foreign news reporter @MikeRDrummond Russia's claims that Ukraine could unleash a "dirty bomb" on its own territory have fuelled speculation that Moscow could be planning a false flag attack. As its forces face a possible rout on the battlefield and Ukrainian troops close in on the key city of Kherson, senior Russian figures have been issuing wild allegations against Kyiv. What are dirty bombs and how dangerous are they? Is all this just a cover for Russia's plans to destroy the Nova Kakhovka dam and buy time for its withdrawing soldiers? Sky News takes a look at some of the key questions. Putin facing 'inevitable defeat' in southern Ukraine - war latest updates What is a dirty bomb and is it a nuclear weapon? A dirty bomb is a conventional explosive device that has been laced with radioactive material. Also known as a radiological dispersal device (RDD), it involves mi
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Ukraine war: School frozen in time after it was used as bomb shelter during nine months of fear
"To be honest, when liberation happened, we were crying," says the deputy headmistress. "We could all breathe more easily." Security and Defence Editor @haynesdeborah Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player The date scribbled on the blackboard of a classroom in southern Ukraine still reads 23 February. It was the day before Russia launched its invasion - and the last time children in the village of Snihurivka were able to study at their school. Lines of desks and chairs stand empty - as if frozen in time. An abandoned pair of little shoes, a drawstring bag of clothes and the odd pen offer the only hint of the routine, school-time bustle that once filled this building. In its place for the past nine months has been only fear as the building became an impromptu bomb shelter for local residents. Only now are staff finally able to consider reopening to students after a major Ukrainian counter-offensive recaptured the village, in the region of Mykolaiv, from Russian han
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Intercambio de prisioneros entre Ucrania y separatistas prorrusos en Donbás
El Gobierno ucraniano y los separatistas prorrusos han intercambido 200 prisioneros de guerra en la línea de separación de fuerzas de la región de Donbás.View on euronews
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Crónicas desde Ucrania, con Camilo Loret de Mola
Desde Ucrania, el periodista Camilo Loret de Mola, del canal Mega TV, presenta una crónica del día a día en el país y en las zonas fronterizas
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Civiles ucranianos se arman para defender su territorio
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Russia hits Ukraine with another deadly wave of "suicide drones"
Kyiv, Ukraine — Waves of explosive-laden suicide drones struck Ukraine's capital and other cities as families were preparing to start their week early Monday, the blasts echoing across Kyiv, setting buildings ablaze and sending people scurrying to shelters. The assaults, which reportedly killed several people, came after a week of massive, coordinated Russian air strikes across the country. Russia has repeatedly denied targeting civilians in Ukraine, but as CBS News senior foreign correspondent Holly Williams reported, one of the neighborhoods hit in Kyiv on Monday is packed with apartment buildings, schools and restaurants. Apartment blocks and a non-residential building were on fire in the capital's central Shevchenko district, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said, adding that at least one person was killed and another believed to be trapped under the debris of an apartment block. Ukraine's first lady Olena Zelenska tweeted photos of the damage in the capital and said three people wer
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