Ukrainian Revolusion смотреть последние обновления за сегодня на .
Subscribe to BBC News 🤍youtube.com/bbcnews On 20 February 2014, more than 50 anti-government protesters were shot dead in Kiev's Maidan square. The massacre triggered the collapse of Ukraine's pro-Russian government, prompting Moscow to annex Crimea and sparking a separatist war in the east. At the time, riot police were blamed for the deaths, but they were not the only ones shooting that day. The BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse, who witnessed the shootings, returned to investigate. Subscribe to BBC News HERE 🤍 Check out our website: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍
Subscribe to VICE News here: 🤍 February 2014, Ukraine's Euromaidan revolution against the government of Viktor Yanukovych had reached another stalemate after the violence in late January. But on the 18th, massive and fatal clashes broke out between police and protesters outside the Ukrainian parliament building, the Rada. After hours of fierce fighting, the protesters were pushed back onto their last lines of defense in Independence square and just about forced the police back after an attempt to clear the square. Once the dust had settled almost 30 police and protesters had been killed, on a day where firearms were used openly by both sides for the first time. Vice News arrived a day later to a city on lockdown and Independence square resembling a dystopian protest nightmare, fires burning, everything covered in black ash and the protesters themselves looked tired and desperate as a fragile truce held throughout the night. The next day however set of a chain of events that would leave dozens of protesters dead, Yanukovych fleeing the country and the protesters firmly in control of parliament. This film tracks the last days of the Euromaidan revolution, from the mass killings of protesters by the police on 20th February, to the day Yanukovych fled his private estate, leaving behind a wealth of incriminating documents linking him to fraud, corruption and possibly even attempted murder. Within days an interim government, made up of protest figures and opposition MPs was in power and presidential elections were set for the 25th May. However, since the end of the revolution the new government has had to face a nosediving economy, the Russian annexation of Crimea and now a violent bid for independence by pro-Russian separatists in the east. After a violent and chaotic 6 months, the election gives the country a chance to look towards a future of closer links to the EU and a chance to end the corruption that dominates Ukrainian society. Watch all of VICE News' dispatches from Ukraine: 🤍 Check out the VICE News beta for more: 🤍 Follow VICE News here: Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Tumblr: 🤍
▶Totally not inspired by PolishTortoise - 🤍 ▶Well, let's do some stock images vid about Ukranian Revolution. But not Revolution of 2014, but Revolution of 1917! Oh, no, Russia again!... ▶💲I'm a ukrainian refugee and really need money. If you want to help me you can donate here and i will be very grateful to you - 🤍 ▶💲Also my patreon: 🤍 ▶Cooperation and Advertisement: utkinsergey04🤍gmail.com ▶ My TikTok: 🤍 ▶Copyright disclaimer - I do not give anyone permission to translate and/or reupload my videos or designs on YouTube or other social media platforms, especially tiktok!
Official Video for "Revolution Ukraine" by Artisto. Music written by Axetrax: Axel Hilgenstoehler Особлива подяка Богдану Нагайло за допомогу в написанні тексту і поширенні пісні, Ірина Ястреб за супорт у всіх питтаннях. 🤍 🤍 Follow Artisto: 🤍 🤍 🤍 REVOLUTION Україна брати і сестри чуєте мене ця пісня для вас 1 Строфа Нам потрібен президент що працює на народ хліб не краде не привласнює завод рівноправство для жінок в суспільному житті вони матері дітей без них немає сім'ї Сім'ям житло щоб у них все було щоб народжувать дітей і дитятко росло Медицинська допомога незалежно від грошей повноцінне лікування і для бідних людей Бабусям дідусям які все побудували пенсії попіднімать щоби не голодували Щоби їм не стидно було війти в місто погулять вдіти гарний костюм тай гуцулку станцювать Вільний доступ до ресурсів незалежно від звязків незалежно хто ти є і від статусу батьків Вільний розвиток людей без державного пресу тільки так ми досягнемо прогресу Приспів Ще не вмерла Україна хай живе і геть руїна так як мати любить сина Україна любить нас Як Шевченко заповів ми кайдани порвемо правду й волю в своїй хаті разом ми відстоїмо 2 Строфа Культу сили та грошей ми поставим кінець я за культ свободи всіх хто зі мною молодець Хто візьме хабаря в космос полетить в нас корупції небуде тут таким нема де жить Суботекс Алкоголь Метадон Нікотин Кожний день пожирають дітей України я за овочі після спорту для всіх ча ча ча для старих і кунг фу для малих 600000 Українців помирає кожен рік а іще половина з України емігрує може Україна не дожити цей вік крім нас Українців ніхто неньку не врятує 1000 років ми воювали за нашу свободу і що ми дістали грошей в народу не було і не має він з голоду тихо здихає Приспів ще не вмерла Україна хай живе і геть руїна так як мати любить сина Україна любить нас Як Шевченко заповів ми кайдани порвемо правду й волю в своїй хаті разом ми відстоїмо REVOLUTION Ukraine — Революція свідомості!
