00:00For the last four years of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine,
00:03it's consistently targeted critical civilian infrastructure,
00:06including hospitals, schools, kindergartens, apartments and power plants,
00:10often in densely populated areas.
00:12By the start of winter, nearly half of the country's power grid was out of commission
00:16and 10 million Ukrainians were without electricity.
00:19Titiana Pavlyuk lives with her husband and her young daughter.
00:22She barely ever sleeps because of the constant wave of ballistic and drone attacks day and night.
00:28Life here in Kiev is not easy at all.
00:33We are struggling every day with electricity cuts, with no heating.
00:39During the day we have drone attacks, at night we have missile attacks.
00:44Today night we had this attack.
00:46I didn't sleep, not at all.
00:49I slept for two, three hours, but in the morning I need to wake up,
00:53I need to prepare breakfast for my daughter.
00:56Mayor of Kiev Vitaly Klitschko says Ukrainians are freezing still
00:59because attacks have cut out electricity and heating.
01:03This winter is one of the most difficult winter in the last four years for many reasons.
01:09First of all, we have massive attack from Russian Federation,
01:12chemicalized drone, ballistic missile, cruise missiles, attack our critical infrastructure.
01:18This power plant is now no longer functional
01:20after several ballistic and drone missile attacks since August.
01:23On January 9th, the final attack meant that it could no longer operate,
01:28meaning that 300,000 people in Kiev were plunged into darkness
01:31and left without heat or energy with minus 23 degrees.
01:35As you can hear, the air raid sirens mean that we have to relocate to a shelter,
01:40proving that people in Kiev will never be safe until this war is over.
01:44EU Commissioner for Crisis Management, Hadjil Abib,
01:47delivered 1,000 emergency generators for use across the whole country
01:51as a short-term measure to keep hospitals, schools and shelters functioning.
01:56One such hospital in Kiev she visited was forced to conduct surgery with a torchlight
02:01as Russian attacks meant electricity was cut.
02:04The commissioner also visited Kiev residents in the hospital
02:06who had been badly injured by Russian attacks in family homes.
02:10It's very difficult to speak after what we just saw.
02:17Wounded soldiers, but also patients in very severe conditions because of this war.
02:24It's women.
02:24It's innocent people who were just living their everyday life.
02:30We just met a woman who has been targeted in her apartment.
02:34She lived in the fifth floor and a drone was entering through the windows.
02:41Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy denounced Russia's Vladimir Putin
02:44as a slave to war in a speech to the Munich Security Conference.
02:48He said Russia had damaged every power plant in the country,
02:51saying Ukraine was doing everything to end the war,
02:53but so far there's no sign the Kremlin has any intention on stopping.
02:58Shona Murray, Euronews, Kiev.
03:03The aftermath of a deadly storm continued to disrupt parts of France on Sunday
03:09with flooding concerns persisting in the southwest.
03:12The country's flood alert agency said it had been working around the clock for a month
03:17to deal with the impact of the incessant rains and winter storms.
03:21The latest data from weather service Meteor France shows parts of France
03:26have been under an orange or red alert for 30 days,
03:30with roads and houses flooded after the Garland River burst its banks in the southwest.
03:36Soil moisture levels have reached record highs since data collection began in 1959,
03:43local authorities said.
03:44Meanwhile, only days after storm nils,
03:47storm Oriana hit Spain over the weekend with torrential rains
03:51and strong winds of up to 166 kilometers per hour.
03:55The storm caused severe disruptions to public transport services.
03:59A red alert was issued in the province of Castillon
04:03as hurricane-force winds swept through the region.
04:06The storms have so far caused three deaths in France and Spain,
04:10leaving dozens of people injured in weather-related accidents.
04:17Dana Eden, the co-creator and executive producer of hit TV spy thriller Tehran,
04:23has been found dead in an Athens hotel room, according to local police reports.
04:28The 52-year-old was in Greece filming the fourth season of the show,
04:32which follows a Mossad agent seeking to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear bomb.
04:37The cause of death has not yet been confirmed,
04:40and authorities say a formal investigation has been launched.
04:43Her death sparked rumors on social media over foul play,
04:47given the nature of the show's narrative.
04:49There have also been misleading reports in Israeli media,
04:53stating that Greek police were investigating a possible link to Iran.
04:57International production company Donna & Shula Productions, however,
05:01released a statement dismissing any unfounded rumors about Eden's death.
