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Mar 1 17 tweets 6 min read
🔎 As President Putin’s forces lay siege to Ukraine’s cities, the spirit and determination of its people have grabbed the world's attention.

But for all the coverage of war, the culture and history of this nation is unknown to many

thetimes.co.uk/article/ukrain…
🗣 Language

This is one of the key cultural differences between Ukraine and Russia – exemplified by the Ukrainian pronunciation of their capital: kee-yiv rather than the Russian version, kee-yev 👇 Image
Russian is largely spoken in the east, particularly Crimea, which Putin annexed in 2014.

(Our interactive map shows the % of those who speak Russian as their first language in Ukraine) Image
🗺 Borders

By the 19th century the western part of what is now Ukraine was under Austro-Hungarian control and the east was controlled by the Russian Empire. Ukraine won short-lived freedom from its Slav neighbours after its war of independence, fought between 1917 and 1921 Image
It united west and east, which had been divided between the Habsburg and Romanov empires, into the Ukrainian People’s Republic.

🗣 Khromeychuk: "This started an irreversible process, a realisation that a Ukrainian state was possible"
After the Second World War Ukraine became part of the Soviet Union as the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. It was instrumental in the collapse of the Soviet Union, declaring its independence in 1991 Image
🇺🇦 Culture

Ukraine has become increasingly cosmopolitan and its cities are particularly western-facing. Kenneth Nowakowski, bishop of the Ukrainian Church in London, said: "People are always amazed by how vibrant and young people are, among coffee shops, the theatre and ballet"
🗣 “In Kyiv you are going to find Ukrainian food along with Georgian food, sushi, Indian food, as well as McDonald’s and Kentucky Fried Chicken.

"If you go to Lviv you’ll see buildings there, like the opera theatre, which are very similar to Vienna, Budapest or Zagreb" Image
The sight of Oleksandr Usyk, Vasyl Lomachenko, and Wladimir and Vitali Klitschko taking up arms has been a reminder of Ukraine's impact in the sporting arena. As world champion boxers, their already battle-hardened faces will be familiar to many sports fans across the globe Image
📺 Popular culture

One of its biggest showbiz stars is now its leader on the biggest stage – Zelensky was a renowned comedian and starred on the Ukrainian version of #StrictlyComeDancing. Voters were used to seeing him in office from popular drama series Servant of the People Image
💰 Economy

Known as the breadbasket of Europe, Ukraine’s vast expanses of rich soil make it one of the world’s largest grain producers and its single biggest provider of sunflower oil
However, its economy is modest, lying 55th in the global table of GDP. Analysts fear that Covid has lifted the poverty rate above 50 per cent, although that is an improvement on Ukraine’s final years in the Soviet Union Image
🏫 Education

About 99% of the country’s children are enrolled in schools, which has broadly been the case since Soviet days, and the literacy rate is close to 100%.

In 2017 Ukraine remodelled its education system with Britain as a model Image
📍 Politics and Crimea

Since the fall of communism Ukraine has endured corruption, oligarchs and poisonings – yet its democracy has endured. Political parties rise and fall but the key division is not between left and right but east and west

(🔎 See our interactive map) Image
🔺 Early presidents Leonid Kuchma (1994-2005) and Viktor Yushchenko (2005-2010) wanted to balance Russian trading links with closer EU and Nato ties

🔺 Victor Yanukovych won in 2010. Seeking greater Russia ties, he refused to sign a political and free-trade agreement with the EU
This fuelled the Maidan Revolution of 2014, which in turn provoked Putin into annexing Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula with a largely ethnic Russian population.

🔺 It led to the installation of the pro-Kremlin leader Sergei Aksyonov, a referendum declared illegal by the West Image
🔺 That year Ukraine elected Petro Poroshenko who signed the EU agreement Yanukovych rejected. His slogans included “army, language, faith” and “we’re going our own way”.

🔺 Then came Zelensky who thrashed Poroshenko in 2019 and continued to look westwards for allies 👇 Image

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More from @thetimes

Mar 3
Loud booms ring out every few minutes from the Ukrainian air defence trying to protect Kyiv. Underneath them, Dr Igor Nesteruk, considers his ill-fitting sheepskin coat

thetimes.co.uk/article/kyivs-…
“What do you think?” says Nesteruk, pivoting for a view. “Too unisex?”

The professor of applied mathematics at Ukraine’s premier research science institute was donated the coat by neighbours when he joined the Territorial Defence Forces last week
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Mar 3
Britain will not be able to sanction Roman Abramovich and other oligarchs for “weeks and months” because the government has been unable to build a case against them

thetimes.co.uk/article/buildi…
The Foreign Office and National Crime Agency have been unable to prove that there are “reasonable grounds” for designating the UK’s most prominent oligarchs for sanctions because they have struggled to link their finances to the Putin regime Image
Liz Truss, the foreign secretary, wants to sanction Abramovich but has been left frustrated after being told that the government has been unable to build up a case against him and others Image
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Mar 3
🔺 JUST IN: Russia is determined to control the whole of Ukraine and “the worst is yet to come” in the war with Ukraine, President Macron believes after a 90-minute call to President Putin thetimes.co.uk/article/ukrain…
🔺 Update: Ukraine operation is going to plan, Putin tells Russians thetimes.co.uk/article/ukrain…
Vladimir Putin said on Russian television: “I want to say that the special military operation is proceeding strictly in line with the timetable. According to plan. All the tasks that have been set are being successfully resolved”
Read 4 tweets
Mar 2
Ukraine has invited Russian women to come to Kyiv and collect their sons, many of whom appear to be inexperienced and frightened teenage conscripts thetimes.co.uk/article/russia…
In a field surrounded by the people he had been sent to fight, a young Russian prisoner of war hungrily gulped down the tea and bread they offered him.

A Ukrainian woman calmed him, telling the soldier not to worry. Using her phone, she made a video call to his mother
As soon as his mother appeared on the screen, he burst into tears.

“Everything is OK,” his female captor said, while others stroked his back. “Natasha, God be with you. We will call you later. He is alive and healthy”
Read 8 tweets
Mar 2
Dnipro will be a Stalingrad for the Russian attackers, vows regional chief Mykola Lukashuk
thetimes.co.uk/article/dnipro…
The province chief once presided over vast infrastructure projects, oversaw plans for new highways, checked industrial blueprints and regional budgets and ran one of the largest civil administrations in Ukraine... 🇺🇦
Now Lukashuk has a Makarov pistol strapped to his belt and a Kalashnikov on the table, and is organising Dnipro to become a Stalingrad for invading Russian troops 🇷🇺
Read 13 tweets
Mar 2
‘The Nazi who should be de-Nazified is one man — and his name is Putin.’

Ukrainians have reacted with outrage to the bombing of the Babyn Yar memorial to murdered Jews thetimes.co.uk/article/the-na…
Dima’s back was turned when the first bomb fell. Deaf from birth, he did not hear the explosion but felt the blast wave push him to the ground.

“When I turned around I saw the flames,” he signs through an interpreter to @scribblercat
Dima's recounting the moment when Russian missiles struck the television tower broadcasting to Kyiv, knocking channels off air.

Five people were killed in the blast, including a cameraman, Yevhenii Sakun, who was filming outside when the missiles struck Image
Read 7 tweets

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