Olga Tokariuk Profile picture
Jan 13, 2022 12 tweets 4 min read Read on X
For the last three days, Italian public TV @RaiUno has been broadcasting reports from occupied Donetsk. In these reports, Russia is praised for rebuilding the city, war is described as between Russia and the US, and Ukrainians are called fascists
Reporter says things such as "Up to 2014, Donbas was the most productive and richest part of Ukraine. Today is keeps afloat thanks to the help from Russia, the great mother of this piece of land'
In the latest report, Russian proxies in the trenches said they were combatting against 'Ukrainian fascists' and mentioned the Stalingrad battle. None of these outrageous things are contested or balanced by the reporter. Italian viewers who pay for public TV deserve better
A correction to the first tweet: the reporter describes the war as between Russia and the West, not the US.
While rewatching it, I noticed that the translation of what the first speaker, a babushka, says, differs significantly from what she actually said (it can be overheard)
The old lady says in Russian, as overheard: 'Whether there is Russia or not here, we don't care. It's important that the war stops and the population stops suffering'.
In the Italian voiceover, her soundbite is translated as 'The US and Russia need to make a deal. But they also should explain us what's the difference between Ukraine and Russia. We have always been the same country'.
It doesn't really look like a literal translation...
And here's the screengrab of the latest @Tg1Rai report from Donetsk. It ends with a (pro)Russian soldier's soundbite, who says that today, like in 1942, they are fighting against 'a fascist aggressor'.
Why the reporter gives space to such obvious propaganda?
Ukrainian embassy in Italy wrote a letter to @RaiUno chief Monica Maggioni objecting against what it called 'a one-sided report, in total violation of standards and ethics of journalism', which relied on 'shameful clichés of Russian propaganda' Image
To be fair to RAI, it should be mentioned that @RaiTre reporter has been doing an excellent job with his coverage from Kyiv.
Would be still nice to hear some comments from the Italian public TV, financed with taxpayers money, about its shameful Donetsk reporting
Instead of responding to criticism, @RaiUno broadcasts an 8,5 minute-long report from Donetsk in their weekly show, which comprises all the earlier propaganda narratives, plus some more, accusing Ukrainians of killing civilians with missiles, etc facebook.com/watch/?ref=sav…
In this report, the journalist interviews Denis Pushilin, head of the so-called Donetsk People's Republic. He gives him ample space to deny Russian military involvement in Donbas and blame the US and NATO for 'arming Ukrainians', as well as complain about 'unfair' MH17 trial
There is another remarkable quote in the report, by a local resident who reportedly said: 'I wish it was all over in ten days, like in Crimea, Belarus or Kazakhstan'

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More from @olgatokariuk

Dec 7, 2023
A product of many months of work, my research paper for @risj_oxford is finally out today! In it, I dissect Ukraine's use of humour as a tool of strategic communications and countering disinformation in the context of Russia's full-scale invasion 🧵👇
reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/memes-morale-d…
Here are six ways how humour worked in Ukraine's case - but can be applicable in other contexts:

1. It was an internal unity and coping mechanism. Ukrainians discovered the profound impact of humour on mental health in the situation of full-scale war
2. Humour can attract wider audiences and raise awareness about issues they don't normally care about. Humour helped Ukraine to reach outside of the bubble of supporters and evoke solidarity from a wider crowd. It was used for fundraising by @Official_NAFO and @saintjavelin
Read 12 tweets
Oct 30, 2023
IMO, too much doom and gloom in the latest @TIME cover article on Ukraine. Too much focus on Zelensky, as if it's just his war and his decisions. Too many anonymous quotes by various 'aides' and 'advisors'. Too little about the Ukrainian people. Take it with a grain of salt
An important fact that is casually mentioned in the article: 80% of Ukrainians oppose amy territorial concessions to Russia. Whatever some anonymous Zelensky advisers would say, not just the president but most Ukrainians are ready to keep fighting. It's an existential threat
Ukrainians will keep fighting even if the West abandons their support, citing war fatigue, corruption, Middle East escalation or whatever else reason is mentioned in the article. But the losses will be much higher. Russia's threat to Ukraine and democracies won't go away
Read 4 tweets
Oct 19, 2023
Listening to excellent @TsybulskaLiubov insights on Ukraine's resistance to Russian information warfare at #StopFIMI conference in London. The key to success in countering disinformation is cooperation between different actors in the society and deep understanding of a threat
Example of real-life impact of disinformation in Ukraine: Russian actors penetrate social media groups of Ukrainians whose relatives are MIA and instigate rebellion against the Ukrainian government; often, they exploit existing grievances and organic narratives to sow divisions
In Ukraine, Russian malign actors not particularly successful since the start of full-scale invasion because 1) Ukraine already had the tools to counter disinformation, prepared since 2014 2) government and the people united and acted together in the face of an existential threat
Read 4 tweets
Jul 3, 2023
As a tribute to Ukrainian writer and poet Victoria Amelina, killed by a Russian missile in Kramatorsk, please read and circulate her work far and wide. In this thread, I will collect links to some of her writings translated into English ✍️
In this essay written at the start of Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Victoria tells how she was raised to admire the great Russian culture, despite living in the West of Ukraine. How Moscow was the centre of her universe - until she visited it iwpcollections.squarespace.com/victoria-ameli…
This piece is painfully prophetic: 'Now there is a real threat that Russians will successfully execute another generation of Ukrainian culture – this time by missiles and bombs.
For me, it would mean the majority of my friends get killed'
eurozine.com/cancel-culture…
Read 9 tweets
Jun 7, 2023
Those who imply or suggest that Ukraine might be behind the blowing of Kakhovka dam ignore the context of this war.
1. Russia has been lying before launching the assault on Ukraine and continued to do from day one blaming Ukraine for crimes Russia itself committed 🧵
2. Ukraine warned repeatedly that Russians were about to blow up the Kakhovka dam since October 2022 and asked for an international monitoring mission there. Nobody reacted. 3. Russian military bloggers are boasting about blowing up the dam and asking for more strikes on 🇺🇦
4. Ukraine will suffer long-lasting consequences as a result of this catastrophe: loss of people's lives, entire settlements, fertile land, natural habitat, water supply problems in several regions. It's insane and there's absolutely no evidence to assume 🇺🇦 would do it to itself
Read 9 tweets
Mar 13, 2023
If you wonder why Ukrainians are unhappy about the Navalny documentary winning an Oscar and are rightfully suspicious of him, here's a useful thread
This article also sums up Ukrainians attitudes to Russian opposition pretty well: aljazeera.com/opinions/2023/…
In other news, Ukrainian award-winning filmmaker Iryna Tsilyk wrote today that a Russian director Aleksandr Molochnikov plans to film a documentary about Ukrainian war children. But Ukrainian families he got in touch with and who agreed were not told it was a Russian production
Read 5 tweets

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