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HERE УКРАЇНА TAKES CENTER STAGE — The purpose of r/Ukraine is to amplify Ukrainian voices. We are at war, so content is tightly moderated...

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/chrisdh79 on 2025-08-08 10:54:56+00:00.

Original Title: Ukrainian drones strike 23,000 targets in July, kill 5,000 Russian troops, military chief says | Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said first-person-view (FPV) drones and night bombers were responsible for most of the hits.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Key_Brother on 2025-08-08 10:44:13+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/murphystruggles on 2025-08-08 10:27:01+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Mil_in_ua on 2025-08-08 10:25:47+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/CF_Siveryany on 2025-08-08 10:04:31+00:00.

Original Title: Hi, Reddit! Tomorrow is the weekend and our volunteers are asking us to buy them some metal rebar to make as many metal brackets as possible for the construction of dugouts over the weekend. I plan to buy them 3 km of metal worth $1000. more in the comments.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Mil_in_ua on 2025-08-08 08:50:43+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Mil_in_ua on 2025-08-08 08:38:39+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/UNITED24Media on 2025-08-08 09:40:58+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Consistent_Still7060 on 2025-08-08 08:11:45+00:00.

Original Title: A female medic recalls her first outing for dead soldiers, which was a real shock for her. This tragic experience left a deep mark on her soul, but only strengthened her determination to continue her important mission.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Consistent_Still7060 on 2025-08-08 08:10:28+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/laaake on 2025-08-08 06:15:11+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/UFL_Robin on 2025-08-08 05:52:49+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/MARTINELECA on 2025-08-08 04:30:06+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/SoftwareExact9359 on 2025-08-08 04:05:57+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Ukrainer_UA on 2025-08-08 01:52:47+00:00.


Human rights violations in Crimea

Since the full-scale invasion in 2022, Russia has significantly intensified repression in occupied Crimea. People who openly support Ukraine are often harassed, arrested, and sentenced on fabricated charges. At the same time, journalists, volunteers, and activists are targeted with fines, illegal imprisonment, and torture. In 2024 alone, Russia conducted 61 warrantless home searches, carried out 109 interrogations or so-called “conversations” with residents, and unlawfully detained 111 civilians. Those convicted are often denied contact with their families and have no access to proper legal defense.

Search in the house of Crimean Solidarity activist Lutfiye Zudieva, Photo: Crimean Solidarity

Besides illegal raids, local activists live under the constant threat of detention and criminal allegations based on trumped-up charges. Sabina Ilyasova, a project coordinator at the Crimean human rights organization CrimeaSOS, reported that in occupied Crimea, abductions of people happen every three days. Those taken are usually accused of helping the Ukrainian army or intelligence. Every day, at least one person is arrested for posting Ukrainian songs online or other minor gestures of solidarity with Ukraine, for instance, women painting their nails blue and yellow. According to Ilyasova, at least 140 civilian hostages and political prisoners face inhumane treatment in prisons.

The abuse is not limited only to civil society activists, as Russian security forces often raid the homes of their relatives. For instance, in April 2024, the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) searched the house of 74-year-old Halil Halilov, father of the Crimean Tatar journalist Gulsum Halilova. The man, who suffers from hypertension, couldn’t get out of bed during the raid, in which the agents were searching for banned literature, weapons, and other items, only to find nothing.

The human rights abuse often proceeds in detention facilities, where detainees are usually subjected to torture and pressure to extract confessions or fabricate charges of espionage, extremism, or terrorism, punishable by the Russian penal code with lengthy prison sentences. Some people are released after a few days, often with threats and warnings that they are now being watched. Others face trials and prison sentences based on fake charges. Tetiana Pechonchyk, the head of the board of the ZMINA Human Rights Center, reported that as of 2025, 105 people were imprisoned in Crimea without clear charges, including 52 cases of alleged espionage. About 1,300 people were fined, arrested, fired from their jobs, or forced to record repentant videos denouncing their sympathy for Ukraine.

