Copyright © 2021 Euromaidanpress.com

The work of Euromaidan Press is supported by the International Renaissance Foundation

When referencing our materials, please include an active hyperlink to the Euromaidan Press material and a maximum 500-character extract of the story. To reprint anything longer, written permission must be acquired from [email protected].

Privacy and Cookie Policies.

Ukrainian volunteer project reminds that there is a war in the center of Europe

Ukrainian volunteer project reminds that there is a war in the center of Europe

“This war is not somewhere far away,” a video that has been spreading in the internet tries to convince EU citizens. “When I grow up, I want to be a doctor, and invent cures for all diseases,” a child’s voice says. Harrowing images show how dreams crash into reality that many Ukrainian doctors face – treating those injured by a Russian-backed invasion.

The video was created by People’s Project, a new form of resistance movement sweeping embattled Ukraine. Instead of non-cooperation, e-spionage and sabotage it is part of a battle being waged online as “IT battalions” back-up Ukraine’s cash-strapped and poorly-equipped military. The Crimean crisis and subsequent Russian annexation of Crimea went largely uncontested by Ukrainian authorities and it would prove to be the opening salvo in a much larger crisis. In the days following the ouster of President Viktor Yanukovych’s regime in late February following several of months of (at first peaceful and then bloody) revolution known as Euromaidan the interim government was unprepared for the speed at which events unfolded on the Crimean Peninsula.

As the Euromaidan protests continued to clog the streets of the Ukrainian capital another set of protests were just beginning. Pro-Russian protests began in Crimea within days of Yanukovych’s flight leading to the rise of Russia political figures and -aligned ultimately the region’s parliament a referendum on union with Russia. On February 28, Russian forces rapidly and bloodlessly invaded Crimea. Than three weeks Less later, Crimea ‘voted’ almost unanimously (in what is considered to be a sham referendum) to join Russia. The crisis exposed the weakness of Ukraine’s armed forces in the face of Russian aggression. Money to mobilize was not going to materialize with government coffers stripped bare by the corruption and greed of the previous regime.

It soon became apparent the annexation of Crimea by Russia in March would be followed in quick succession by demonstrations by pro-Russian and anti-government groups in the Donbas region of Ukraine. To equip Ukraine’s military against the growing threat ordinary citizens stepped in. The by Project’s’s People answer was to crowdfund. The Peoples by Project was founded in March 2014 by Mykolaiv IT-entrepreneur and social activist David Arakhamiya. From modest beginnings it has become one of the largest funds of its kind in Ukraine raising more than US $ 2 million to equip Ukraine’s cash strapped military as well as other social initiatives.

Arakhamiya, who later became head of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense’s Volunteer Council, initially enlisted employees of his IT company into his ‘IT batallion.’ Participants to volunteer Other to join the ranks included Valery Kisel, a fitness instructor and former paratrooper, and Dmitriy Kanarskiy – manager of the largest internet provider in Mykolaiv. The first step was to create the www.peoplesproject.com website, where people can see exactly what or who money is being raised for, how much has been raised to date (the website updates itself once every 15 minutes), and how much is still needed. Creating a transparent relationship between donors and the military units and other projects being supported was key to a successful volunteer project.

The first project, the “First Peoples Paratrooper battalion” (79th Airmobile Brigade), focused on equipping the battalion, which at the time was stationed at Chongar near the border with Crimea , these soldiers were close to being “naked” in a military sense. The project was a success. Within a month 1.5 million UAH (about US $ 60,00) was raised to equip Ukrainian soldiers with the latest gear. Arakhamiya could see the potential for growth. The next step was establishing a Peoples by Project office in the Ukrainian capital. That marked the beginning of the project becoming not just “Volunteers from Mykolaiv,” but a nationwide coordination center, when teams in the cities of Dnipropetrovsk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Lviv joined the movement.

“You think this war is somewhere far away? Ukraine is in the center of Europe!” the video finishes, inviting to donate to The People’s Project or other volunteer platforms.

 

You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this.  We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society. A little bit goes a long way: for as little as the cost of one cup of coffee a month, you can help build bridges between Ukraine and the rest of the world, plus become a co-creator and vote for topics we should cover next. Become a patron or see other ways to support. Become a Patron!

To suggest a correction or clarification, write to us here

You can also highlight the text and press Ctrl + Enter

Please leave your suggestions or corrections here


    Related Posts

    February 11: The Russian proposal at the Summit in Minsk is unacceptable – president of Ukraine Poroshenko

    U.S., UK, Canada, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa

    February 11 – The Russian proposal at the Summit in Minsk is unacceptable – president of Ukraine Poroshenko. Russia deliberately disrupts agreements.

