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  • 2 days ago
Desperation erupts in Gaza as starving civilians storm an aid distribution center in Rafah—ending in tragedy as the IDF opens fire near the crowd, leaving multiple casualties. In the north, conditions worsen with no access to food, medicine, or basic relief. One young girl shares a heartbreaking story of hopelessness and loss. Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky announces plans to boost the country’s production of drones and long-range weapons with fresh EU investment. A stark contrast in two war-torn regions. 💔🤖

#GazaCrisis #Rafah #IDF #HumanitarianDisaster #AidUnderAttack #Palestine #GazaUnderSiege #WarCrimes #CeasefireNow #UNRelief #Zelensky #Ukraine #Drones #EUInvestment #MilitaryTech #UkraineWar #MiddleEastConflict #StarvationInGaza #ChildrenOfWar #PeaceNow #GlobalCrisis

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00:00Now, after months of a total Israeli siege of Gaza, the IDF is finally allowing minimal supplies into the enclave.
00:08But he saw desperate and starving Palestinians trying to storm the U.S.-supported food distribution center.
00:17Now, even at night, people were seen with bags and boxes gathering near food trucks.
00:22Some were reported climbing onto the vehicles in an attempt to be the first to get any food.
00:28Notably, aid distribution centers have been located only in the southern part of the enclave, leaving those people and still in the north with no help.
00:37Now, there were scenes of chaos as crowds overrun one aid center.
00:44The IDF said it fired warning shots to disperse the crowds.
00:48Local authorities accused the Israeli soldiers of killing at least three people and wounding several dozen more.
00:58Let's cross live to our team, Middle East Bureau Chief, Maria Finoshina, to get more on this development in Gaza.
01:05Maria, it's good to have you join me now.
01:07So, thousands of Palestinians have overrun the aid delivery center just a day after it started its work.
01:15Take us through how this situation unfolded.
01:17Good morning to you, Mike.
01:23Well, we watched the humanitarian lifeline collapse in real time on Tuesday, and we continue seeing it as a U.S.-backed Israeli-approved aid effort descended into chaos in Gaza.
01:35The plan was simple on paper.
01:37Four aid distribution centers set up across the enclave.
01:41Two opened on Tuesday, one in the south and the other in central Gaza.
01:45But within hours, the situation spiraled.
01:48Crowds surged.
01:49Order collapsed.
01:50Videos circulating online showed mobs storming the sides.
01:54Scenes of desperation and fear.
01:56Gunfire were heard as the IDF fired warning shots to regain control.
02:02Panic spread fast, and casualties were reported.
02:06Gaza officials called it a complete loss of control.
02:09The United States, though, called it something else entirely and placed the blame on Hamas.
02:15Let's take a listen.
02:16All of this could have stopped, of course, if they had released the hostages and put down their weapons, but they refuse to do so.
02:23They've also rejected ceasefires.
02:26Hamas has been opposed to this dynamic.
02:28They have attempted to stop the aid movement through Gaza to these distribution centers.
02:34They have failed, but they certainly tried.
02:37The bottom line is, the real story here is that the aid is moving through.
02:40And in that kind of environment, it's not surprising that there might be a few issues involved.
02:46But the good news is, is that those seeking to get aid to the people of Gaza, which is not Hamas, have succeeded.
02:54Well, Gaza authorities, they reacted.
02:57They reject that narrative outright.
02:59They called the U.S. claims a blatant fabrication and say the distribution center is set up across Gaza.
03:05And nothing more than segregated buffer zones designed to serve Israeli military interests.
03:12Take a listen.
03:14The real reason for the delay and collapse in the aid distribution process is the tragic chaos caused by the mismanagement of the same company,
03:22which is affiliated with the Israeli Occupation Administration itself, in these buffer zones.
03:27The so-called safe distribution sites are nothing more than racist isolation ghettos.
03:33They are a coercive model for booby-trapped humanitarian corridors,
03:38which are used as a cover to advance the occupation's security agendas and perpetuate a policy of starvation and extortion.
03:46So what actually got through?
03:49Officials say around 8,000 aid packages were distributed on Tuesday.
03:54But in the context of a full-blown humanitarian catastrophe, that's nothing.
03:59We're not just talking food.
04:00People need medicine, fuel, clean water, the very basics for survival.
