Ukrainian family living in Nova Scotia reflects on one year of war
A Ukrainian family who now calls Nova Scotia home is looking to the future as the country marks one year at war.
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A Ukrainian family who now calls Nova Scotia home is looking to the future as the country marks one year at war.
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DefenceTalkRussian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday the new Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile will be deployed this year following US reports that the weapon failed a recent test. The Sarmat — dubbed Satan 2 by Western analysts R…
DefenceTalkRussian lawmakers on Wednesday unanimously approved the suspension of Moscow’s participation in the New START arms treaty, which President Vladimir Putin announced a day earlier. New START, the last nuclear arms control pact between Ru…
At a funeral for Roman Skalskyi, a young fallen soldier, mourners reflect on 12 months of damage, displacement and death.
For many Ukrainians, widespread attacks on their cultural institutions are an attempt to erase their heritage and absorb them into an empire-minded Russia.
Olena Shelestenko and her husband Gennady were involved in a Kherson newspaper that was allegedly pro-Russia during the occupation of the city.
In Russian-occupied Ukraine, partisans have been painting the Ukrainian flag in public areas, collecting information on troop movements and attacking soldiers and collaborators.
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Two months after the liberation of Kherson, Global News found a city being cynically pummelled by Russian artillery that has targeted even a maternity hospital.