05:05They've also asked the public to avoid sharing conspiracy theories,
05:09and allowed the TV execs' family and loved ones to grieve in peace.
05:19At Warsaw Slotna Gallery, any fatigue you might feel fades away.
05:24As you enter, you are greeted by a soothing scent,
05:26suggesting that show will stimulate your senses.
05:34The smell is a very intimate, soft, full of half-tones,
05:46and, according to me,
05:49they're perfectly composed of the smell that I created for this exhibition.
05:52The 44 paintings that make up the Pasitea exhibition
05:56are a tribute to taking it easy and letting things flow.
06:00Pasitea is the Greek goddess of relaxation, rest and hallucinations,
06:04the youngest of Venous' companions,
06:07wife of Hypnos, the god of sleep.
06:09She's a figure who embodies the idea
06:10that the artist tries to convey in her works.
06:13They are very oniryczne,
06:15they are very sleepy.
06:16Agnieszka also has a contour in her works.
06:19It's very characteristic to her.
06:21And in a certain moment,
06:23and in a little bit of a reality of these situations,
06:27we're working on the exhibition of Pasitea.
06:29We would like to invite it to the beginning,
06:33but also to the beginning of the opening,
06:35of a pose, of a mask that we wear every day.
06:39Agnieszka Apoznańska likes to work with lots of paintings at once.
06:43In the end, she says,
06:45it's like putting together a puzzle.
06:47With every work I found this breath in a different symbol,
06:53or in a different intensity of color,
06:56in a fragment of the body.
06:57And every work I showed a little bit about
07:00how it will look like the next one.
07:01The exhibition also figures the motif of a curtain,
07:04through which one can see the blurred world
07:06that the artist depicts in her work.
07:09Agnieszka Apoznańska's painting exhibition Pasitea
07:12is on until the 6th of March,
07:14at the Lotna Gallery in Warsaw.
07:24Although Copenhagen Fashion Week is one of the youngest fashion weeks,
07:27it has been running for 20 years.
07:30It stands apart from Paris or Milan.
07:32In Scandinavia, there is a strong emphasis on sustainable development.
07:37Copenhagen Fashion Week collaborates with Renoon,
07:40a company specializing in digital products passports.
07:43It's basically an e-label.
07:46So imagine the label of your garments,
07:49of any product, that is basically digitized.
07:52So you have this possibility to scan a QR code,
07:55or open a certain information page about the product,
08:01that can be in any point of sale.
08:02So in the physical product, but also online.
08:05And then basically open more information about that product,
08:08like who made the product, where it was made.
08:11Telling the stories behind the manufacturing process is important,
08:15but it's equally important the consumers become part of that story.
08:19In two years' time, when every product,
08:22because this is starting from the fashion industry,
08:24so this is why it's super relevant right now,
08:27every product is going to have a QR code.
08:29So what is yours going to say?
08:31So a lot of companies, especially if we look at the luxury high market and premium market,
08:37they're indeed asking what kind of experience do I want to give my customer,
08:42and how do I want to use this as well for my product and my operations.
08:48Copenhagen Fashion Week helps companies see fashion beyond the catwalk.
08:55For us it's been quite an honor and a pleasure to actually work with Copenhagen Fashion Week's team
09:00over the past year, because what Copenhagen Fashion Week is,
09:04it's actually a platform.
09:05It's a platform for who works in the industry, for the designers,
09:08and how to help those designers get to the next step of what the future will ask them to do,
09:15and be successful businesses in Europe and beyond.
09:21Most Fashion Weeks are brand-driven.
09:24Copenhagen Fashion Week goes beyond the runway.
09:51I can follow you like a dog to the end of the world.
10:02And you think he's quite right?
10:06What? Oh, yes, I am.
10:08It's the greatest thing about being a producer, is you get to watch a film be made from the very
10:14first moment until the release and beyond. And being privy to Emerald's process in every step of
10:21the way is so amazing, because she's a genius and a brilliant mind that I love to work with.
10:27I love to watch her work. Yeah, I feel very lucky.
10:29It's genuinely been the greatest experience of my lifetime. And actors say that a lot,
10:34but I don't know, I can't believe it.
10:37I don't know, I can't believe it.
10:51Working with both Emerald and Margot was just a dream, because they were so open to how I wanted to
10:58work and really let me just go ahead and follow my instincts. And I think it's such a rewarding process
11:05to work with people like that, especially to women who just, we were also on the same page.
11:25Do you want me to stop?
11:28Do you want me to stop?
11:29Do you want me to stop?
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