04:05Israel has enforced a near-total blockade since March, as you remember, after cease-fire talks collapsed
04:11and the IDF resumed its offensive in Gaza.
04:14No food, no fuel, no medicine allowed in for almost three months.
04:19Prime Minister Netanyahu made it clear it was all part of a strategy to increase pressure on Hamas.
04:24And he continues to deny there is a hunger crisis in the Gaza Strip.
04:29Take a listen.
04:29So we supply them with about 1.8 million tons.
04:35And that's why people didn't, you didn't have mass starvation at all.
04:40In fact, I'll give you one simple indication of that.
04:43We take thousands of prisoners.
04:46What's the first thing you do when you take a prisoner in Gaza?
04:49The first thing you do is you tell them, take your shirt off.
04:52We want to see that there's no suicide vest.
04:56Thousands and thousands of prisoners have taken their shirt off.
05:01And you don't see one, not one, emaciated.
05:06Not a single case.
05:08From the beginning of the war to the present.
05:10In fact, you see quite the opposite because you don't get that much exercise, certainly not in tunnels.
05:16But you get food.
05:18And we're accused of starvation.
05:23But humanitarian agencies say that argument doesn't hold.
05:27As of May 2025, the UN estimates 1.1 million Gazans are experiencing catastrophic hunger.
05:34And nearly 500,000 are on the brink of famine.
05:37So how exactly are 8,000 packages supposed to solve that?
05:41Let's take a listen to this statement.
05:44What can five or nine or even 100 trucks do for a population that has been made to suffer from hunger as a weapon of war?
05:53At least 500, 600 trucks of food, medical and commercial supplies must enter Gaza daily.
06:01Yunruwe warehouses in Jordan and Egypt are ready to deliver.
06:04But the entry of aid is blocked.
06:07Well, today, the aid center is expected to reopen in Gaza.
06:11But after what happened on Tuesday, the chaos, the panic, the gunfire, the question remains, can this model even work?
06:18Or is it already unraveling, leaving starving Gazans, thousands of them, with no real help and no real hope?
06:26Let's wait and see.
06:27All right.
06:28All right.
06:30Hearty Middle East Bureau Chief, Maria Finoshana, bringing us up to speed there.
06:37All right.
06:37Now, while people in the southern part of the enclave are storming centers for aid, those in the north are struggling to survive due to a lack of medical care.
06:47The vast majority of hospitals have suspended all services amid almost continual Israeli bombardment.
06:55The World Health Organization has recorded nearly 700 attacks on medical facilities since 2023.
07:03Now, here is the story of one girl living on the edge of the abyss, resigned to the fact that no help is on its way.
07:10We were asleep at home.
07:40My family was visiting.
07:42We were targeted by a missile.
07:44All of my family was martyred.
07:46Only me, my father and my brother survived.
07:49They pulled me out from under the rubble.
07:51They took me to the hospital.
07:53My condition is very bad.
07:55I don't feel anything in the lower part of my body at all.
08:00My mother was beside me, and when she was martyred, I heard her scream with my own ears.
08:05Every time I remember my mother's scream, I break down more.
08:08My mental state gets worse.
08:11My sister once said, we refuse to die.
08:14But I'm the opposite.
08:15I wish I could die.
08:16I wish I could.
08:17I die a thousand times every day.
08:20I'm in agony.
08:21I'm so tired.
08:22I'm very tired.
08:23As a human being, I'm telling you about my life.
08:26I want to rest.
08:27I want to be able to walk again so I can help my brother and father.
08:31Hala is injured in the spine, her urinary and digestive systems, and the pelvis.
08:39The doctors told us there's no treatment for her here.
08:42The pelvis can't be treated in Gaza.
08:45Hala took the worst of the injuries.
08:47She is in very bad condition.
08:49Her respiratory system is what's hurting her most.
08:52Her spine is broken.
08:53Her pelvic bones are shattered.
08:55Her digestive system, down there, is gone.
08:58Nothing is left of Hala.
09:00Right now, the only treatment Hala is getting is painkillers.
09:04Doctors in Gaza said there's no solution for her here.
09:07You can see how Gaza is under siege.
09:09She needs to leave Gaza so she can survive.
09:11She needs to leave.
09:42I appeal to the World Health Organization to resolve this matter.
