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#video#Mariupol
‘Oksana, it’s all right. I’m staying for now. Moreover, I adopted my family here. I’m alive and well. Everything is fine. If it works, then tell your mother that everything is in order’. Alexander Komarov from Mariupol wrote down these words for his sister in the Moscow region, who asked to take her brother out of the ruined city. They searched for him for a long time. In one of the courtyards, they suggested a grave in a neighbouring front garden was his. But there was another name on the cross.
There was little time as the volunteer humanitarian convoy was about to leave. The address was searched for around Nikopolskaya Street, not far from the Ilyich metallurgical plant where fighting had recently taken place. The convoy decided to check another address and found Alexander. He said he let a family with a wounded child stay with him as their house burned down. He refused to leave people and evacuate.
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#video#Mariupol
‘The only people they [Mariupol residents] don’t blame is Russia because to them, Russia is coming, and they have saved these people.’ John Dougan, a former US police officer, conveys what residents of Mariupol told him. He went to the war zone because he didn’t believe the Western media: ‘The story that was being reported in the Western media was not the story that the people were living in Ukraine.’
Residents heard John speaking English, approached him, and asked to relay their messages to the world: ‘From the beginning of the war, I wanted the whole world to know that the way they protected us is not protection. They were hiding behind our backs. They just simply destroyed us.’
John is now actively blogging about his trips to Donbass. He hopes as many people as possible around the world will find out the truth about the situation. Want to know more about John Dougan? Watch our documentary about him 'Breaking Bad Wolf' right now.
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#video#Mariupol
‘When two shells flew into our yard, my husband immediately said: ‘Ukraine’. That’s where they were sitting, and it flew in from there... A Ukrainian tank was standing on the street’, says a refugee from Mariupol.
Her husband was seriously wounded: they removed his spleen and a rib. When they arrived at the hospital, there was ‘no water, nothing’. The woman says that doctors and nurses cried because they could not help the seriously injured. Now she, like many other refugees, has found temporary shelter in the village of Bezymennoe.
Their stories will be featured in a new RT Documentary film.
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#video#Mariupol
‘When our house caught fire, we jumped out. And here, the tank was standing and pointed its muzzle at us. And the men say: ‘Well, shoot. What are you looking at?’ [Only] then did he take it and turn the muzzle away’. Tamara Antonova tells how, during a bombardment, together with her neighbours, she jumped out of the basement directly in front of an Azov* battalion tank.
Her home is next to the Azovstal plant, where the Azov* militants are located. Tamara could not leave: her sister Lydia was lying in the apartment. RT and a Russia-DPR humanitarian convoy team managed to bring them out.
*banned in Russia
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