In 2017, FSB officers kidnapped Rinat Paralamov, who had refused to accept Russian citizenship. He was tortured with electric shocks to force him to give up the names of other Crimean Tatars allegedly connected to “Hizb ut-Tahrir”. They also tried to pressure him into cooperating, threatening his entire family. After the torture, the man was dumped near a train station in Simferopol, where activists found him. Later, Rinat and his family were forced to move to Kyiv to protect their lives.

Note: Hizb ut-Tahrir is an Islamic political party that is classified as a terrorist organization under Russian law. However, it is not banned in Ukraine or in most countries around the world.

Russia’s occupational administration often weaponises health conditions as a repressive tactic. While in custody, Russians systematically ignore prisoners’ health conditions — or deliberately deny them essential care. In 2023, two Crimean political prisoners, Kostiantyn Shyring and Dzhemil Gafarov, died after being denied medical care. As of fall 2024, there were 67 Ukrainian citizens in poor health and in need of urgent medical care who were being illegally imprisoned in Crimea.

Kostiantyn Shyring and Dzhemil Gafarov, Photo: Сrimean Нuman Rights Group

Besides activists and civil society leaders, independent lawyers who represent these political prisoners are also being systematically targeted. In 2022, three Crimean Tatar lawyers known for their human rights activism — Lilia Hemedzhi, Rustem Kyamiliev, and Nazim Sheikhmambetov — had their licenses revoked without allowing them to contest the decision. In July 2023, human rights lawyer Oleksii Ladin was disbarred for defending detained Crimean Tatars and Ukrainians in political trials. Activists and families of political prisoners say these actions are aimed at blocking the right to legal defense and a fair trial.

The persecution of Crimean Tatars as indigenous peoples

The persecution of Crimean Tatars — the indigenous population of Crimea — goes far beyond the full-scale invasion. It goes back to the 18th century, when the Russian Empire first occupied the peninsula. Since then, the restrictions imposed on language, traditions, and religion became a permanent feature of Russian colonial policy. The attempts to eliminate the presence of the Crimean Tatars in their homeland reached its peak in the 1944 mass deportation, where the entire Crimean Tatar population was forcibly displaced to the remote areas of the USSR and were prohibited to return till the final years of the Soviet era.

The persecutions resumed after the Kremlin forces occupied the peninsula again in 2014. Since then, Moscow has used various methods to erase the Crimean Tatar identity, reinforcing the historical myth of the “Russian Crimea”. Russian security services, police, and military forces have regularly raided Crimean Tatar homes. According to the Crimean Tatar Resource Center, in 2023, the occupational authorities conducted 65 searches, 46 of which took place in the homes of Crimean Tatars. They searched for Ukrainian symbols, banned books, weapons, or any signs of affiliation with so-called “terrorist Nazi organizations” that Russian propaganda uses as a pretext to justify the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and illegal occupation of the peninsula.

Searches in the homes of Crimean Tatars in Bakhchisarai. Photо: Сrimean solidarity

Most of the time, such raids found nothing. If the family were lucky, the officers would leave after wrecking the house and terrifying its residents. According to people who managed to leave the peninsula, at least one family member — usually a man would be taken for interrogation. The “reason” could be anything — from “suspicious behaviour” to fabricated evidence that the Russian law enforcement plants during the raid, most commonly, books banned under Russian law. Practiced since 2014, this policy primarily aims to intimidate residents and compel them to cooperate. If people refuse, harsher methods are used, such as detentions and interrogations.

This sort of institutionalised abuse disproportionately targets the Crimean Tatars. According to the Crimean Tatar Resource Center, in 2023 alone, 119 of 173 recorded arrests (69%) targeted the indigenous Crimeans. As of February 2025, the Representative of the President of Ukraine in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea has identified 221 Crimean political prisoners, with 134 of them being Crimean Tatars. Experts call these actions a form of hybrid deportation, as threats, repression, and forced conscription are pushing Crimean Tatars to flee their homeland.