09:47My daughter dies in front of me.
09:48She is emotionally devastated by the killing of her mother and little sister.
09:52I don't know what to do.
09:54I'm tied up, as you see.
09:56I beg you to help me.
09:57This girl, 14 years old, should not remain paralyzed in a wheelchair.
10:01International organizations are calling me,
10:04but so far I haven't seen any actual help on the ground.
10:07Everyone keeps promising and saying, we're with you.
10:09But here I am, still in Gaza.
10:12My daughter is dying in front of me.
10:15I already lost her mother and sister,
10:17and I still haven't received any help.
10:20They give me nothing.
10:21I suffer.
10:22I can't sleep.
10:23I'm constantly in pain.
10:25I'm always suffocating.
10:27My mental state collapses every night.
10:29I wish I could go abroad to get treatment.
10:32I'm asking to take me abroad so I can live a normal life again and forget what happened to me.
10:37I'm exhausted.
10:38I've had enough of life.
10:40Please help me.
10:41Really a sad story from the Middle East there.
10:48Now, to the United States, Donald Trump has warned his counterpart, Vladimir Putin, that, quote,
10:53he's playing with fire.
10:55That's after Russia carried out a large-scale attack on military targets in Ukraine.
11:01Now, Moscow also confirmed more than 150 drones fired by Kiev were intercepted on Sunday evening.
11:08Here is the U.S. president's reaction.
11:12What Vladimir Putin doesn't realize is that if it weren't for me,
11:16lots of really bad things would have already happened to Russia.
11:20And I mean really bad.
11:22He's playing with fire.
11:25Well, joining me in the studio, RIT correspondent Igor Zdanov.
11:28Well, so, Igor, we have seen a change in tone in Trump here.
11:33Does it reflect a change in Washington's position?
11:37Well, of course, only time can tell that if Donald Trump is ready to slap more sanctions on Russia.
11:43But certainly some very strong language coming there from the American president.
11:46We haven't really heard him criticize Vladimir Putin personally like that.
11:50And it did come, as you've rightly pointed out, after a very large-scale, you know,
11:55missile and drone strike on the Ukrainian territory.
11:58Given that one of the targets that the Russian defense ministry publicly announced was,
12:03were the positions of the American-supplied Patriot air defenses.
12:07And according to the Russian, again, MOD, those targets have been hit and destroyed.
12:13And given reports that very often American crews, crews of American nationals,
12:18they take direct part in operating those Patriot systems.
12:21It could be that Russia did deal not just a painful blow to Ukraine,
12:26but also a painful blow to the United States in the form of their crews.
12:30Of course, that information, if it is ever released to the public, probably not.
12:36It could be the reason behind Trump's sudden, well, shift in his always ostentatious tone.
12:44But at the same time, of course, there have been reports that Trump is considering slapping more sanctions on Russia.
12:51Those reports have been citing anonymous sources.
12:54But after all, the American president has repeatedly said that that option is on the table for him.
13:00So far, he has not pulled the trigger on that just yet.
13:04But after all, there is a bipartisan document that has been drafted spearheading,
13:10which was spearheaded, the process was spearheaded by Senator Lindsey Graham.
13:15And that's, according to that document, countries basically doing trade with Russia
13:20and purchasing Russia's energy resources could be slapped with 500 percent tariffs.
13:27That would hit both the Middle Eastern nations, that would hit China, a U.S. adversary.
13:33And at the same time, that would hit Europe and some friendly, well, Asian countries,
13:39which are friendly to the United States.
13:41Again, Donald Trump is still to make a decision as to whether or not to go ahead with slapping those sanctions.
13:49But bear in mind that all of this, at the same time, it happens amid a very, well, very difficult,
13:56but, you know, peace negotiating process.
13:59It is difficult, it is moving forward ever so slowly, but it is moving forward.
14:05After all, over the weekend, we did observe the biggest prisoners of war swap,
14:10a thousand people for a thousand people.
14:12We actually, I personally had a chance to observe it.
14:16We accompanied some civilians who were exchanged as part of this prisoners of war swap,
14:22those civilians from originally from the Kursk region of Russia,
14:26the Ukrainians, they took them to the Ukrainian territory, to the Sumi region,
14:32and they were exchanged as part of that swap.
