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It has been suggested that this article be merged with List of films about the Russo-Ukrainian War. ( Discuss ) Proposed since December 2024. Below is an incomplete list of feature films, television films or TV series which include events of the Russo-Ukrainian War .
Russian separatist forces in Ukraine, primarily the People's Militias of the Donetsk People's Republic (DPR) and the Luhansk People's Republic (LPR), [nb 1] were pro-Russian paramilitaries in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. They were under the overall control of the Russian Federation. [5] They were also referred to as Russian proxy ...
Clashes between government forces and pro-Russian groups escalated in early May when the city administration building was briefly retaken by the Ukrainian National Guard. The pro-Russian forces quickly took the building back. [153] Militants then launched an attack on a local police station, leading the Ukrainian government to send in military ...
Pro-Russian protest at Lenin Square, Donetsk, 6 April 2014, with flags of Russia, the Russian Empire, and the Eurasianist Movement. From late February 2014, demonstrations by pro-Russian, separatist and counter-revolutionary groups took place in several cities in eastern and southern Ukraine. [36]
During the pro-EU Euromaidan movement, a pro-Russian opposition movement known as anti-Maidan emerged, particularly in eastern Ukraine, where there was a large Russian speaking minority. [ 8 ] On December 4, thirteen days after the beginning of Euromaidan, around 15,000 people gathered at a pro-Yanukovych rally in Donetsk, though many of these ...
2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine: Pro-Russian separatists Russia Ukraine: 22 February 2014 2 May 2014 As a result of the revolution in Kyiv, a pro-Russian unrest in the eastern regions of the country escalated into mass protests and violence between the pro-Russian and pro-Ukrainian activists. In Crimea, the events served as a pretext for a ...
The film is set during and based upon the events of the Second Battle of Donetsk Airport of the Donbas war. [1] Ukrainian soldiers and volunteers had held the airport for four months since an earlier battle, [2] while surrounded by pro-Russian forces associated with the Donetsk People's Republic (DPR). [3] [a]
Kharkov People's Republic – The Kharkiv People's Republic was proclaimed on 7 April by a small group of pro-Russian separatists occupying the RSA building with Yevhen Zhylin as President. [232] However, later that day, Ukrainian special forces retook the building, thereby ending the control the protesters had had over the building. [232]