kiev
  • Ilaria Romano 6 May 2025
    “The other night the sky turned completely red, something that hadn’t happened in a while. We were really scared,” says Tatiana, a former tour guide from Kyiv, who, for the umpteenth time in the past three years, was woken up by explosions. “We’re still lucky compared to those living near the front line, but since the beginning of this war, no one has been able to sleep,” she says. “Almost every night we are woken by the sound of sirens, even though we no longer go down to the subway to wait for it to end.”
  • Gaetano Pentassuglia, University of Liverpool 29 April 2014
    As widely reported by the media, the key justification for Russian intervention in Crimea has been the need to protect ethnic Russians. Indeed, President Putin obtained the backing from Russia’s upper house of parliament on that basis. The argument, built around a vaguely construed notion of humanitarian intervention or protection of nationals abroad has proved wholly unpersuasive.
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