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Ukraine country profile

Ukraine country profile

Yahoo27-01-2025

Europe's second largest country, Ukraine is a land of wide, fertile agricultural plains, with large pockets of heavy industry in the east.
While Ukraine and Russia share common historical origins, the west of the country has closer ties with its European neighbours, particularly Poland, and nationalist sentiment has been strongest there.
Ukraine gained independence after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and then veered between seeking closer integration with Western Europe and being drawn into the orbit of Russia, which sees its interests as threatened by a Western-leaning Ukraine.
An uprising against pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych in 2014 ushered in a series of Western-leaning governments.
That same year, Russia seized the Crimean peninsula and armed insurgent groups to occupy parts of the east. The Russian army eventually launched a full-scale invasion in February 2022.
Some estimates suggest that up to a million Russian and Ukrainians have been killed or injured in the first two and half years of fighting.
Read more country profiles - Profiles by BBC Monitoring
Capital: Kyiv
Area: 603,550 sq km
Population: 33.4 million
Language: Ukrainian
Life expectancy: 68 years (men) 77 years (women)
President: Volodymyr Zelensky
Mr Zelensky's initial claim to fame was playing a fictional president in a television comedy programme, and his victorious election campaign echoed his character's anti-establishment stance.
His Servant of the People party went on to win early parliamentary elections in July 2019, giving him control of both the executive and the legislature.
President Zelensky went on to rally Ukraine's resistance to the Russian invasion in 2022. He declared martial law and a general mobilisation of the armed forces.
His leadership during the war has won him widespread international praise, and he has been widely seen as a symbol of Ukrainian resistance.
National media have adopted a united patriotic agenda following the Russian annexation of Crimea and the armed conflict in the east.
Ukraine has banned relays of leading Russian TVs; in turn, areas under Russian or separatist control have seen pro-Kyiv outlets silenced.
The authorities also block access to some popular Russian websites and social networks.
Ukrainians have changed their media consumption since the start of the full-scale war, with social media replacing TV as a top news source for Ukrainians, new TV channels continuing to launch despite the conflict, and the complete loss of popularity of Russian outlets.
Read full media profile
Some key dates in Ukraine's history:
1918 - Ukraine declares independence after Russian Revolution.
1921 - Soviet rule established as Russian Red Army conquers two-thirds of Ukraine.
1932 - At least seven million peasants perish in man-made famine during Stalin's collectivisation campaign.
1941-44 - Ukraine suffers terrible wartime devastation during Nazis occupation.
1945 - Allied victory in Second World War leads to conclusive Soviet annexation of west Ukrainian lands.
1986 - A reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power station explodes, sending a radioactive plume across Europe.
1991 - As the Soviet Union heads towards dissolution, Ukraine declares independence.
2004 - Orange Revolution mass protests force pro-European change of government.
2014 - Maidan Revolution ousts pro-Kremlin government over stalled European Union association deal. Russia then seizes Crimean peninsula and launches insurgency to occupy parts of eastern Ukraine.
2022 - Russia launches a full-scale invasion in February, initially taking large areas of the eastern but fails in a bid to take Kyiv. Ukraine counter attacks, recapturing Kherson in November and pushing Russian forces back across the Dnipro river.
2023 - Fighting largely reaches a stalemate. The Kakhovka dam on the Dnipro river in southern Ukraine is destroyed, leading to widespread flooding and disruption. The dam was under Russian control at the time.
2024 - Fighting in much of eastern Ukraine becomes a war of attrition. Ukraine launches a counter-offensive into Russia's Kursk region. North Korean troops are sent to fight on Russia's side.

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Barabak: Trump could help feed hungry people. Instead he's throwing a vanity parade
Barabak: Trump could help feed hungry people. Instead he's throwing a vanity parade

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  • Yahoo

Barabak: Trump could help feed hungry people. Instead he's throwing a vanity parade

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Trump is frustrated by his own success on immigration
Trump is frustrated by his own success on immigration

Vox

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  • Vox

Trump is frustrated by his own success on immigration

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Zelenskyy considers Serbian president's visit important, as he witnessed war firsthand
Zelenskyy considers Serbian president's visit important, as he witnessed war firsthand

Yahoo

timean hour ago

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Zelenskyy considers Serbian president's visit important, as he witnessed war firsthand

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy believes that the first visit of his Serbian counterpart, Aleksandar Vučić to Ukraine is important because he has seen the war firsthand. Source: Zelenskyy on X (Twitter), as reported by European Pravda Details: On the evening of Wednesday 11 June, Zelenskyy spoke about his conversation with Vučić, who visited Odesa and attended the Ukraine-Southeast Europe Summit. "This is the [Serbian] President's first visit to Ukraine, and it is truly important to be here in Ukraine and witness the war firsthand," the Ukrainian leader said. Zelenskyy and Vučić discussed mutual support on the path to the European Union, bilateral cooperation and Ukraine's recovery. Quote from Zelenskyy: "I thank [Vučić] for the initiative to help with the recovery efforts and to assume patronage over the reconstruction of several Ukrainian settlements. This is a truly effective form of cooperation, and we look forward to positive results." Background: Notably, the participants of the Ukraine-Southeast Europe Summit have signed a declaration in which they condemn Russia's war against Ukraine "in the strongest possible terms" and call on the international community "to maintain and further strengthen sanctions against the Russian Federation". Meanwhile, Vučić was the only participant in the event who did not sign it. Commenting on this, Vučić said that in this way he "did not betray Russia". Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

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