In 2018, I visited Bakhmut, bought some soda from this decommissioned German DHL delivery truck re-used as a mobile shop, and got a digital award for staying in “Hotel Bakhmut” in the city center. Now the city does not exist anymore because of the Russian terror.
There was a stadium behind the hotel - I tried to make my jogging exercise there, but it was extremely hot at noon in July, and I gave up after 3 km (instead of planned 10). Neither the hotel nor the stadium exist anymore.
Next day, we went to Mayorske checkpoint about 40 km from Bakhmut - the last Ukraine-controlled position before the Russia-occupied territory. People could cross the contact line there. Of course on the days when the Russians did not shell the checkpoint (they did it regularly).
The way to the checkpoint and back was quite depressing. But it was nothing compared to 2023.
There were signs warning about landlines everywhere. Street signs were pierced by the Russian bullets - as the Russians shot at “Kharkiv” name after they realized they will not get the city. Now there is much more mines and UXOs, and Kharkiv ist still free. #RussiaUkraineWar
On that 3,500-km trip around Ukraine we also visited Mariupol, including the Illicha steel plant (the older one, out of two: Illicha and AzovStal).
I jogged in Mariupol too, up to AzovStal steel plant from my hotel Reikartz (the pic). Neither the plant nor the hotel exist anymore. Where you see “8” at my map, it was the theater which the Russians bombed killing hundreds of civilians #RussiaUkraineWar#RussiaisATerroristState
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THREAD: In the previous discussion on war atrocities amid Russo-Ukrainian war, many focused on the phenomenon of war violence, explaining the RU atrocities by a sort of a general violent behaviour amid wars. It is a wrong approach. It ignores Russia. /1
The concept "war is hell, people tend to turn into beasts" is very popular. Stories of atrocities from Mỹ Lai in Vietnam or Al-Ghraib in Iraq seem to confirm this common knowledge and turn to banality. But especially in Russo-Ukrainian war this banal knowledge doesn't help. /2
Russian atrocities in Ukraine have nothing to do with what Western people who have zero experience with daily Russia tend to explain with "war brutalisation". No. Russian atrocities in this war are exactly on the level of normal Russian civilian life, plus weapons. /3
A German professor Sönke Neitzel from @unipotsdam, commenting beheading of a Ukrainian POW by the Russians: "We must (!) assume (!!!) that the Ukrainians treat the Russian POWs not less brutal".
In his interview he brings numerous examples from WWII with the main idea "war is hell, both sides do terrible things". His scientific work was also dedicated (at least partly) the phenomenon of war atrocities. This is all good and humanistic, but ignores SYSTEMATIC terror.
Some comment here, he should be on a Russian payroll or something. I don't think so. I think he has not noticed how he had become a prisoner of his own very high and very shiny moral ivory tower. It happens to those who dive into abstract theory and disconnect from reality. Sad.
Springtime for Putin & Russia: a former @BoellStiftung Moscow office director, a great friend of 🇷🇺, & a Holodomor denier happily goes to 🇷🇺. As @berlin_bridge says “If you’re not worried to go to Russia bc you’ve been speaking out against the war, you’re doing something wrong”
As I posted a very personal story of how a grandmother of my first wife has nearely died in Holodomor, Jens found time to come to the discussion and deny Holodomor saying „there was famine everywhere“. It is like saying, „not only Jews were killed by the Nazis, the Germans too“.
Being married to a daughter of Vasili Shukshin, one of the most prominent Russian nationalists and antisemites from the Soviet cultural scene is not a sin. A sin is to value his father-in-law’ cultural heritage and make pilgrimage to his museum.
When #RussianWorld#RusskiyMir comes to you, your life gets destroyed, and everything you loved gets smashed. See what the Russians brought to Ukraine.
1: Bakhmut.
(This THREAD was inspired by @Mariana_Betsa's comparison of Mariupol before and after #RusskiyMirMeansDeath came)
The concept of #RusskiyMir (Russian World) is essential for the Russian imperialism and its war against Ukraine. Let us dive into this concept. A long THREAD:
The concept of #RusskiyMir is not new. It emerged first in the 19th century as a part of Russian imperial philosophy under the names of "Russian Idea", "Russian Spirit" or else, and was related to ideas of pan-Slavism, the unity of Slavonic nations under the rule of Russia /2
During the Soviet era, the idea of #RusskiyMir was not popular in Moscow. But in the 1990s, after the collapse of the USSR, it emerged again in a quite different form. In a "methodology" intellectual sect, Kremlin-close intellectuals developed a concept of "Russian Archipel". /3
The ICC arrest warrant against Vladimir Putin is long overdue. Russia has started forcible transfer of Ukrainian children not in 2022, but in 2014. The system was invented by a "charity" organiser Yelizaveta Glinka, who was cheered by the West: european-resilience.org/analytics/how-…
On this video: Russian occupation authorities transfer Ukrainian children to Russia in October 2022.
Starting from 2014, the "charity" founder Yelizaveta Glinka, known as "Doctor Liza", travelled to Russia-occupied Ukrainian Donbas and kidnapped up to 500 UKR children. She gave hours of interview to RU propagandist Graham Phillips and denied RU military involvement in Donbas.