i will start my journey and go to kabul. because i knew that they had access to things and anything could happen at any moment, i had to accept this risk, which i did. finally, i on the evening of august 18, we left home. took only a backpack and headed to a station. only five minutes had to pass when we were stopped at the checkpoint. the young boy, fully armed, asked every passenger where are you going and what s your job? he was slowly approaching me. my heart was beating so fast. i thought it was all over now. there was only one seat left to reach me. oh, my god. it was a miracle that someone shouted from outside and asked him to come out as soon as
august 18, we interviewed many people who went through the process of this training, very abusive screening process, ukraine and civilians are made to handover the phone, and they are interrogated and questioned that they don t pass the process they are detained, some of those people were then forcibly brought onto russia. rachel, thank you so much for talking with us. thank you. the first ship carrying ukrainian grain is expected to leave the odesa region in the hours ahead, there hoping to reach is tenable by tuesday or wednesday, resuming exports could be a crucial first step in easing the global food crisis sparked by the war, which has trapped millions of tons of grain inside ukraine for months. in july, turkey helped broker a deal between you train and russia to allow 5 million tons
international community, ensuring accountability for war crimes, the office of the prosecutor of the international criminal court has as you know open investigation into war crimes in ukraine, there has been a tremendous outpouring of support from united states and the european union and member states to bolster investigative efforts by the ukrainian prosecutor s office, there are thousands of cases that have already been opened, and the support needs to be bolstered and continued, and continued support to ukrainian civil society groups that are doing documentation and providing desperately needed services to survivors and victims and their families. a report on forced transfers and filtration is coming out on august 18, are you able to share any of those findings with us at all? people should read the report when it comes out on
feed their kids. well, the industrial action from bt and aqa has been part of a number of strikes across several industries. royal mail workers have voted to strike, while disputes are brewing over the pay of public sector workers including barristers, teachers and health employees. workers from felixstowe dock and railway company have voted to take strike action at the uk s busiest container port in a dispute over pay. and the rmt and tssa will hold more rail strikes on august 18 and 20, while london underground workers will walk out on august 19th. let s speak now to steven fielding, professor of political history at the university of nottingham. thank you forjoining us. we brought you injust to thank you forjoining us. we brought you in just to look at strikes in the past. there is a lot of talk about a summer of discontent, may be autumn and a winter of discontent. we know what that is like, bins not being emptied, no buses and no