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Our Journalist Pavel Sheremet Assassinated by Car Bomb in a Car Owned by Our Founding Editor. World Reacts

interview

Timothy Snyder: Brexit Is Not Going to Lead to the End of the EU. It Will Lead to Some Kind of Different Europe

Timothy Snyder is an American historian who has been researching the tragic history of the Eastern Europe for many years. Snyder diligently monitors modern day Ukraine and putinist Russia because he considers that many things which are happening here right now can repeat themselves in his native US.

Ukraine a Year From Now: Two Scenarios

The Ministry of Economic Development has forecasted two scenarios of the trajectory of the Ukrainian economy until 2019. The document outlines two scenarios — optimistic, which implies quick reforms in the economic sector with the help of Ukraine’s international partners, leading to 3% GDP growth in 2017, and pessimistic, involving slower reforms, weaker position of Ukrainian goods on external markets, and two times slower GDP growth of 1.5%

Without Any Chance. Afanasiev and Soloshenko on How Russian FSB Breaks Its Captives

I ask the conductor: "And if there’s a fire in the cabin-you’ll open the bars for us to jump?" He replies "No, its’ easier for me to write you off, than try and sort out where you all rand off to." (ukr.)

Poroshenko’s Orbits. Who Influences the President and His Decisions?

There are no people in the President’s team, whom he would listen to unquestioningly. Poroshenko trusts nobody but himself. All the others he simply lets closer or pushes further. "A Tsar’" — this is a precise description of Poroshenko by one of our sources.

‘We Go, So the World Sees.’ Why Journalists are Necessary in the War Zone

We talked to several media professionals about their missions, experiences, toughest challenges during the last two years, and why they continue working against all the odds
interview

Marysia Nikitiuk: Today’s Character is a Bad Man with a Kind Heart and an Incredible Sense of Guilt

"The Eastern vector is interesting to the audiences. But they are interested in today’s events. Many distributors are tired of movies about WW2. They are interested in how Eastern Europe lives now" — says Marysia Nikitiuk, Ukrainian screenwriter who won Krzysztof Kieslowski ScripTeast award during the Cannes Film Festival in May this year

Three Generations of Pain. What May 18th Means for Crimean Tatars

May 18th is the Day of Remembrance for the Victims of the Crimean Tatar Genocide. This day in 1944 marked the start of the operation of forced resettlement of Crimeans to Uzbekistan and the Urals region which led to the deportation of more than 180,000 Crimean Tatars in just two days. By different estimates, between 25% and 45% of deported people died on the way and in the so-called special settlements. In 2016, all public remembrance ceremonies for this tragic date in Crimea were banned by the Russian Federation authorities.

Celebrating Museum Night in Ukraine

International Museum Day was instituted 39 years ago and is celebrated on May 18 each year. In 1997 ‘International Museum Night’ was established. In 2008 several Ukrainian museums with the most forward-thinking management joined the Museum Night for real. In 2015 their number rose to 70 among almost 600 state museums, national parks and reserves.

Long Road to the Top: Groysman’s Journey to Prime Minister

For many years Groysman has been a younger political partner to Poroshenko. However, tough negotiation between the two men about appointments for the Cabinet of Ministers proved that Groysman doesn’t just want to be ‘the President’s boy’ anymore.

Oleh Sych: Antivirus Software Stood no Chance Against Russian Attack on Ukraine’s Power Grid

Oleh Sych is CTO of Zillya! Antivirus — a Kyiv-based software company. Zillya! helped the SBU to investigate the largest and most successful hacker attack in Ukraine’s history, when Prykarpattyaoblenergo was forced to black out, leaving parts of the city of Ivano-Frankivsk and a number of towns and villages in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast without electricity days before Catholic Christmas.

Svetlana Alexievich: Any War is Still Murder

Svetlana Alexievich was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2015. Now she came to Kyiv to present the Ukrainian translations of her works. Svetlana’s books are the encyclopedia of the Soviet empire, a research on the ‘red man’, who suffered himself and caused others to suffer.
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