• last month
Russian opposition figures organised a protest march leading to the Russian embassy in Berlin to mark 1,000 days of war in Ukraine, an event which leaves some Ukrainians with mixed feelings.
Transcript
00:001,000 days into Ukraine war, the rage of Ukrainian people towards Russians is growing.
00:07Many believe that they are not doing enough to stop the war.
00:11Russian opposition activists Yulia Navalnaya, Ilya Yashin and Vladimir Kabamoza
00:16therefore organized a march against the war in Berlin.
00:20The participants came with mixed feelings.
00:24Russian and Putin's propaganda is not the same.
00:28The Kremlin's propaganda tries to do everything to identify the people
00:36with the terrorist organization that seized power in the country.
00:40Many Ukrainians say it is wrong to blame Putin alone.
00:44They see a collective responsibility for the war on the part of the Russian population.
00:50There are more of them. If they prove that it is not a collective fault,
00:53then where is the collective fault? How many people are there?
00:56If they didn't come out, they would have left the regime. But they didn't do anything.
01:20Russian activist Vladimir Kabamoza, who spent two and a half years in a Russian prison
01:27for opposing the war in Ukraine, says he is proud of the resistance movement in Russia.
01:50Russian activist Vladimir Kabamoza, who spent two and a half years in a Russian prison
01:53for opposing the war in Ukraine, says he is proud of the resistance movement in Russia.
02:01Russia will be free!
02:08The anti-war march was the first joint step of the Russian community
02:12towards an active protest against the war in Ukraine.
02:16But many Ukrainians agree that it can't stay like this.
02:21More needs to happen.
02:23Diana Reznik, from Berlin, for euronews.

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