    February 11 – 19 Ukrainian military were killed and 78 wounded as a result of shelling near the burial mound "Hostra Mogyla" close to Debaltseve and at other locations within ATO area, – informed the spokesman for the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Vladyslav Seleznyov at a briefing on Wednesday morning.

    February 11 – In Donbas pro-Russian militants shelled the positions of Ukrainian troops 27 times on the night of February 11th. Most of the attacks occurred in the direction of Luhansk. 87 pro-Russian militants and 42 units of military equipment were destroyed in the last 24 hours (including 12 tanks, 14 multiple rocket launchers and 16 armored vehicles).

    February 11 – In Donetsk 6 people were killed and 8 wounded as a result of shelling at the bus station and entrance office of "Donetsk Metallurgical Plant".

    February 11 – President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko spoke about a successful military operation at Debaltseve foothold: "Several successful operations were conducted yesterday at Debaltseve foothold. They allowed us to gain control over two municipalities and the contact line", – said Poroshenko.

    February 11 – "People's Republic of Luhansk" and "People's Republic of Donetsk" demand that Ukraine stops the ATO and are requesting autonomy and new elections, – as stated in a protocol draft handed over on Tuesday night by the leaders of the terrorists to the contact group in Minsk.

    February 11 – Russian Federal TV Station "Channel 5" has broadcast a story describing how quickly and easily Russian troops can enter European capitals and threatened the West with missile attacks. Show's authors vaguely disguised this information as campaign to hold "Victory Day parades" in the EU member-states capitals.

    February 11 – Russia implemented a direct military intervention during the battle at the city of Debaltseve, – stated Lieutenant General Ben Hodges, Commander of Allied Land Command (NATO).

    February 11 – Russian Foreign Ministry believes that border control issues should be should negotiated upon with the militants, which, in its turn, doesn't provide a solution to the problem, – stated Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

    February 11 – Government is ready to establish martial law, should there be esalation of the situation in the east. This was stated by President Petro Poroshenko during a government meeting. Poroshenko emphasized that it is precisely "from the results of the summit that it will depend if we will be successful in stopping the aggressor by diplomatic means, or if we will switch into a very different course." I and the government, and Parliament are ready to make a decision to impose martial law in the entire territory of Ukraine," he noted.

    "In no way will I delay this decision, if the the irresponsible acts of the aggressor bring about a serious continued escalation of the conflict," he emphasized. "I am convinced that our country can protect itself and that every person will do whatever posssible in order to demonstrate that victory will be ours. However, I stress, that I am a president of peace, and thatn through army means, the situation in Donbas should not be decided," he added.

    Ukraine cannot be a buffer state

    Photo report from eastern Ukraine

    Help Ukraine seize this chance

    Economist Edward Lucas Attacks Russia's RT and Sputnik for "manufacturing lies" and those working there as "freaks and propagandists"

    Feature by BBC Monitoring on 9 February

    Russian state media have hit back strongly at British journalist Edward Lucas after he criticized them at the recent Munich Security Conference and suggested that journalists working for them should be ostracized. One top TV presenter went as far as to brand Lucas a "village idiot".

    At a panel discussion at the annual Munich Security Conference on 6 February, Lucas, a senior editor at The Economist and author of The New Cold War, accused the Kremlin's international media operations, RT (formerly known as Russia Today) and Sputnik (rebranded successor to the Voice of Russia) of "manufacturing lies".

    He said the people working for them were "freaks and propagandists", who should be the target of a campaign of ostracism, according to records of the discussion published by RT and Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.[1]

    "If anyone puts a CV on my desk and on that CV I see they worked for RT or Sputnik or one of these things, that CV is going into the bin," Lucas said. He added that people in the West were wrong to see working for the Kremlin's international media as a "first stage on the career ladder". "It's not, it's the last stage," he told the Munich conference.

    "Journalistic Joe McCarthy"

    Russian state media came back, all guns blazing, with Lucas even getting a whole slot to himself on state channel Rossiya 1's weekly current affairs news roundup Vesti Nedeli.[2]

    Outspoken host Dmitriy Kiselev, who is also director-general of Sputnik's parent company Rossiya Segodnya (which confusingly translates as Russia Today), hurled a whole fistful of epithets at Lucas – "odious British journalist", "hysterical Londoner" and even "village idiot" – while rubbishing his analysis of Russian politics and accusing The Economist of practising censorship.