When the Soviet Union collapsed in the 1990s Ukraine was one of the largest new nations to emerge. It held its first elections in 1991. Bordered by Russia on the east and by Hungary, Poland and Slovakia on the west, politics in Ukraine have always been divided along those looking east towards Russia and those looking to the West. Putin has said that Ukraine is “ancient Russian soil” but the majority of Ukrainians don’t feel this way, with 68% of Ukrainians in favour of joining the EU. Please subscribe HERE 🤍 #Ukraine #BBCNews
A look at Ukraine's 2014 unrest through the lens of modern history. Subscribe to The Daily Conversation for more videos like this: 🤍 Facebook 🤍 Google+ 🤍 Twitter 🤍 Современная история Украины Сучасна історія України Ukraine (Country),Україна,Росія,Russia,Путін,Віктор Янукович,Юлія Тимошенко,Yulia Tymoshenko (Politician),Viktor Yanukovych,President,Президент,Віктор Ющенко,Euromaidan,protest,revolution,Віталій Кличко,vitali klitschko,Viktor Yushchenko,World War,WW,WWI,WWII,Soviet Union (Country),радянський Союз,deal,American,USA,угода,international relations,history,news,politics,сделка,Владимир Путин,Vladimir Putin,Modern,Communism (Political Ideology),lenin,ленин,Сталин,stalin,battle,Kiev,Киев As the dust settled after World War I, Ukraine was defeated and divided and the Soviets controlled much of the country. In 1922 Ukraine, along with Russia, became the founding members of the Soviet Union. Then in 1932 the great famine began and up to 10 million Ukrainians starved to death. It was made worse by the policies of the new head of the communist party, Joseph Stalin. Then came the Great Terror: Two waves of Stalinist political repression and persecution in the Soviet Union resulted in the killing of some 681,000 people; including 80 percent of the Ukrainian cultural elite and three-quarters of all the Ukrainian Red Army's higher-ranking officers. Then came the outbreak of WWII. German armies invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, beginning four straight years of non-stop total war. In the battle of Kiev, Axis troops encircled and laid siege to the capital city. More than 600,000 Soviet soldiers were killed or taken captive there. The total losses inflicted upon the Ukrainian population during the war are estimated between five and eight million, including over half a million Jews killed by Nazi death squads, sometimes with the help of local collaborators. Corruption under Ukraine's second president set the stage for the 2004 ascendence of then Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych to the Presidency in elections that the Ukrainian Supreme Court ruled were rigged. Yanukovych was then thrown out of power in the peaceful Orange Revolution in favor of opposition leaders Viktor Yushchenko and Yulia Tymoshenko, who became President and Prime Minister. Yanukovych then regained the Prime Ministership in 2006, but lost a snap election just a year later that saw Tymoshenko become Prime Minister again. This map of those 2007 election results shows just how divided Ukraine is politically. Then came the January 2009 natural gas crisis in which Russia stopped supplying gas to Ukraine in the middle of winter. Since Ukraine is itself the main supply route to much of Europe, this was a pretty big problem. Tymoshenko eventually signed an agreement to reopen the pipes, but not before Ukraine incurred major economic losses. As a result of the political fallout, Yanukovych - who just does not go away - was elected President again in 2010. And in October, 2011, Tymoshenko was sentenced to seven years in prison for abuse of office because she signed the natural gas deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin. In 2012 the European Union and Ukraine began negotiations for it to join the 28-nation group. President Viktor Yanukovych urged the parliament to adopt laws so that Ukraine would meet the EU's criteria. Bringing us to the 3-month old Euromaidan protests which began at the end of 2013 when Yanukovych - who was feeling the economic pressure - abruptly suspended efforts to join the EU. He then turned around and signed an agreement with Putin, who offered $15 billion in financial aid and a 33% discount on Russian natural gas. As a result, the protests have escalated and become more violent, with many now calling for the ouster of Yanukovych and a rejection of the Russian deal in favor of a complete embrace of Europe. Yulia Tymoshenko is released from custody in Kharkiv Parliament impeaches President Viktor Yanukovych President Yanukovych wherabouts unknown after fleeing Kiev Parliament appoints new speaker and interior minister Protesters take over security in Kiev
Subscribe to VICE News here: 🤍 With protests in Ukraine turning deadly last week, VICE News went to Kiev's Independence Square to document the Euromaidan movement's struggle for the fate of the nation. In addition to the smoldering avenues littered with sniper fire, and protesters tending to their dead and wounded, our crew chronicled the toppling of Viktor Yanukovych. As Ukraine prepares for its future, here's a look at how the revolution unfolded. Sign up for the Beta at 🤍 Follow VICE News here: Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Tumblr: 🤍
