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and supermarkets for sugar. people are buying huge supplies of sugar. - their life has always been hard, and theyjust keep struggling. l it does not sound, from what you are saying, as though there is any real great pressure on vladimir putin to say, stop the war because we are suffering, people have not got to that stage at all yet? first suffering, people have not got to that stage at all yet? that stage at all yet? first of all, i am not sure that stage at all yet? first of all, i am not sure he that stage at all yet? first of all, i am not sure he is that stage at all yet? first of all, i am not sure he is ready - that stage at all yet? first of all, i am not sure he is ready to - that stage at all yet? first of all, | i am not sure he is ready to listen to them i am not sure he is ready to listen to them. because i am not sure he is ready to listen to them. because in i am not sure he is ready to listen to them. because in the - i am not sure he is ready to listen to t
but i cannot say that the crisis of the sanctions are hitting very hard. we see there is a lot of panic buying, that is for sure. there are a lot of fights, literalfights in shops and supermarkets for sugar. people are buying huge supplies of sugar. their life has always been hard, and theyjust keep struggling. it does not sound that there is any great pressure on vladimir putin to say stop the war because we are suffering. people have not got to that stage at all yet. bill. suffering. people have not got to that stage at all yet. suffering. people have not got to that stage at all yet. all, i am not sure he is that stage at all yet. all, i am not sure he is ready that stage at all yet. all, i am not sure he is ready to that stage at all yet. all, i am not sure he is ready to listen - that stage at all yet. all, i am not sure he is ready to listen to - that stage at all yet. all, i am not| sure he is ready to listen to them. because in the past we have seen people protesting on
so, what do the vast majority of russians hear about the war? i m joined by a journalist from the bbc russian service. at the moment we see that it is not easy, but i cannot say that the crisis of the sanctions are hitting very hard. we see there is a lot of panic buying, that is for sure. there are a lot of fights, literalfights in shops and supermarkets for sugar. people are buying huge supplies of sugar. their life has always been hard, and theyjust keep struggling.
but is either side actually winning? i think the russians have had an outbreak of reality, of a reality check. they have bitten off more than they could chew by trying to take the whole of ukraine. how are the sanctions and the war affecting ordinary russians? the majority of russians, their life has always been hard, and theyjust keep struggling. in one of the world s other largely unreported wars, the one in ethiopia, is there a slight glimmer of hope now? when the government said that they were declaring a truce on humanitarian grounds, that was an encouraging sign that the war could be heading toward some sort of resolution. so, no knockout blow by russia and no sign that ukraine can throughout the invaders.