    RT responded more primly, saying it was "absolutely outraged" by Lucas's "specious attacks", which, it said, were particularly "despicable" as several of its journalists were daily risking their lives to "report on stories nobody else dares to touch".[3]

    Sputnik also had Lucas in its sights, describing him in one article as a "journalistic Joe McCarthy" – a reference to the US senator who instigated a witch-hunt against Communist sympathizers in the 1950s.[4]

    Lucas himself appeared to revel in the backlash, responding to Kiselev in kind.

    "Better than a Pulitzer prize? i get prime-time abuse from vile Kremlin mouthpiece Kiselov," he tweeted.[5]

    He could also take comfort from the support of fellow Twitterati, who suggested he had got under RT's skin.

    US journalist Michael Weiss observed that Lucas had "figured out RT hacks' Achilles heel", while Times columnist Oliver Kamm said he had "badly wounded them".[6][7]

    Writer and Russia watcher Ben Judah also weighed in, saying Lucas had put the wind up RT. "Experts should refuse to appear on RT – or any other? disinformation channel", he added.[8]

    "Misinformation"

    RT and its supporters also entered the fray on Twitter.

    One of its contributors, Robert Bridge, accused Lucas of being "scared to hear another side of the story", while the channel itself suggested his attack on its journalists may have been provoked by recent criticism of The Economist on its show In The Now.[9][10]

    In The Now dismissed as "absurd" a claim by The Economist that Russian state TV "conceals" bad economic news from its viewers. It showed excerpts from top TV bulletins talking about the collapse of the rouble to prove the contrary. It also said that the story of the rouble's woes and the looming recession had been well covered in Russian newspapers. To suggest otherwise, it said, was to promote "misinformation".[11]

    It called its analysis of The Economist's coverage a "tutorial on how to write a propaganda article".

    But RT's criticism of The Economist was itself guilty of omission and distortion.

    For example, it made no mention of the fact that on the day in mid December when the rouble tumbled by some 10 per cent, Rossiya 1 main news had ignored this story altogether.

    Also, it illustrated its claim about the Russian press's economic coverage with screenshots not from leading newspapers but from news agencies and websites, one of them a little known business portal from the Volga republic of Tatarstan.

    The panel discussion at the Munich conference, which also featured NATO commander and US general Philip Breedlove and Norwegian Defence Minister Ine Eriksen Soreide, looked more broadly at the issue of hybrid warfare and the role played in it by different media organizations.

    According to a report by Judy Dempsey on the Carnegie Europe website, the participants said that one of the reasons why RT and its ilk have been able to make such an impact is the cutbacks at top Western international media, such as the BBC World Service and the Voice of America.[12]

    [1] http://rt.com/op-edge/230315-rt-responds-lucas-munich/

    [2] http://vesti7.ru/news?id=45745

    [3] See note 1

    [4] http://sputniknews.com/columnists/20150208/1017973545.html

    [5] https://twitter.com/edwardlucas/status/564531479263600642

    [6] https://twitter.com/michaeldweiss/status/564468359048486912

    [7] https://twitter.com/OliverKamm/status/564408994853572609

    [8] https://twitter.com/b_judah/status/564541740863193091

    [9] https://twitter.com/Robert_Bridge/status/564665181549391873

    [10] https://twitter.com/INTHENOWRT/status/564758039371472896

    [11] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2H5X3WYm_3U

    [12] http://carnegieeurope.eu/strategiceurope/?fa=58998

    Source: BBC Monitoring research 9 Feb 15

    P.S.: Please spread this appeal as much as possible.

    March 19: A year after Annexation of Crimea

    March 19 – Security Service of Ukraine (SSU) has issued a warning about the militants preparing provocations for Friday in order to be able to resume hostilities.

    March 19 – Broadcast of Ukrainian TV channels has resumed at the occupied territories (namely "Channel 5", Espresso TV and Radio 24 is now broadcasting in Donetsk), – stated the Minister of Information Policy Yuriy Steys at a briefing. According to Stets, Poland has provided free transmitters, which, in addition to supporting the broadcast of Ukrainian channels, can also suppress frequencies used by the separatists.

    March 19 – Missile systems "Iskander", which Russia has deployed to Kaliningrad, are able to get to reach European capitals, even Berlin, – said Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaitė in Brussels (reports Delfi.lt).

    March 19 – Malaysian "Boeing" MH17 flight was shot down by a missile "Buk", made in Russia, – writes Dutch media RTL Nieuws citing an expert.

    Corrupt, cash-strapped and lacking skill: the Ukraine army Britons come to train

    A year after Annexation of Crimea

    Absolute schizophrenia in Kadyrov's Chechnya

    Dutch TV reports fragment from crash matches Russian-made rocket

    P.S.: Please spread this appeal as much as possible.