14:36So that was hailed as a big success because, after all, remember, bear in mind,
14:40that is the biggest prisoners of war swap since the beginning of this conflict.
14:47And so right now, right now it is a good opportunity.
14:51And in fact, what is next, what is everyone's waiting on, is for Russia and Ukraine to provide
14:56their own memorandums as to how they view the, well, the process forward, how they view
15:02a ceasefire between the nations, basically to go into nuance there a little bit, not just
15:07an unconditional ceasefire.
15:09So when it comes to the rhetoric coming out of Washington and out of the State Department,
15:14if you were to compare that to what Donald Trump had to say, what followed from the State
15:19Department, that was much more timid, that was much more diplomatic, and in fact, there
15:25was a very, very well, a clarification that that was not something, basically something
15:32that Donald Trump said.
15:34It doesn't mean that he was giving up on the peace process and on negotiations with Russia.
15:40Have a listen.
15:40I wouldn't call it frustration.
15:43I would, I, it is a statement of the man who has led the effort for peace in so many
15:51different regions, making it clear and being completely transparent about his opinion about
15:57what's transpired.
15:58And I think that is something Russia should take seriously.
16:01Americans certainly do.
16:02This is not a war that can be solved through the military and through violence, that it has
16:08to be done diplomatically.
16:09At the same time, you've heard President Trump note that there has to be direct talks between
16:16the parties.
16:18So there you have it.
16:19This is not a statement that comes from a country, you know, just about to pull out of
16:25negotiations and just abandon all the efforts and to acknowledge and to admit that all the
16:31efforts that they have made to achieve peace were in vain.
16:35Also, bear in mind, this is coming from the State Department, an agency led by, well, Marco
16:40Rubio, who's arguably one of the biggest neocons and, well, anti-Russian voices in the Trump
16:47administration right now.
16:48If you look at the history, what he's been saying, what his stance on Russia and on Moscow
16:53has been historically, he's not a fan of Moscow.
16:56So this is, this coming from his agency, it is a clear signal that right now there's still
17:01very much, very much the hope that this process can go forward.
17:05Because after all, remember, it's not just about the, you know, the talks between Russia
17:09and Washington.
17:10It's not just about ending the war in Ukraine.
17:13It is also about, you know, mending bilateral relations and mending all the gaps, closing,
17:19you know, just bringing something, something positive back in the relations between the, between
17:24Moscow and Washington.
17:26And so according to, well, the Russian foreign ministry now, they see a big push coming from
17:33Europe, for instance, to derail any talks that are happening between the United States
17:39and Russia.
17:43Many world leaders experienced changes in their rhetoric.
17:46For example, until recently, the whole of Europe was shouting in one voice, there is no ceasefire.
17:51Let's pump Ukraine with weapons.
17:52Let's finish off Russia on the battlefield.
17:55What are they shouting now?
17:57Immediate ceasefire without preconditions.
17:59But Macron adds that he will not stop arming Ukraine during the very ceasefire that they
18:03demand from Russia.
18:05President Trump is a man who wants results.
18:07And when he sees how his efforts to advance the settlement agreed with Putin, a group of
18:11European representatives begins to sabotage it, pushing Ukraine to completely reckless actions.
18:17He may show certain emotions.
18:19The main thing here is not to pay attention to rhetoric, but to ensure that Europe stops
18:23sabotaging the peace process.
18:26Well, you could see the, you know, the Turkish foreign minister over there and the Turkish flag.
18:31And it is quite symbolic that Sergei Lavrov made the statement that you've just listened
18:37to at a, basically at an event with, together, standing together with his Turkish counterpart.
18:45Because after all, we were there to cover the first, the first direct face-to-face talks
18:53between Russia and Ukraine.
18:54After all, those were the first direct talks after 2022, as they had the opportunity to
19:01sit together, as you and me do just now.
19:04Of course, there were plenty more differences going on and, well, arguments were had in that
19:11room.
19:12And, well, so when you have that, we also, as we were covering that, we could see how much
19:17opposition came from both Europe and Ukraine when it comes to these peace talks and this
19:24peace track.
19:25Now, talking about derailing the peace, we have heard the Russian foreign minister say
19:31that the EU is doing everything to sabotage peace.
19:35But the bloc is not the only one in this, is it?
19:38No, it isn't, of course.
