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Загибель вагітної жінки, двох залізничниць та енергетика: огляд ворожих атак по Україні за останні сім днів
Протягом тижня ворог завдав масованих ударів БпЛА по Харкову, здійснив смертоносні атаки на Чугуїв та Запоріжжя, обстріляв з артилерії Суми. У Слов'янську було влучання ФАБ неподалік пологового будинку, і хоча в самій лікарні ніхто не постраждав, цей обстріл змусив ухвалити рішення про закриття акушерського відділення — останнього, яке ще працювало на Донеччині. Під ударами в Україні опинилися об'єкти енергетики, залізниці та судна в Чорному морі. Через ворожі обстріли під час виконання службових обов'язків загинули енергетик у Херсоні та двоє працівниць залізниці на Сумщині.
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Загибель вагітної жінки, двох залізничниць та енергетика: огляд ворожих атак по Україні за останні сім днів
Протягом тижня ворог завдав масованих ударів БпЛА по Харкову, здійснив смертоносні атаки на Чугуїв та Запоріжжя, обстріляв з артилерії Суми. У Слов'янську було влучання ФАБ неподалік пологового будинку, і хоча в самій лікарні ніхто не постраждав, цей обстріл змусив ухвалити рішення про закриття акушерського відділення — останнього, яке ще працювало на Донеччині. Під ударами в Україні опинилися об'єкти енергетики, залізниці та судна в Чорному морі. Через ворожі обстріли під час виконання службових обов'язків загинули енергетик у Херсоні та двоє працівниць залізниці на Сумщині.
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Боротьба за правду в Херсоні: як медійники протистоять роспропаганді під дроновим терором
«Україна перетворює Херсон на військову зону», «містяни живуть у стані постійного тиску та страху», про це з показною турботою повідомляє російська державна інформагенція РИА «Новости», цитуючи так званого губернатора Херсонської області Володимира Сальдо. Колаборант Сальдо пішов на співпрацю з владою РФ та очолив окуповану Херсонщину, він є головним рупором ворожої пропаганди у регіоні.
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Наслідки чергових російських атак — у репортажах з Одеси, Херсона, Дніпра та Києва
У столиці триває ліквідація наслідків масштабної ракетно-дронової атаки, яка забрала життя сімох громадян і спричинила руйнування й пожежі. Жорстокого удару зазнало місто Дніпро, де загинуло 16 мирних жителів, ворог повторно атакував місто та район просто в день жалоби. На Донеччині чергові авіаудари по Краматорську та Дружківці принесли нові смерті. Окупанти кожен день обстрілювали Херсон з артилерії й безпілотників, а також дистанційно мінували території. Потерпали обласні центри та громади у прифронтових і прикордонних регіонах.
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During the invasion, Russian forces killed 135 journalists, and more than 30 media workers remain in captivity, — NSJU
According to verified NSJU data, as of 30 October 2025 at least 28 civilian media workers remain in Russian captivity. Russia is also holding at least one media professional who had mobilized to defend Ukraine within the Defence Forces.
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Breaking News
News
This week, Russia continued its missile and drone terror against Ukrainian cities. Hundreds of Shahed-type UAVs and dozens of tactical missiles were launched every day — from the well-known Iskander missiles to the latest Grom-1 models.
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This week, Russia continued its missile and drone terror against Ukrainian cities. Hundreds of Shahed-type UAVs and dozens of tactical missiles were launched every day — from the well-known Iskander missiles to the latest Grom-1 models.
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Photo Stories
5.6.2026
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“Nature ‘300’.” A project by Andrii Kasianchuk about war and the hope of healing the wounds of the land
Andrii Kasianchuk’s project is a continuation of his father’s practice, who kept a school diary of observations in 1989–1993, shortly after the Chornobyl nuclear disaster. Kasianchuk chronicles today’s catastrophe — the ecocide caused by the full‑scale Russian‑Ukrainian war. Using digital media, he collects evidence of the war’s impact on nature — from fires and polluted rivers to the disappearance of species and transformation of the landscape. The digital environment becomes a field of modern observation, where data, images, and messages from the network acquire the status of documents of the time.
Photo Stories
5.6.2026
“Nature ‘300’.” A project by Andrii Kasianchuk about war and the hope of healing the wounds of the land
Andrii Kasianchuk’s project is a continuation of his father’s practice, who kept a school diary of observations in 1989–1993, shortly after the Chornobyl nuclear disaster. Kasianchuk chronicles today’s catastrophe — the ecocide caused by the full‑scale Russian‑Ukrainian war. Using digital media, he collects evidence of the war’s impact on nature — from fires and polluted rivers to the disappearance of species and transformation of the landscape. The digital environment becomes a field of modern observation, where data, images, and messages from the network acquire the status of documents of the time.
Photo Stories
3.6.2026
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“The main thing that remains in memory is the people I lived with at the positions.” The story of the fortress of Marinka and its defenders in the photographs of Anatolii Stepanov
Marinka, once a cozy town of 10,000 near Donetsk, since 2014 together with neighboring Krasnohorivka turned into a powerful defensive line. The story of heroic resistance in the Marinka sector is above all an epic of the superhuman resilience of Ukrainian soldiers who fought for every fragment of wall. It is also a memory of eight years of life for local residents on the line of separation, which after February 24, 2022, became a hell of total war. The enemy applied a scorched‑earth tactic in this direction — just as in Bakhmut — erasing the city from the face of the earth block by block. Ukrainian defenders withdrew from Marinka in December 2023, when only ruins remained of the city. Photojournalist Anatolii Stepanov, who has been documenting this war since 2014, told about the shelling of Marinka and the heroes who held this stronghold.