Recently, Russia has increasingly accused Crimean Tatars of links to the Islamic organisation Hizb ut-Tahrir, banned in Russia, giving it a convenient tool to justify arrests. In March 2024 alone, Russian forces carried out the third-largest wave of raids since the beginning of the occupation, arresting ten Crimean Tatars on charges of affiliation with the organisation.

_______________________________

The 1262nd day of a ten-year invasion that has been going on for centuries.

One day closer to victory.

🇺🇦 HEROIAM SLAVA! 🇺🇦

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/LetsGoBrandon4256 on 2025-08-07 19:51:00+00:00.


From KyivPost's Twitter account.

“The war must end on terms that benefit us. That means we must win, not retreat,” — Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Syrsky

“We have plans; you can’t achieve victory through defense alone.”

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Freewhale98 on 2025-08-07 23:07:32+00:00.


Testimony from a Russian prisoner of war has emerged claiming that homosexuality is widespread among North Korean troops deployed to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

According to Ukrainian media outlets such as TCH on the 6th, Ukrainian journalist and soldier Yuriy Butusov released interrogation footage of a Russian POW. The prisoner’s name, age, and unit affiliation were not disclosed.

In the interrogation video, the POW said that North Korean soldiers openly display same-sex relationships without hesitation. He said, “We were standing in line at the restaurant when two North Korean soldiers walked up holding hands. Before parting ways, they kissed.” He emphasized, “They really kissed on the lips,” adding, “At first, I thought it was a man and a woman.”

The POW also claimed that North Korean soldiers have stolen from and assaulted Russian troops. “Once, North Korean soldiers stormed into a trench, beat up a soldier, took his laptop, and ran away,” he said. “But to us, they all look the same, so it’s hard to figure out who did it. Of course, they probably think we all look the same, too.”

Homosexual behavior within the North Korean military has also been reported by North Korean defectors. However, since there is no concept of “homosexuality” in North Korea, such acts often exist only as behavior without clear recognition or categorization. Some defectors explain it as a form of sexual repression due to long-term service.

Lee, a North Korean defector who served in Pyongyang’s military, said in a BBC Korea interview released last October: “When young boys come into the army, aren’t they cute? So we hug them, put our arms around their shoulders, rub against them. Since there are no women, if a slightly pretty-looking boy comes in, people frame him as a woman and satisfy their desires.” He added, “It’s not because their sexual identity is unusual, but because they endure ten years without women. It doesn’t mean they actually like men.”

He further said, “When you look at North Korea through a South Korean mindset, you can never understand it. You have to see it through North Korea’s own perspective to understand. There’s no sense of homosexuality there, not even as common sense.” He noted that while such people may exist, “Almost no North Koreans recognize themselves as such.”

In fact, in 2015, two male North Korean soldiers were caught on South Korean surveillance cameras in broad daylight embracing and appearing to kiss. Commenting on this, Ahn Chan-il, head of the World North Korea Research Center, said, “Judging from their uniforms, they appear to be officers. After serving over ten years without being able to go outside or have contact with women, they find a sort of release in homosexual-like acts within the military.”

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/GermanDronePilot on 2025-08-07 22:50:11+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/GermanDronePilot on 2025-08-07 22:16:24+00:00.

Original Title: Ukrainian 225th separate assault regiment presented the recently developed drone bomb "Black Whole". This thing will be dropped from Ukrainian heavy drones to destroy Russian military targets. 07.08.2025

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Mil_in_ua on 2025-08-07 22:02:08+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/21_vetal_01 on 2025-08-07 21:12:05+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Mil_in_ua on 2025-08-07 21:04:58+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Flowrisma on 2025-08-07 20:38:28+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/Ukraine_Aid_Ops on 2025-08-07 19:45:53+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/ukraine by /u/KateKozakDrive on 2025-08-07 19:26:04+00:00.

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