The 2014 revolution brought Kiev nightlife to a complete standstill. As protests turned into riots, and government security forces opened fire on protestors, the country fell into crisis. But out of the ashes of revolution has risen a new generation. Slava Lepsheev, who’d lost his job because of the financial crisis triggered by the war, had had enough, and started Cxema, a raw, hard and hypnotic techno rave that he took to whatever semi-legal venue he could set a soundsystem up in. So together with Slava, and the city’s brightest young lights, we followed young Kiev as they prepared for a night at Cxema, from building the venue to watching the sunrise break. Director Tom Ivin Producer Kate Villevoye Local Fixer Lyuba Knorozok, Dmitry Kolchinsky Director of Photography Jack Reynolds Sound Denys Ryskal, Andrii Vaskovski, Viktor Savin Lighting Stanislav Bezpechnyi Production Assistant Andrii Bezliudnyi Editor Paul Frankl, Rebecca Gin Colourist Oisín O’Driscoll at The Mill Sound Mix Guy Chase Narrator Leala-Rain Shonaiya Script Clive Martin, Matthew Whitehouse Translations Yelena Kensborn Music Voin Uruwu feat. Valta - Hunters and Gatherers Voin Uruwu - Forest Theme Stanislav Tolkachev - Sometimes Everything Is Wrong Lollibou - Crimson Tune Wulffius - In the Pines’ Crowns (Wicked Bass Records 2016) Stanislav Tolkachev - Right Angle Voin Oruwu - A-mplification Archive courtesy of Vice News, Slava Lepsheev, Unkle Dee, Aleksey Olin Global Executive Producer Ravi Amaratunga Supervising Producer Eloise King Production Manager Lauran Clark Production Assistant Lily Rose Thomas Assistant Producer Stephen Isaac-Wilson Post Production Coordinator Regina Lemaire-Costa Commercial Creative Director Bunny Kinney Talent Producer Declan Higgins Head of Production Bree Horn Head of Post Production Daniel Elias Post Production Administrator Laura Davidson Special Thanks Slava Lepsheev, Dima Kovalyov, iZone, Anastasiia Fedorova Follow i-D: YouTube 🤍 Twitter 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Pinterest: 🤍 Tumblr: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 Soundcloud: 🤍 More videos from the VICE network: 🤍
This panel discussion is part of a conference which seeks to address the question of how we know about the Russo-Ukrainian War, and to explore the conditions under which processes of knowledge production about the war have been taking place. Speakers Mary Kaldor, London School of Economics Anton Shekhovtsov, Centre for Democratic Integrity, Vienna Viktoria Sereda, Ukrainian Catholic University, Lviv Learn more: 🤍
Check out more episodes of VICE News here: 🤍 Kiev's Euromaidan protesters began 2014 the same way they ended 2013: by rioting in the streets in an attempt to bring down their government. Key victories have already been won, with Prime Minister Mykola Azarov and his cabinet resigning. The demonstrators also forced the annulment of a new anti-protest law that was, ironically, the cause of much of their protesting. The protesters haven't been contented by this, however, and are still out in the streets, demanding the head of President Viktor Yanukovych and the staging of fresh elections. What began as a protest against the Ukrainian government's close ties with Russian leader Vladimir Putin has become a focus for wider discontent. However, Yanukovych seems in no mood to relinquish his power. As the social unrest spreads across the country, its first post-Soviet President, Leonid Kravchuk, has gone as far as to warn that Ukraine is on the brink of civil war. Dozens of people have lost their lives in just the last two days of violence. At the end of January, VICE flew to Kiev as rioters hurled Molotov cocktails at police and the city turned into a battlefield. Subscribe to VICE News here: 🤍 Sign up for the Beta at 🤍 Follow VICE News here: Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Tumblr: 🤍
Ukraine's 2004 Orange Revolution might look different from the 2014 ongoing riots in Kiev, but many of the players are the same. » Subscribe to NBC News: 🤍 » Watch next Flashback: 🤍 About: NBC News is a leading source of global news and information. Here you will find clips from NBC Nightly News, Meet The Press, and our original series Debunker, Flashback, Nerdwatch, and Show Me. Subscribe to our channel for news stories, technology, politics, health, entertainment, science, business, and exclusive NBC investigations. Connect with NBC News Online! Visit NBCNews.Com: 🤍 Find NBC News on Facebook: 🤍 Follow NBC News on Twitter: 🤍 Follow NBC News on Google+: 🤍 Follow NBC News on Instagram: 🤍 Follow NBC News on Pinterest: 🤍 Ukraine's 2004 Orange Revolution | Flashback | NBC News
Subscribe to VICE News here: 🤍 As protesters in central Kiev took over the parliament building on Saturday, others headed to President Yanukovych's highly controversial private estate of Mezyhrhrya, just outside the city. The estate, half the size of Monaco, cost hundreds of millions of dollars to build, much of it coming from embezzlement and corruption, and had long been in the protesters' sights. The average monthly salary for an Ukrainian citizen is around 200 Euros, so their President's opulent lifestyle was a constant slap in the face that could no longer be ignored. VICE News went along with thousands of curious Ukrainians to take a look and walk around Yanukovych's house, like a kleptocrat's version of Cribs. Sign up for the Beta at 🤍 Follow VICE News here: Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Tumblr: 🤍
In just 93 days, what started as peaceful student demonstrations became a violent revolution. Netflix documentary Winter on Fire brings you the story of Ukraine's fight for freedom from the frontlines of the 2014 uprising. Watch now on Netflix: 🤍 SUBSCRIBE: 🤍 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 222 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries, feature films and mobile games across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom | Full Feature | Netflix 🤍
In August 2014, after months of increasingly assertive intervention into the Ukraine crisis, Russian President Vladimir Putin crossed a major line by invading the country's rebel-held east with Russian tanks and troops. Vox Foreign Editor Max Fisher explains Putin's reasons for invading are less obvious than you might think. Produced by Joe Posner & Joss Fong Photographs courtesy Getty Images Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Vox.com is news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
What started as a peaceful protest in Kiev exploded into bloodshed, with dozens dead.