Photo Stories
3.6.2026
“The main thing that remains in memory is the people I lived with at the positions.” The story of the fortress of Marinka and its defenders in the photographs of Anatolii Stepanov
Marinka, once a cozy town of 10,000 near Donetsk, since 2014 together with neighboring Krasnohorivka turned into a powerful defensive line. The story of heroic resistance in the Marinka sector is above all an epic of the superhuman resilience of Ukrainian soldiers who fought for every fragment of wall. It is also a memory of eight years of life for local residents on the line of separation, which after February 24, 2022, became a hell of total war. The enemy applied a scorched‑earth tactic in this direction — just as in Bakhmut — erasing the city from the face of the earth block by block. Ukrainian defenders withdrew from Marinka in December 2023, when only ruins remained of the city. Photojournalist Anatolii Stepanov, who has been documenting this war since 2014, told about the shelling of Marinka and the heroes who held this stronghold.
Photo Stories
2.6.2026
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“7 Seconds” for eternity. Portraits of soldiers on ambrotypes by Stanislav Ostrous
The exposure time needed to create an ambrotype lasts on average seven seconds. In the reality of war, this span can turn into a fragile pause between explosions, into the moment of death for many people, or into the instant when light falls onto the glass plate and preserves the image of a soldier. During this time, the fighter remains alone with himself, and his seven seconds of life are forever captured on glass.
Photo Stories
2.6.2026
“7 Seconds” for eternity. Portraits of soldiers on ambrotypes by Stanislav Ostrous
The exposure time needed to create an ambrotype lasts on average seven seconds. In the reality of war, this span can turn into a fragile pause between explosions, into the moment of death for many people, or into the instant when light falls onto the glass plate and preserves the image of a soldier. During this time, the fighter remains alone with himself, and his seven seconds of life are forever captured on glass.
Photo Stories
1.6.2026
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10 photos of May
Photo Stories
1.6.2026
10 photos of May
News Stories
31.5.2026
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Unprecedented destruction in Kyiv, tragedy in Kherson, strikes on schools: the main facts about shelling in Ukraine over the past week
As a result of the May 24 attack in Kyiv, unprecedented destruction of cultural sites has been recorded since the beginning of the Russian‑Ukrainian war. The Russians are deliberately destroying educational institutions — the buildings of the Kyiv‑Mohyla Academy were damaged, a drone strike completely burned down a school in Chernihiv region, and a school in Derhachi was damaged. The enemy continues airstrikes on Kramatorsk, terrorizes Odesa both day and night, and attacks foreign civilian vessels in the ports. In Kherson, a Russian shell exploded on a playground, killing the father of a family; doctors are fighting for the lives of the mother and their three‑year‑old daughter, while the six‑year‑old daughter is in moderate condition.
News Stories
31.5.2026
Unprecedented destruction in Kyiv, tragedy in Kherson, strikes on schools: the main facts about shelling in Ukraine over the past week
As a result of the May 24 attack in Kyiv, unprecedented destruction of cultural sites has been recorded since the beginning of the Russian‑Ukrainian war. The Russians are deliberately destroying educational institutions — the buildings of the Kyiv‑Mohyla Academy were damaged, a drone strike completely burned down a school in Chernihiv region, and a school in Derhachi was damaged. The enemy continues airstrikes on Kramatorsk, terrorizes Odesa both day and night, and attacks foreign civilian vessels in the ports. In Kherson, a Russian shell exploded on a playground, killing the father of a family; doctors are fighting for the lives of the mother and their three‑year‑old daughter, while the six‑year‑old daughter is in moderate condition.
News Stories
30.5.2026
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82 years of repression of the Crimean Tatar people: Russian propaganda about the 1944 deportation and modern trials in occupied Crimea
Every year on May 18, Ukraine bows its head in memory of the victims of the genocide of the Crimean Tatar people — a crime that has no statute of limitations. In 1944, the Soviet system deported more than 200,000 Crimean Tatars, taking thousands of innocent lives and crippling the fate of an entire people. This terrible crime against humanity has been recognized in Ukraine at the legislative level as genocide.
News Stories
30.5.2026
82 years of repression of the Crimean Tatar people: Russian propaganda about the 1944 deportation and modern trials in occupied Crimea
Every year on May 18, Ukraine bows its head in memory of the victims of the genocide of the Crimean Tatar people — a crime that has no statute of limitations. In 1944, the Soviet system deported more than 200,000 Crimean Tatars, taking thousands of innocent lives and crippling the fate of an entire people. This terrible crime against humanity has been recognized in Ukraine at the legislative level as genocide.

Photo Stories

This section features the best images of the month, interviews with photographers, and in-depth visual stories. Discover compelling narratives and events through the lens of our talented authors.

Photo Stories
10.1.2024
A lie in a photograph lasts an hour, but the truth, though perhaps not as beautiful, lasts forever. A conversation with Ukrainian documentary filmmakers
Photo Stories
7.1.2024
“Feel this angle within yourself.” Elena Guseinova analyzes the photo of the week
Photo Stories
17.12.2023
Near Bakhmut, from winter to winter. The story of twenty-year veterans through the eyes of Oleksandr Babenko
Photo Stories
13.12.2023
“Even the silence here reminds you of the shelling.” A visual essay by Igor Ishchuk about the city of Kherson and its people.
Photo Stories
11.12.2023
“Generation.” Documentary project by Olena Grom
Photo Stories
11.12.2023
Behind the slag heap: Konstantin Guzenko documents children from frontline regions

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