(Reuters) - At a cemetery outside Mariupol, a Ukrainian city captured by Russia last week after a destructive three-month siege, a grief-stricken mother sobs inconsolably.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told global business leaders on Monday the world must increase sanctions against Russia to deter other countries from using brute force to achieve their.
friend and i asked him, what are you doing here? and he told me, what? i m living here, i live here . and ijust need to tell him that he s dead. he didn t know that he s dead. i wonder what all this escalation means for you, given what you ve seen. once i lost my family and my home and i don t want to lose it again, so for me, this is a huge problem. i don t have one more life to restart it. since the war began in 2014, i ve been photographing some of its faces. ..and hearing the testimonies of those for whom it is a constant presence. treatment of trauma is underfunded, and many are left without help. so, you worked across both military and civilian? vladimir voloshin is a therapist working with trauma patients.
for me, this is a huge problem. i don t have one more life to restart it. since the war began in 2014, i ve been photographing some of its faces. ..and hearing the testimonies of those for whom it is a constant presence. treatment of trauma is underfunded, and many are left without help. so, you worked across both military and civilian? vladimir voloshin is a therapist working with trauma patients. translation: those people who ve not been treated, - they have a feeling of anxiety in the background waiting for something bad. they have mood swings and when big stress happens like this escalation, it gets worse. amid new threats, it can be easy to overlook what s already been lost.