In 2014, as unrest in Ukraine provoked one of the biggest confrontations between Russia and the United States since the Cold War, FRONTLINE documented the crisis up-close. (Aired 2014) This journalism is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station here: 🤍 With Ukraine once again in the spotlight, revisit “The Battle for Ukraine,” in which filmmaker James Jones documented both sides of the fight in 2014 between Ukraine’s ultra-nationalist group, Right Sector, and a militant, pro-Russia group called Stronghold. Drawing on personal and dramatic footage, Jones (“Secret State of North Korea”) documented deep-seated hatreds between right-wing Ukrainians with historic ties to the Nazis, and violent pro-Russian separatists vying for control of the country. Love FRONTLINE? Find us on the PBS Video App, where there are more than 300 FRONTLINE documentaries available to watch any time: 🤍 #Documentary #Ukraine Subscribe on YouTube: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Funding for FRONTLINE is provided through the support of PBS viewers and by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Major funding for FRONTLINE is provided by the Abrams Foundation; the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; Park Foundation; and the FRONTLINE Journalism Fund with major support from Jon and Jo Ann Hagler on behalf of the Jon L. Hagler Foundation, and additional support from Koo and Patricia Yuen.
ДЛЯ ТИХ, кому відео не відкриває справжніх подій майдану: я монтував його задовго до початку жахливих подій, тому тут тільки перша частина історії. Viva la revolución! Для відео використані матеріали багатьох, на жаль, невідомих мені операторів. Окрема увага і подяка режисеру Максиму Дончику, чиїм кліпом "Стіна" (🤍 я доповнив це відео, а також студії відеомонтажу D-Light video. Нарізка, частковий монтаж та доповнення - Володимир Мацевич. Хай живе революція! Слава Україні! Произведение «Maidan. Ukraine. Revolution.» созданное автором по имени Vladecckk, публикуется на условиях лицензии Creative Commons «Attribution» («Атрибуция») 4.0 Всемирная. Основано на произведении с 🤍
On November 22, 2004, hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians took to the streets in protest of the elections that took place that year. The peaceful protests would last a month and result in the Ukrainian Parliament's declaration that the elections were in fact, falsified. These protest would come to be called the Orange Revolution. _ Subscribe to UATV English: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 Medium: 🤍 Watch UATV live: 🤍
How did Ukraine became part of the Soviet Union? In this history of Ukraine it happened because Ukraine failed to secure its independence in the post WW 1 chaos that occured in Central and Eastern Europe after the Armistice. After the Russian Revolution (1917) the Ukrainian People's Republic (also known as the Ukrainian National Republic; the UNR) is established. When Bolshevik Russia and Germany signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk it left Ukraine in the German sphere of influence. Apart from the UNR the West Ukrainian People's Republic was established in Eastern Galicia. This republic was soon overrun by the Polish forces in the Polish–Ukrainian War (1918 - 1919). Meanwhile White Russian troops fought against the Red (as part of the Russian Civil War). The White Russian forces were attacked by the Black Army of Nestor Machno. History Hustle presents: Ukrainian War of Independence (1917 - 1921) - How Ukraine Failed to Gain Independence. Recorded on the 6th of August 2018 in Lviv, Ukraine. “Crusade" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License 🤍 “Evil March" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License 🤍 Images from commons.wikimedia.org SUBSCRIBE ► 🤍 INSTAGRAM ►🤍 FACEBOOK ► 🤍 OTHER VIDEOS OF MINE Finland after WW 1 / Finnish Civil War 🤍 Estonia after WW 1 / Estonian War of Independence 🤍 Latvia after WW 1 / Latvian War of Independence 🤍 Lithuania after WW 1 / Lithuanian Wars of Independence 🤍 Belarus after WW 1 🤍 Hungary after WW 1 / The Hungarian Soviet Republic 🤍 Poland after WW 1 / Second Polish Republic 🤍 PLAYLISTS Interwar years: 🤍 Wanna join forces and do a collaboration? Send me an email at: historyhustle🤍gmail.com
