First modification:
Thousands of people have taken to the streets of several of the world’s major cities to protest against the Russian invasion. Emigrants from this country have taken advantage of the forum to denounce the conditions experienced by their relatives who live under siege in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian diaspora has moved from helplessness and outrage to action. Dozens of protests against the Russian invasion have taken place in the main cities of the world, and have been attended by expatriates who have begun to denounce the situation of their relatives in Ukraine and to demand concrete action from the governments of the world against Russia. and in favor of his country.
The yellow and blue flag has become the banner of Tokyo, Berlin, Mexico City, Bucharest, Sydney, New York, Tel Aviv and other cities that have joined the repudiation against the military operations authorized by Vladimir Putin, and that have caused the displacement of at least 150,000 people.
“Somehow, all together, with all the countries in Europe and around the world, we have to stop Putin. If we don’t, he will move on,” urged Kiril Abramov, a 33-year-old Ukrainian living in Romania and originally from Kherson, a region close to Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.
“My family is in the Kiev region, and today they are attacking Kiev. I don’t know what to do, what to think, I call them every 15 minutes,” confessed a Ukrainian woman who identified herself as Victoria, who joined the demonstrations in Istanbul.
In Berlin, the rally of support for Ukraine was attended by Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda, who was taking part in a meeting with Foreign Minister Olaf Scholz and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki. Nauseda issued instructions this Saturday to receive a group of at least 70 Ukrainian tourists who were stopping over in Vilnius and had no way to return to their country.
In Frankfurt, Germany, the electronic scoreboard at the Deutsche Bank stadium, home to Eintracht, lit up with the words “Stop, Putin!” during the game against Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich.
The largest of the demonstrations took place in Bern, Switzerland, where more than 20,000 people gathered to show their support for Ukraine and their rejection of Russian actions.
Solidarity with Ukrainians in the world and foreigners in Ukraine
The Ukrainian community in Greece, made up of some 25,000 people according to government figures, took to the streets of Athens to demand an end to the siege. Natalya Chikhun spoke through tears with her brother Valerios, asking for news of her relatives in Kherson: her 33-year-old son and her 80-year-old mother.
“I call my son and he’s like, ‘Mom, I woke up to a big bang and I ran to the window and there was black smoke everywhere.’ My mother is 80 years old. Where can she go? What can she do? She took a small suitcase, put her documents and her medicine in it and ran to the basement of her building,” Chikhun recounted.
In Greece not only the situation of the Ukrainians has been cause for concern. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis denounced that 10 citizens of his country have died and six others have been injured, including a child, as a result of the bombing in Mariupol, where there is a large Greek community.
In New York’s Times Square, Ukrainian protesters were also joined by Georgian immigrants, as Dmitri Lazarrashvili said, in return for the support received in 2008, when Russia invaded his country to take control of North Ossetia and Abkhazia.
Russians in the world repudiate the actions of their country
In Geneva, hundreds gathered outside the United Nations headquarters, including a Russian nationalized Swiss, Valery Bragar, who confessed “extremely ashamed of my country of birth.”
“We are here obviously for peace, we do not want anyone to die on either side, and less for political reasons that have nothing to do with what people think,” said Yuri Vanov, a 37-year-old Russian resident in Buenos Aires. Aires.
Argentina concentrates the seventh largest Ukrainian colony in the world, with 450,000 people. Oleg Jachno, president of the Ukrainian chamber of commerce in Argentina, participated in the demonstration and called for “expelling Putin”.
Other Latin American countries, such as Mexico, Brazil and Peru, were the scene of demonstrations. In Mexico City, dozens of people gathered outside the Russian embassy, some wearing makeup that looked like blood, while holding up banners comparing Vladimir Putin to Hitler.
With Reuters and AP
First modification:
Thousands of people have taken to the streets of several of the world’s major cities to protest against the Russian invasion. Emigrants from this country have taken advantage of the forum to denounce the conditions experienced by their relatives who live under siege in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian diaspora has moved from helplessness and outrage to action. Dozens of protests against the Russian invasion have taken place in the main cities of the world, and have been attended by expatriates who have begun to denounce the situation of their relatives in Ukraine and to demand concrete action from the governments of the world against Russia. and in favor of his country.
The yellow and blue flag has become the banner of Tokyo, Berlin, Mexico City, Bucharest, Sydney, New York, Tel Aviv and other cities that have joined the repudiation against the military operations authorized by Vladimir Putin, and that have caused the displacement of at least 150,000 people.
“Somehow, all together, with all the countries in Europe and around the world, we have to stop Putin. If we don’t, he will move on,” urged Kiril Abramov, a 33-year-old Ukrainian living in Romania and originally from Kherson, a region close to Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.
“My family is in the Kiev region, and today they are attacking Kiev. I don’t know what to do, what to think, I call them every 15 minutes,” confessed a Ukrainian woman who identified herself as Victoria, who joined the demonstrations in Istanbul.
