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🇬🇧 How we help animals

During our August humanitarian trip to Eastern Ukraine, helping animals became an important goal. We received a huge amount of requests for pet food from local animal volunteers, which we managed to fulfil thanks to your donations and our partners' support.

Companion animal homelessness has always been a significant issue in our country. With the start of the full-scale invasion, it has become even more acute, especially in the frontline territories. A nearly non-existent culture of responsible pet ownership and/or a lack of adequate veterinary services (not every village has an available vet and not every owner can afford to pay for the sterilisation), leads to a majority of domestic and street animals remaining unsterilised. As a result, many pets lost their homes due to mass evacuations. You add it up to those already wandering the streets and receive an uncontrollable population growth.

Constant shelling has increased the number of wounded animals. With no one around to care for them, these injuries often lead to amputations. It takes too long for these pets to be found and taken in by kind-hearted people. Among them are the local volunteers who have taken on a difficult mission of caring for animals. We do our part to assist them during our humanitarian trips.

This time we revisited Mrs. Nadiia from the Kupiansk region and brought pet food for 10 dogs and two cats under her care. Thanks to our friends from the Ukraine Solidarity Bus she received a Jackery 2000 charging station. We also checked in on Yanina in Izyum and provided her wards with antiparasitic treatments and provisions.

The mining town Dobropillya was added to our usual list. This is the town where people are evacuated from the frontline areas, and the situation here is quite critical. Therefore, we decided to do our best to help local shelters and brought them 300 kg of food.

The first shelter housed at least 50 dogs and about the same number of cats. The number of pets in the second one is constantly changing and has been growing recently due to evacuations from the Pokrovsk district. Even at the very moment of our visit, we caught volunteers building enclosures for newly arrived dogs. So you can only imagine how many new animals they get every day.

We will keep in touch with Nadiia, Yanina, and the shelters in Dobropillya to support the work of these dedicated animal activists. You can greatly assist us by donating, reposting, or sending food and antiparasitic treatments.

Details for animal aid:
Monobank jar: https://send.monobank.ua/jar/7EZuQAw6VR
Card number: 5375 4112 1599 3812
PayPal: [email protected]



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🇬🇧 How we help animals

During our August humanitarian trip to Eastern Ukraine, helping animals became an important goal. We received a huge amount of requests for pet food from local animal volunteers, which we managed to fulfil thanks to your donations and our partners' support.

Companion animal homelessness has always been a significant issue in our country. With the start of the full-scale invasion, it has become even more acute, especially in the frontline territories. A nearly non-existent culture of responsible pet ownership and/or a lack of adequate veterinary services (not every village has an available vet and not every owner can afford to pay for the sterilisation), leads to a majority of domestic and street animals remaining unsterilised. As a result, many pets lost their homes due to mass evacuations. You add it up to those already wandering the streets and receive an uncontrollable population growth.

Constant shelling has increased the number of wounded animals. With no one around to care for them, these injuries often lead to amputations. It takes too long for these pets to be found and taken in by kind-hearted people. Among them are the local volunteers who have taken on a difficult mission of caring for animals. We do our part to assist them during our humanitarian trips.

This time we revisited Mrs. Nadiia from the Kupiansk region and brought pet food for 10 dogs and two cats under her care. Thanks to our friends from the Ukraine Solidarity Bus she received a Jackery 2000 charging station. We also checked in on Yanina in Izyum and provided her wards with antiparasitic treatments and provisions.

The mining town Dobropillya was added to our usual list. This is the town where people are evacuated from the frontline areas, and the situation here is quite critical. Therefore, we decided to do our best to help local shelters and brought them 300 kg of food.

The first shelter housed at least 50 dogs and about the same number of cats. The number of pets in the second one is constantly changing and has been growing recently due to evacuations from the Pokrovsk district. Even at the very moment of our visit, we caught volunteers building enclosures for newly arrived dogs. So you can only imagine how many new animals they get every day.

We will keep in touch with Nadiia, Yanina, and the shelters in Dobropillya to support the work of these dedicated animal activists. You can greatly assist us by donating, reposting, or sending food and antiparasitic treatments.

Details for animal aid:
Monobank jar: https://send.monobank.ua/jar/7EZuQAw6VR
Card number: 5375 4112 1599 3812
PayPal: [email protected]

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The War on Fakes channel has repeatedly attempted to push conspiracies that footage from Ukraine is somehow being falsified. One post on the channel from February 24 claimed without evidence that a widely viewed photo of a Ukrainian woman injured in an airstrike in the city of Chuhuiv was doctored and that the woman was seen in a different photo days later without injuries. The post, which has over 600,000 views, also baselessly claimed that the woman's blood was actually makeup or grape juice. Pavel Durov, Telegram's CEO, is known as "the Russian Mark Zuckerberg," for co-founding VKontakte, which is Russian for "in touch," a Facebook imitator that became the country's most popular social networking site. Telegram, which does little policing of its content, has also became a hub for Russian propaganda and misinformation. Many pro-Kremlin channels have become popular, alongside accounts of journalists and other independent observers. But Kliuchnikov, the Ukranian now in France, said he will use Signal or WhatsApp for sensitive conversations, but questions around privacy on Telegram do not give him pause when it comes to sharing information about the war. What distinguishes the app from competitors is its use of what's known as channels: Public or private feeds of photos and videos that can be set up by one person or an organization. The channels have become popular with on-the-ground journalists, aid workers and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who broadcasts on a Telegram channel. The channels can be followed by an unlimited number of people. Unlike Facebook, Twitter and other popular social networks, there is no advertising on Telegram and the flow of information is not driven by an algorithm.
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