Ukraine was right in the center of the violent chaos following the Russian Revolution 1917. After declaring independence the Ukrainian People's Republic was invaded multiple times as the Russian Civil War, the Polish-Soviet War, the Ukrainian-Polish War and the Soviet-Ukrainian War all raged across the country. The Communist victory in the Russian Civil War meant that the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic became a founding member of the USSR. » SUPPORT THE CHANNEL Patreon: 🤍 » THANKS TO OUR CO-PRODUCERS John Ozment, James Darcangelo, Jacob Carter Landt, Thomas Brendan, Kurt Gillies, Scott Deederly, John Belland, Adam Smith, Taylor Allen, Rustem Sharipov, Christoph Wolf, Simen Røste, Marcus Bondura, Ramon Rijkhoek, Theodore Patrick Shannon, Philip Schoffman, Avi Woolf, » SOURCES Adams, Arthur E, “The Bolsheviks and the Ukrainian Front in 1918-1919”, The Slavonic and East European Review, Volume 36, Number 87, (1958) Darch, Colin Major, “The Makhnovshina, 1917-1921: Ideology, nationalism, and peasant insurgency in early twentieth century Ukraine”, Department of Social and Economic Studies, University of Bradford, (1994) Dmytryshyn, Basil, Moscow and the Ukraine, 1918-1953; A study of Russian Bolshevik Nationality Policy, (New York : Bookman Associates, 1956) Guthier, Steven L, “The Popular Base of Ukrainian Nationalism in 1917”, Slavic Review, Volume 38, Issue 1, (1979) Kubicek, Paul, The History of Ukraine, (Westport, CT : Greenwood Press) McGeever, Brendan, Antisemitism and the Russian Revolution, (Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2019) Shkandrij, Myroslav, Revolutionary Ukraine, 1917-2017: History’s Flashpoints and Today’s Memory Wars, (New York : Routledge, 2020) Snyder, Timothy. The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine, Belarus 1569-1999 (London: Yale University Press, 2003) Sullivant, Robert S., Soviet Politics and the Ukraine: 1917-1957, (New York : Columbia University Press, 1962) » OUR SISTER CHANNEL 🤍 »CREDITS Presented by: Jesse Alexander Written by: Mark Newton, Jesse Alexander Director: Toni Steller & Florian Wittig Director of Photography: Toni Steller Sound: Toni Steller Editing: Jose Gamez Motion Design: Philipp Appelt Mixing, Mastering & Sound Design: 🤍 Research by: Mark Newton, Jesse Alexander Fact checking: Jesse Alexander Channel Design: Yves Thimian Contains licensed material by getty images Maps: MapTiler/OpenStreetMap Contributors & GEOlayers3 All rights reserved - Real Time History GmbH 2022
Deadly anti-government protests overnight and into early hours of Wednesday morning in Ukraine. Read the story here: 🤍 Subscribe on YouTube: 🤍 Watch more videos at: 🤍 - Want more from The New York Times? Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Google+: 🤍 Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On YouTube. Ukraine Protest 2014: Deadly Clashes Escalate | The New York Times 🤍
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To understand the current conflict between Ukraine and Russia, look to the interconnected history of the two countries. Read the story here: 🤍 Subscribe on YouTube: 🤍 Watch more videos at: 🤍 - Want more from The New York Times? Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Google+: 🤍 Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On YouTube. Ukraine-Russia Ties, Explained | The New York Times 🤍
“Men fight wars, and women mourn them,” says documentary photographer Anastasia Taylor-Lind. With stark, arresting images from the Maidan protests in Ukraine, the TED Fellow shows us intimate faces from the revolution. A grim and beautiful talk. TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design plus science, business, global issues, the arts and much more. Find closed captions and translated subtitles in many languages at 🤍 Follow TED news on Twitter: 🤍 Like TED on Facebook: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel: 🤍
US Republican senator John McCain addresses crowds in Independence Square in Kiev on Sunday, encouraging the crowds to continue their peaceful protest in support of greater ties with the European Union. Subscribe to The Guardian on YouTube ► 🤍 The former presidential candidate told protesters that Ukraine's destiny lies in Europe and that the US supports their cause Support the Guardian ► 🤍 Today in Focus podcast ► 🤍 Sign up for the Guardian documentaries newsletter ► 🤍 The Guardian ► 🤍 The Guardian YouTube network: Guardian News ► 🤍 Guardian Football ► 🤍 Guardian Sport ► 🤍 Guardian Live ► 🤍 Guardian Culture ► 🤍
Citizens in the pro-Russian port of Sevastopol, Ukraine, are angry and fearful of a new Ukrainian government. More from CNN at 🤍 To license this and other CNN/HLN content, visit 🤍 or e-mail cnn.imagesource🤍turner.com.