In Berlin, the rally of support for Ukraine was attended by Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda, who was taking part in a meeting with Foreign Minister Olaf Scholz and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki. Nauseda issued instructions this Saturday to receive a group of at least 70 Ukrainian tourists who were stopping over in Vilnius and had no way to return to their country.
In Frankfurt, Germany, the electronic scoreboard at the Deutsche Bank stadium, home to Eintracht, lit up with the words “Stop, Putin!” during the game against Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich.
The largest of the demonstrations took place in Bern, Switzerland, where more than 20,000 people gathered to show their support for Ukraine and their rejection of Russian actions.
Solidarity with Ukrainians in the world and foreigners in Ukraine
The Ukrainian community in Greece, made up of some 25,000 people according to government figures, took to the streets of Athens to demand an end to the siege. Natalya Chikhun spoke through tears with her brother Valerios, asking for news of her relatives in Kherson: her 33-year-old son and her 80-year-old mother.
“I call my son and he’s like, ‘Mom, I woke up to a big bang and I ran to the window and there was black smoke everywhere.’ My mother is 80 years old. Where can she go? What can she do? She took a small suitcase, put her documents and her medicine in it and ran to the basement of her building,” Chikhun recounted.
In Greece not only the situation of the Ukrainians has been cause for concern. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis denounced that 10 citizens of his country have died and six others have been injured, including a child, as a result of the bombing in Mariupol, where there is a large Greek community.
In New York’s Times Square, Ukrainian protesters were also joined by Georgian immigrants, as Dmitri Lazarrashvili said, in return for the support received in 2008, when Russia invaded his country to take control of North Ossetia and Abkhazia.
Russians in the world repudiate the actions of their country
In Geneva, hundreds gathered outside the United Nations headquarters, including a Russian nationalized Swiss, Valery Bragar, who confessed “extremely ashamed of my country of birth.”
“We are here obviously for peace, we do not want anyone to die on either side, and less for political reasons that have nothing to do with what people think,” said Yuri Vanov, a 37-year-old Russian resident in Buenos Aires. Aires.
Argentina concentrates the seventh largest Ukrainian colony in the world, with 450,000 people. Oleg Jachno, president of the Ukrainian chamber of commerce in Argentina, participated in the demonstration and called for “expelling Putin”.
Other Latin American countries, such as Mexico, Brazil and Peru, were the scene of demonstrations. In Mexico City, dozens of people gathered outside the Russian embassy, some wearing makeup that looked like blood, while holding up banners comparing Vladimir Putin to Hitler.
With Reuters and AP
First modification:
Thousands of people have taken to the streets of several of the world’s major cities to protest against the Russian invasion. Emigrants from this country have taken advantage of the forum to denounce the conditions experienced by their relatives who live under siege in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian diaspora has moved from helplessness and outrage to action. Dozens of protests against the Russian invasion have taken place in the main cities of the world, and have been attended by expatriates who have begun to denounce the situation of their relatives in Ukraine and to demand concrete action from the governments of the world against Russia. and in favor of his country.
The yellow and blue flag has become the banner of Tokyo, Berlin, Mexico City, Bucharest, Sydney, New York, Tel Aviv and other cities that have joined the repudiation against the military operations authorized by Vladimir Putin, and that have caused the displacement of at least 150,000 people.
“Somehow, all together, with all the countries in Europe and around the world, we have to stop Putin. If we don’t, he will move on,” urged Kiril Abramov, a 33-year-old Ukrainian living in Romania and originally from Kherson, a region close to Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.
“My family is in the Kiev region, and today they are attacking Kiev. I don’t know what to do, what to think, I call them every 15 minutes,” confessed a Ukrainian woman who identified herself as Victoria, who joined the demonstrations in Istanbul.
In Berlin, the rally of support for Ukraine was attended by Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda, who was taking part in a meeting with Foreign Minister Olaf Scholz and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki. Nauseda issued instructions this Saturday to receive a group of at least 70 Ukrainian tourists who were stopping over in Vilnius and had no way to return to their country.
In Frankfurt, Germany, the electronic scoreboard at the Deutsche Bank stadium, home to Eintracht, lit up with the words “Stop, Putin!” during the game against Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich.
The largest of the demonstrations took place in Bern, Switzerland, where more than 20,000 people gathered to show their support for Ukraine and their rejection of Russian actions.
Solidarity with Ukrainians in the world and foreigners in Ukraine
The Ukrainian community in Greece, made up of some 25,000 people according to government figures, took to the streets of Athens to demand an end to the siege. Natalya Chikhun spoke through tears with her brother Valerios, asking for news of her relatives in Kherson: her 33-year-old son and her 80-year-old mother.
“I call my son and he’s like, ‘Mom, I woke up to a big bang and I ran to the window and there was black smoke everywhere.’ My mother is 80 years old. Where can she go? What can she do? She took a small suitcase, put her documents and her medicine in it and ran to the basement of her building,” Chikhun recounted.