19:40After all, if you were to listen to what's coming out of Kiev, if you were to listen to
19:46what they have been saying, that was all about, we want an unconditional 30, at least a 30-day
19:52ceasefire.
19:53At the same time, they would run into the embrace of Europe to ask for more weapons, to
19:59ask for more guns, to ask for more money to buy weapons with.
20:04And so they would even want a, you know, a peacekeeping force, a so-called peacekeeping
20:10force in Europe, excuse me, from Europe to go into Ukraine.
20:15So Zelenskyy, he has been very, well, he has been very consistent with his push to get
20:23more fuel for his war machine out of the EU.
20:31We are also preparing new agreements with our European partners in the near future to
20:36attract investment into Ukrainian production.
20:38First and foremost, this means the production of unmanned systems and long-range capabilities,
20:45everything that allows us to maintain control on the front lines, protect the lives of our
20:49warriors, and operate at significant distances.
20:52So a very clear push there to keep the war going, but after all, Russia has said repeatedly it doesn't
21:02really have a problem with that.
21:04I mean, we have heard from the Russian negotiating team stuff like that Russia was going to, is ready.
21:12Russia is ready and is prepared to fight for however long it takes.
21:17I mean, 10, 20 years.
21:19After all, Russia doesn't want that, but it is, it is, well, if things come to that, if push comes to shove,
21:28then Russia is prepared to do just that.
21:31And Russia has no problem and, in fact, has been advocating for the peace talks to, you know,
21:37to bring peace closer, to end this conflict.
21:40But first, the Russian needs to agree and sort out all the nuances.
21:44And while that happens, while the diplomats and negotiators, while they meet and sit and talk it over,
21:50the fighting will go on.
21:53And because, after all, Russia has the upper hand on the battlefield right now.
21:57The Ukrainians have been kicked out of the Kursk region.
21:59The Russians, they have been advancing across the front line.
22:02And in the past couple of weeks or so, Russia has liberated about 100 square kilometers of land.
22:09I mean, of course, in the war of attrition, it's not as important as the consistent damage
22:14that it is dealing to the manpower and to the opposing force.
22:18But still, after all, we're still in the very early stages of this peace process.
22:24It has kicked off.
22:25And so far, it is going.
22:27There's no signs of it accelerating.
22:30But also, there's no signs of it just, you know, failing as well.
22:34All right.
22:35We'll wait to see how these things pan out.
22:37Igor Shdanov, thank you very much for bringing us up to speed.
22:42Right.
22:42Ukraine's anti-corruption body has found almost $900,000 worth of violations in tax returns
22:50by the country's conscription officials.
22:5218 randomly selected offices were found to have unaccounted wealth, such as real estate.
22:58Now, the actions of conscription officers repeatedly provoke public outrage in Ukraine,
23:05with videos frequently going viral of them violently taking people from the streets.
23:11Last year, Kiev prohibited such footage being taken.
23:15The public outrage has led to violent confrontations with people attacking the officers.
23:21Now, following several such incidents in the central Ukraine,
23:26Kiev's military officials threatened criminal persecution of anyone preventing the officers carrying out their duties.
23:33Now, let's get live to Andrei Telizhenko, former advisor to the persecutor general of Ukraine and ex-diplomat.
23:44I'm glad to have you join me right now, Andrei.
23:46So, given the information about tax return violations among conscription officers published by Kiev,
23:53how widespread are these cases?
23:56These cases are all over the country.
24:00The problem is, the conscription officers, the recruitment officers that were formed, they're illegal.
24:07They have to work together right now with the police on the ground.
24:11Only then, their legality is confirmed.
24:15So, whatever they're doing, this is a private little army for the Zelensky regime personally
24:20to go and terrorize the people on the ground in Ukraine.
24:25Most men right now who are hiding out in their homes for more than two years,
24:31there's cases who didn't go out on the street, and their families are bringing their food to their apartments.
24:36Because as soon as they go out, they're going to get basically kidnapped from the street like a dog,
24:43and then sent to the front line from three days until two weeks without hardly even training.
24:48So, that's the case.
24:50And these recruitment officers, conscription officers that are working on the ground,
24:56they're making money, side money on this.
24:59If you get caught on the street right now, like, take it to the bus, it's called busification.