In the final years of the First World War, the Russian Empire was coming to its end. It had been devastated by revolution and finally transformed into the first Communist country in the World. In the years following the Revolution, non-Russian nations that lived under the House of Romanov sought to secure their long-lost independence. One of these was Ukrainе. From 1917 until 1921, the Ukrainians had struggled to build and secure an independent country, fighting against the new regime, against their neighbors in the west, and also among themselves. Become a Simple History member: 🤍 Support us on Patreon: 🤍 Copyright: DO NOT translate and re-upload our content on Youtube or other social media. SIMPLE HISTORY MERCHANDISE Get the Simple History books on Amazon: 🤍 T-Shirts 🤍 Simple history gives you the facts, simple! See the book collection here: Amazon USA 🤍 Amazon UK 🤍 🤍 🤍 Credit: Created by Daniel Turner (B.A. (Hons) in History, University College London) Script: Dejan Milivojevic Narrator: Chris Kane 🤍 Sources: Magocsi, Paul R. A history of Ukraine. University of Toronto Press, 1996. Plokhy, Serhii. The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine. Basic Books, 2021. Reid, Anna. Borderland: A Journey through the History of Ukraine. Weidenfeld Et Nicolson, 2015. Subtelny, Orest. Ukraine a History. Univ. of Toronto Press, 2012. Ukrainian-Soviet War, 1917–21. Encyclopedia of Ukraine.
Ukraine is being pulled in different directions: one toward Russia, the other toward Western Europe. Read the story here: 🤍 Subscribe on YouTube: 🤍 Watch more videos at: 🤍 - Want more from The New York Times? Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Google+: 🤍 Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On YouTube. Ukraine Protest 2014: The Divide, Explained | The New York Times 🤍
19.01.2014, Kiev, Evromaydan, Ukraine, maidan, Hrushevskoho, revolution
Investigative journalist Robert Parry talks about Russia's move to invade Ukraine's Crimean peninusla and the role of the US and the west in fomenting crisis there See more videos: 🤍
After another day of turmoil in Ukraine, Gabriel Gatehouse reports for Newsnight from the streets of Kiev. His report contains distressing images.
Subscribe to France 24 now: 🤍 FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 🤍 The "Winter on Fire" of 2013-2014 saw Ukrainians oust a kleptocratic leader in violent protests, in the name of closer ties with the EU and adherence to its values of good governance. What did they achieve? Our reporter Gulliver Cragg, who covered the protests at the time, went to meet some of those whose lives were profoundly affected by Ukraine's Maidan Revolution. When Ukrainian protesters first took to Maidan Square in central Kiev in November 2013, few believed they could actually get rid of President Viktor Yanukovich. But when they finally did, in February 2014 after exactly three months camped out in freezing temperatures on the Square, the joy was mitigated by grief. The protests had shown how people could come together and brought out a spirit of collective action and solidarity that was a wonder to behold, but they had also turned violent, and in the end more than a hundred protesters had been killed. And though Yanukovich had been unpopular across the country, not everyone supported the revolutionaries. Moreover, the politicians that came to power after the revolution were not really such new faces: many had served in previous governments and were suspected of corruption themselves. In this context Russian and pro-Russian forces tried to stir up trouble in the Russian-speaking regions of Eastern and Southern Ukraine, where the Maidan movement was less popular. They fully succeeded in just two of those regions: Donetsk and Luhansk. But there, as breakaway Russian-backed “people’s republics” were declared, the situation descended into all-out war between the Ukrainian army and volunteer battalions on one side, and groups of Russian volunteers and mercenaries, local pro-Russian militants, and regular Russian soldiers on the other. No high-level figures jailed for corruption The shock of war to some extent distracted attention from the pro-Western reforms Ukraine’s new leaders had promised, and made the economic and social context far more difficult. But civil society had been energised by Maidan, and has been pushing the government to carry out those reforms – most importantly those aimed at ending the corruption that has hamstrung Ukraine’s development ever since independence in 1991. Ask Ukrainians now how they feel about what’s been achieved, and you get a wide range of opinions. Many are bitterly disappointed. Corruption is still rife and no high-level figures have been jailed, either for corruption or their role in the killings on Maidan (most of Yanukovich’s associates fled to Russia). The current government manifestly resists attempts to pass necessary anti-corruption reforms and only caves in under pressure from civil society and the foreign donors that keep the economy afloat. To many Ukrainians, including Artem Lymar and his wife, in this report, it seems almost absurd to suggest that so little change could be worth so much bloodshed. ►► Watch our Focus report: Agent 'Kateryna', Ukraine's anti-corruption hero But many others disagree. The key message you get from the optimists (if we may call them that) is that if you feel disappointed because things are bad now, you don’t fully understand how bad