Ukrainian drones struck the Kazan Aviation Plant in Russia.
The oil depot at Liski continues to burn and was targeted again.
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Debris, again.
Russia claims Ukrainian drones attempted to attack an oil depot in Voronezh’s Liskinsky district. Air defense and EW systems reportedly shot them all down.
Governor Gusev stated one drone caused a fire after crashing into the depot.
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— NOELREPORTS (@noelreports.com) January 20, 2025 at 1:55 PM
Ukrainian attacks on Russian targets are getting to be daily occurrences.
This is reported as a Ukrainian sniper taking out two Russian soldiers.
Another locomotive is burned.
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🚂🔥 On January 18, 2025, a 3M62U locomotive was destroyed in tram depot in St. Petersburg, - GUR
⚡️ The fire destroyed the entire control system. The locomotive, which was hauling Russian weapons, ammunition and military equipment by rail, cannot be restored.
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— MAKS 24 👀🇺🇦 (@maks23.bsky.social) January 20, 2025 at 6:03 AM
The gun fires off a fusillade after being hit by a drone.
A Russian field hospital.
Another 36 Russian officers go home in body bags, including four lieutenant colonels.
Another 1,690 Russians who should have stayed home, along with 10 tanks and 42 armored personnel vehicles.
Russia had said it would resume gas shipments to Transnistria, but apparently that promise fell through, so Transnistria is now willing to accept help from Moldova.
St. Kitts and Nevis is a small Caribbean island nation.
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
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Here is a subtitled video.
More details appeared about the abuse of Russian soldiers by Russian military police in Kyzyl, Tyva region of Russia.
There has been information that one of the soldiers had his spine broken from the beatings. An electric shocker and a rubber rod were used for beatings.
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— Anton Gerashchenko (@antongerashchenko.bsky.social) January 20, 2025 at 4:10 AM
Russian trench soup?
A film that is the collection of seven shorts is out and tells the story of the war through the experiences of animals.
The occupying Russian soldiers paid little attention to the elderly woman shuffling through the farmland surrounding the villages outside Kyiv, taking her goat to pasture. But she was focused closely on them. After locating their positions, she headed back home with the goat, and later called her grandson, a soldier in the Ukrainian army, to give the coordinates.
The story is one of seven episodes, based on real events from the first year of Russia’s full-scale invasion but lightly fictionalised, that make up a feature film about the war in Ukraine, due out later this year. All seven of the shorts have one thing in common: they tell the story of the conflict from the perspective of animals.
Filming has been under way on the anthology War Through the Eyes of Animals since the first months of the war, when a group of Ukrainian film-makers decided that using animals to tell the story of Russia’s invasion would provide a new and unusual way to bring home the horror of war.
“Animals have no politics, but they can feel good and evil,” said Oleh Kokhan, the film’s producer, in an interview in Kyiv. “We also see this war is an ecocide, which will affect the ecology of Europe and the world.”