In Greece not only the situation of the Ukrainians has been cause for concern. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis denounced that 10 citizens of his country have died and six others have been injured, including a child, as a result of the bombing in Mariupol, where there is a large Greek community.
In New York’s Times Square, Ukrainian protesters were also joined by Georgian immigrants, as Dmitri Lazarrashvili said, in return for the support received in 2008, when Russia invaded his country to take control of North Ossetia and Abkhazia.
Russians in the world repudiate the actions of their country
In Geneva, hundreds gathered outside the United Nations headquarters, including a Russian nationalized Swiss, Valery Bragar, who confessed “extremely ashamed of my country of birth.”
“We are here obviously for peace, we do not want anyone to die on either side, and less for political reasons that have nothing to do with what people think,” said Yuri Vanov, a 37-year-old Russian resident in Buenos Aires. Aires.
Argentina concentrates the seventh largest Ukrainian colony in the world, with 450,000 people. Oleg Jachno, president of the Ukrainian chamber of commerce in Argentina, participated in the demonstration and called for “expelling Putin”.
Other Latin American countries, such as Mexico, Brazil and Peru, were the scene of demonstrations. In Mexico City, dozens of people gathered outside the Russian embassy, some wearing makeup that looked like blood, while holding up banners comparing Vladimir Putin to Hitler.
With Reuters and AP
First modification:
Thousands of people have taken to the streets of several of the world’s major cities to protest against the Russian invasion. Emigrants from this country have taken advantage of the forum to denounce the conditions experienced by their relatives who live under siege in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian diaspora has moved from helplessness and outrage to action. Dozens of protests against the Russian invasion have taken place in the main cities of the world, and have been attended by expatriates who have begun to denounce the situation of their relatives in Ukraine and to demand concrete action from the governments of the world against Russia. and in favor of his country.
The yellow and blue flag has become the banner of Tokyo, Berlin, Mexico City, Bucharest, Sydney, New York, Tel Aviv and other cities that have joined the repudiation against the military operations authorized by Vladimir Putin, and that have caused the displacement of at least 150,000 people.
“Somehow, all together, with all the countries in Europe and around the world, we have to stop Putin. If we don’t, he will move on,” urged Kiril Abramov, a 33-year-old Ukrainian living in Romania and originally from Kherson, a region close to Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.
“My family is in the Kiev region, and today they are attacking Kiev. I don’t know what to do, what to think, I call them every 15 minutes,” confessed a Ukrainian woman who identified herself as Victoria, who joined the demonstrations in Istanbul.
In Berlin, the rally of support for Ukraine was attended by Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda, who was taking part in a meeting with Foreign Minister Olaf Scholz and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki. Nauseda issued instructions this Saturday to receive a group of at least 70 Ukrainian tourists who were stopping over in Vilnius and had no way to return to their country.
In Frankfurt, Germany, the electronic scoreboard at the Deutsche Bank stadium, home to Eintracht, lit up with the words “Stop, Putin!” during the game against Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich.
The largest of the demonstrations took place in Bern, Switzerland, where more than 20,000 people gathered to show their support for Ukraine and their rejection of Russian actions.
Solidarity with Ukrainians in the world and foreigners in Ukraine
The Ukrainian community in Greece, made up of some 25,000 people according to government figures, took to the streets of Athens to demand an end to the siege. Natalya Chikhun spoke through tears with her brother Valerios, asking for news of her relatives in Kherson: her 33-year-old son and her 80-year-old mother.
“I call my son and he’s like, ‘Mom, I woke up to a big bang and I ran to the window and there was black smoke everywhere.’ My mother is 80 years old. Where can she go? What can she do? She took a small suitcase, put her documents and her medicine in it and ran to the basement of her building,” Chikhun recounted.
In Greece not only the situation of the Ukrainians has been cause for concern. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis denounced that 10 citizens of his country have died and six others have been injured, including a child, as a result of the bombing in Mariupol, where there is a large Greek community.
In New York’s Times Square, Ukrainian protesters were also joined by Georgian immigrants, as Dmitri Lazarrashvili said, in return for the support received in 2008, when Russia invaded his country to take control of North Ossetia and Abkhazia.
Russians in the world repudiate the actions of their country
In Geneva, hundreds gathered outside the United Nations headquarters, including a Russian nationalized Swiss, Valery Bragar, who confessed “extremely ashamed of my country of birth.”
“We are here obviously for peace, we do not want anyone to die on either side, and less for political reasons that have nothing to do with what people think,” said Yuri Vanov, a 37-year-old Russian resident in Buenos Aires. Aires.
Argentina concentrates the seventh largest Ukrainian colony in the world, with 450,000 people. Oleg Jachno, president of the Ukrainian chamber of commerce in Argentina, participated in the demonstration and called for “expelling Putin”.
Other Latin American countries, such as Mexico, Brazil and Peru, were the scene of demonstrations. In Mexico City, dozens of people gathered outside the Russian embassy, some wearing makeup that looked like blood, while holding up banners comparing Vladimir Putin to Hitler.
With Reuters and AP