they were before, and how much worse they could have got had Yanukovich stayed in power and brought Ukraine fully under the Russian yoke. Anti-corruption campaigners such as Vitaliy Shabunin point to huge numbers of reforms that have been passed largely thanks to their lobbying efforts. They may not have borne much fruit yet, they say, but they will. Another character in this report, Viktor Varenytsia, who lost a brother on Maidan, wrote to me on 21 November, the anniversary of the start of the protests, that he didn’t know whether the day should be a day of grief because of his family tragedy or a celebration because it was the start of the process where Ukraine finally broke free of Russian domination and affirmed its commitment to European values. Too much has happened in Ukraine since Maidan to cover everything in one report, but this is the story of some people whose lives were profoundly affected by the events, each in different ways. 🤍 Visit our website: 🤍 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍
Відеокліп створено під час Євромайдану - волевиявлення Великого українського народу! Любіть Україну! "Україно, вперед! Час настав!!!" 🤍 🤍 🤍 - Автор пісні Ростислав Хитряк Музика Axe Продюсер і відеознімання Роман Савчак Монтаж Віктор Ольхов Технічна підтримка Микола Крупей Постер: фото Карен Арзуманян; Постер: фото Карен Арзуманян; Пост-продакшн UhappyDesign 🤍 - У роботі використано відео: - Vidro Production: 🤍 🤍 - Радіосвобода - 🤍 - HVtv - 🤍
Ukraine protesters demanding the country's president step down, faced off with police in riot gear, blocking the entrances to government buildings. Mark Phillips reports.
The eastern part of Ukraine is much more pro-Russian in outlook - and it's there that Viktor Yanukovich reportedly fled yesterday. International Editor Lindsey Hilsum reports from Donetsk.Sign up for Snowmail, your daily preview of what is on Channel 4 News, sent straight to your inbox, here: 🤍 Missed Channel 4 News? Catch up on the last seven days here: 🤍 Channel 4 News weather forecast, with Liam Dutton: 🤍 All the latest blog posts from the Channel 4 News on-screen talent: 🤍
Subscribe to France 24 now: 🤍 FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 🤍 The "Winter on Fire" of 2013-2014 saw Ukrainians oust a kleptocratic leader in violent protests, in the name of closer ties with the EU and adherence to its values of good governance. What did they achieve? Our reporter Gulliver Cragg, who covered the protests at the time, went to meet some of those whose lives were profoundly affected by Ukraine's Maidan Revolution. When Ukrainian protesters first took to Maidan Square in central Kiev in November 2013, few believed they could actually get rid of President Viktor Yanukovich. But when they finally did, in February 2014 after exactly three months camped out in freezing temperatures on the Square, the joy was mitigated by grief. The protests had shown how people could come together and brought out a spirit of collective action and solidarity that was a wonder to behold, but they had also turned violent, and in the end more than a hundred protesters had been killed. And though Yanukovich had been unpopular across the country, not everyone supported the revolutionaries. Moreover, the politicians that came to power after the revolution were not really such new faces: many had served in previous governments and were suspected of corruption themselves. In this context Russian and pro-Russian forces tried to stir up trouble in the Russian-speaking regions of Eastern and Southern Ukraine, where the Maidan movement was less popular. They fully succeeded in just two of those regions: Donetsk and Luhansk. But there, as breakaway Russian-backed “people’s republics” were declared, the situation descended into all-out war between the Ukrainian army and volunteer battalions on one side, and groups of Russian volunteers and mercenaries, local pro-Russian militants, and regular Russian soldiers on the other. No high-level figures jailed for corruption The shock of war to some extent distracted attention from the pro-Western reforms Ukraine’s new leaders had promised, and made the economic and social context far more difficult. But civil society had been energised by Maidan, and has been pushing the government to carry out those reforms – most importantly those aimed at ending the corruption that has hamstrung Ukraine’s development ever since independence in 1991. Ask Ukrainians now how they feel about what’s been achieved, and you get a wide range of opinions. Many are bitterly disappointed. Corruption is still rife and no high-level figures have been jailed, either for corruption or their role in the killings on Maidan (most of Yanukovich’s associates fled to Russia). The current government manifestly resists attempts to pass necessary anti-corruption reforms and only caves in under pressure from civil society and the foreign donors that keep the economy afloat. To many Ukrainians, including Artem Lymar and his wife, in this report, it seems almost absurd to suggest that so little change could be worth so much bloodshed. ►► Watch our Focus report: Agent 'Kateryna', Ukraine's anti-corruption hero But many others disagree. The key message you get from the optimists (if we may call them that) is that if you feel disappointed because things are bad now, you don’t fully understand how bad they were before, and how much worse they could have got had Yanukovich stayed in power and