Ukraine, Trump and Russia
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Russia is remaking Mariupol, which was devastated by a brutal siege in 2022. Ukrainians seeking to move back are finding it hard to recognize the city, or to reclaim their property.
Agence France-Presse on MSN
Out of Mariupol: teenagers flee Russian draft in occupied Ukraine
The Russian security agents were smirking. - 'Scared' - At a checkpoint, Russian security agents questioned them separately in a small room for around five hours.
In March 2022, Ukrainian beauty blogger Marianna Vyshemirskaya was photographed by Associated Press journalists Mstyslav Chernov and Yevgeny Maloletka as they documented the aftermath of a Russian strike on a maternity hospital in Mariupol.
Ukraine talks in Geneva, President Zelensky says: "Putin wants legal recognition to what he has stolen...that's the main problem."
WITH the city of Pokrovsk falling into Vladimir Putin’s hands, Ukraine is toughening its next line of defence to show the Russian tyrant has won the battle – but not the war. In the
Around 30.5 million people currently live in government-controlled territory in Ukraine. Official population statistics have not been published since the start
Roman Surovtsev was unexpectedly detained during a routine check-in with Immigration and Customs Enforcement on August 1, and never came home. Now, it’s unclear when his family will see him again
Trump’s plan may be the only realistic way to deter Putin today and secure Ukrainian sovereignty for the foreseeable future.
Photojournalist Lynsey Addario, the subject of 'Love + War,' and Mstyslav Chernov, the filmmaker behind '2000 Meters From Andriivka,' discuss their work as conflict journalists.