25:06In Ukraine, with the people, you have to pay up to $2,000, $3,000 to be let out of the bus, right on the spot.
25:15If you don't have that money, then you get sent to the recruitment office itself.
25:19Then it takes from $5,000 to $7,000 of bribes to get out of that office and go back home.
25:25And then again, you can get caught.
25:27It doesn't give you a green card to be not caught again.
25:30You can get caught again once they let you out, and they can take more money from you.
25:34So, they're making hundreds of millions of dollars from regular Ukrainians,
25:39and a lot of people don't have the possibility to pay that money.
25:42So, these people are basically getting richer and richer.
25:47Zelensky is giving them this opportunity.
25:49The Security Service of Ukraine and the military intelligence of Ukraine,
25:56with the head of Vodano, is protecting these people,
25:58because they're the private army of Zelensky who are keeping the people scared on the ground
26:03and keeping the men flowing to the front lines regularly.
26:08Now, this situation comes amid rising public outrage against conscription,
26:14including attacks on officers.
26:16How do you expect this trend to evolve?
26:19The problem is, people hate this process.
26:25The women are trying to back the men when they're being caught,
26:29and the people are trying to support anybody who's been caught so they can be freed out.
26:33They're beating up these conscription officers.
26:36They're beating up the police who are with them.
26:39The recent act we saw in Cherkasy, where one of the large cities in central Ukraine,
26:45where a group of people gathered and beat up and pushed away the recruitment officers
26:50so they would have to flee the site because they're protecting their families and their men
26:55from not being dragged to the front lines.
26:57The next day, you know what happened?
26:59The police and the Security Service of Ukraine came to every one of those people's houses
27:03who protected themselves and basically put them to prison for going against the law,
27:09for trying to sabotage the recruitment process.
27:12So, this is what is happening.
27:13People are outraged.
27:14People are ready to stand up.
27:16People are ready to fight back.
27:17There are some cases where people are killing the recruitment officers,
27:20shooting them, throwing grenades into their homes,
27:23basically knifing them.
27:27And on the streets, there are cases where people,
27:29the recruitment officers are dying all over the Ukraine.
27:32But the next day, if something like this happens,
27:35even just people protest.
27:37For protest, they're going to be sent to prison.
27:40For longer, even if he killed the person himself.
27:45So, this is how it works in Ukraine.
27:46Fear, prosecution, political repressions go against the people who stand up
27:51and try to fight for themselves.
27:53Now, Ukraine previously prohibited filming conscription officers while they work.
27:59Now, what does this say about their accountability?
28:05Ukraine banned filming the front lines with even foreign journalists,
28:09ban filming anything happening in Kiev or around the country in Ukraine where it's been bombarded.
28:15It's banned filming the recruitment officers from doing their illegal jobs,
28:20basically throwing men like dogs into the buses.
28:23So, they're trying to build a picture that nothing's happening in Ukraine.
28:27They're trying to build a picture that this never happened.
28:30This is just Russian disinformation.
28:33There's just cases coming back of war prisoners to Ukraine.
28:38They said the Russian army was showing them these processes with the busification,
28:44with the recruitment officers throwing men like dogs into the buses.
28:48And they said they didn't believe that that was Russian propaganda.
28:50But then they came back to Ukraine.
28:51They saw it in their own eyes.
28:53So, they're trying to make an image in Ukraine that this is never happening.
28:56The West is closing the ties on this.
28:58There's thousands of Western journalists in Ukraine every day.
29:02They don't want to just see it because the Ukrainian regime, the Kiev regime,
29:06is blocking them from showing this.
29:07And their owners outside of Ukraine in the West are also blocking them from showing it
29:12because they're trying to make a picture of Ukraine as a democracy.
29:14Even though it's not a democracy, it's a dictatorship that's keeping its people hostages on the ground
29:19and not being shown to the public, even though it is shown.
29:23The world knows what is happening in Ukraine.
29:26It just needs to get an attack together and basically understand that the Zelensky regime is no democracy.
29:33Zelensky is a dictatorship and a terrorist that terrorizes not only his own people,
29:36but also the Russian Federation.
29:38All right.
29:39We have to leave you here now.
29:41Andrei Telizhenko, former advisor to the Persecuted General of Ukraine and ex-diplomat.
29:46Thank you so much for your insight.
29:49God bless.
29:50Great.

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