brought Ukraine fully under the Russian yoke. Anti-corruption campaigners such as Vitaliy Shabunin point to huge numbers of reforms that have been passed largely thanks to their lobbying efforts. They may not have borne much fruit yet, they say, but they will. Another character in this report, Viktor Varenytsia, who lost a brother on Maidan, wrote to me on 21 November, the anniversary of the start of the protests, that he didn’t know whether the day should be a day of grief because of his family tragedy or a celebration because it was the start of the process where Ukraine finally broke free of Russian domination and affirmed its commitment to European values. Too much has happened in Ukraine since Maidan to cover everything in one report, but this is the story of some people whose lives were profoundly affected by the events, each in different ways. 🤍 Visit our website: 🤍 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍
Russian mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin said that the Kremlin's rationale for invading Ukraine was based on lies concocted by his perennial adversary - the army's top brass. #News #Reuters #newsfeed #russia #ukraine #ukrainewar #putin Subscribe: 🤍 Reuters brings you the latest business, finance and breaking news video from around the globe. Our reputation for accuracy and impartiality is unparalleled. Get the latest news on: 🤍 Follow Reuters on Facebook: 🤍 Follow Reuters on Twitter: 🤍 Follow Reuters on Instagram: 🤍
🤍 It was a far cry from the mass protests of the Orange Revolution. Seven years on, the remnants of Ukraine's pro-democracy movement gathered in Independence or Maidan Square. But with an anniversary protest banned, police moved into the iconic site in Kiev. Viktor Yanukovych, the loser in the uprising against rigged elections, is now President. But he should still fear Ukraine's revolutionary spirit, according to opposition deputy Andriy Parubiy. "As Maidan ruined him in 2004," he says, "Maidan will ruin him in the future."
Russia on the Edge: Prigozhin's Warning of Revolution Amid Ukraine War | Vantage on Firstpost Following his controversial victory in Bakhmut, Ukraine, Russian mercenary leader Yevgeniy Prigozhin has raised an alarm. In a startling revelation, he warns that Russia's escalating conflict in Ukraine could trigger a revolution in the country, unless the nation's privileged class steps up. Prigozhin was speaking after two Russian rebel militias, the Russian Volunteer Corps and the Freedom of Russia Legion, had made a dramatic incursion into the Belgorod region along Ukraine’s northern border. What could this mean for Russia’s future? Catch this in-depth analysis from Vantage on Firstpost. Russia | Wagner Group | Russia Ukraine War | Vladimir Putin | Russian Invasion | World News | International News | Firstpost #russia #wagnergroup #russiaukrainewar #vladimirputin #russianinvasion #worldnews #internationalnews #firstpost Vantage is a ground-breaking news, opinions, and current affairs show from Firstpost. Catering to a global audience, Vantage covers the biggest news stories from a 360-degree perspective, giving viewers a chance to assess the impact of world events through a uniquely Indian lens. The show is anchored by Palki Sharma, Managing Editor, Firstpost. By breaking stereotypes, Vantage aims to challenge conventional wisdom and present an alternative view on global affairs, defying the norm and opening the door to new perspectives. The show goes beyond the headlines to uncover the hidden stories – making Vantage a destination for thought-provoking ideas. Vantage airs Monday to Friday at 9 PM IST on Firstpost across all leading platforms. Subscribe to Firstpost channel and press the bell icon to get notified when we go live. 🤍 Follow Firstpost on Instagram: 🤍 Follow Firstpost on Facebook: 🤍 Follow Firstpost on Twitter: 🤍
🤍 - A short-lived truce has broken down in Ukraine as street battles have erupted between anti-government protesters and police. Last night the country's embattled president and the opposition leaders demanding his resignation called for a truce and negotiations to try to resolve Ukraine's political crisis. But hours later, armed protesters attempted to retake Independence Square sparking another day of deadly violence. At least 50 people have died since Tuesday in the bloodiest period of Ukraine's 22-year post-Soviet history. While President Obama has vowed to "continue to engage all sides" a recently leaked audio recording between two top U.S. officials reveal the Obama administration has been secretly plotting with the opposition. We speak to Stephen Cohen, professor emeritus of Russian studies and politics at New York University and Princeton University. His most recent book, "Soviet Fates and Lost Alternatives: From Stalinism to the New Cold War," is out in paperback. His latest Nation article is "Distorting Russia: How the American Media Misrepresent Putin, Sochi and Ukraine." Democracy Now!, is an independent global news hour that airs weekdays on 1,200+ TV and radio stations Monday through Friday. Watch our livestream 8-9am ET at 🤍. Please consider supporting independent media by making a donation to Democracy Now! today, visit 🤍 FOLLOW DEMOCRACY NOW! ONLINE: Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍democracynow Subscribe on YouTube: 🤍 Listen on SoundCloud: 🤍 Daily Email News Digest: 🤍 Google+: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 Tumblr: 🤍 Pinterest: 🤍