
Pro-Palestinian activist's arrest will be 'first of many,' vows Trump
ADVERTISEMENT
The priest at the Church of St Andrew, Father Andriy Halavin, is still in Bucha, three years since Russia started its brutal invasion of Ukraine.
The region of Kyiv and its towns like Bucha, Hostomel and Irpin were the first to face — and stop — Russian forces in their all-out war in early 2022.
Showing Bucha's Wall of Remembrance, Father Andriy says it will be replaced with a permanent memorial.
He told Euronews the wall, replete with metal plaques for each person killed in the town after Russian troops occupied it, should be a place where people could come with their children, for it to be also a place of strength.
'The liberation of our country started with the liberation of Bucha," Father Andriy explained.
A woman attends a memorial ceremony for killed civilians to mark the third anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, in Bucha, Ukraine, Feb. 24, 2025.
AP Photo
Painful memories of 2022
Father Andriy knows every corner of Bucha and probably every resident. As he shows the memorial, he points at the house facing the church.
The family who lived there escaped Russia's war once in the past, when Moscow forces invaded the Donbas. But the Kremlin and its war chased them all the way to Bucha.
On 5 March — several days into the occupation — the family tried to evacuate.
"Russian forces opened fire at them, at the entire family, just like this, in the streets of Bucha," Father Andriy recalled.
Only the father survived, having lost his leg. The names of the two children — nine and four years old — and their mother are engraved on the memorial at the church, right across the road from their house. The man still lives in Bucha, Father Andriy says.
He knows the names and stories of almost everyone whose name is on the memorial. Many families got killed while trying to evacuate, he explained.
'We have surveillance cameras at the exit from Bucha, the roundabout towards Hostomel and Irpin. On the second day of the full-scale war, the Russians fired at any moving car, and many people died there," he said.
Cemetery worker exhume the corpse of a civilian killed in Bucha from a mass grave, in the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, April 13, 2022.
AP Photo
Many civilians also got killed while staying in Bucha under occupation. 'When Russians came into people's houses, they would open fire at anyone inside,' Father Andriy explained.
Residents had no choice but to leave and try to find food, water and medicine. Russian soldiers told the locals to put white bands on their arms, and they'd be safe.
'A father and a son went to a city hall to get medicine, both got shot. The son, thirteen years old, survived because the bullet got through the hood of his vest. He stayed on the ground, next to the body of his father, pretending to be dead until it was safer to run home,' the priest recalled.
ADVERTISEMENT
Bucha, three years later
The Vokzal'na Street in Bucha, where a column of Russian armored vehicles was destroyed by a Ukrainian army, famous for a photo that shocked the world, look totally different now.
There's no sign of battle and almost no sign of destroyed houses. The street has been rebuilt, and it now looks just like any other road in any quiet European town with modern cookie-cutter houses and tidy fences.
Cafes and shops have been rebuilt and reopened, and people are back. But although one can spot the scars of Russian brutality only on some residential buildings in the facades pockmarked by shrapnel from the shelling signs on the facade — just like on the Church of St Andrew — the emotional wounds have not healed.
There are 509 names of the civilians killed during the occupation of Bucha on the Wall of Remembrance, Father Andriy says, adding, "509 civilians died here not as a result of combat, but during the occupation. And we have not yet talked about rape, robbery, abduction of children."
ADVERTISEMENT
Soldiers walk amid destroyed Russian tanks in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, April 3, 2022.
AP Photo
Talks with Russia: View from Bucha
Among many statements regarding Ukraine by US President Donald Trump, there was one that really stood out, crossing red lines for the Ukrainians: when Trump said that Ukraine should not have started the war.
Father Andriy says for the Russians, negotiations are not a way to find peace, but "a way to achieve what you cannot achieve with weapons."
'The Russians wanted to take Kyiv in three days, and they failed. With the help of Trump, negotiations, and so on, they are trying to occupy Ukraine in some other way," he explained.
"This is a matter of justice. What is worrying is that when they say 'negotiations', no one talks about crimes. No one talks about responsibility.'
ADVERTISEMENT
He says he fully understands why those on the outside might be unable to comprehend it, explaining it as simple as "human psychology".
'When planes were already flying over our heads, Russian helicopters were flying overhead and everything was blasting away and exploding, you understand that there is war," Father Andriy said.
"But mentally it was it impossible to admit that it can be real in the 21st century.'
Many people in Europe feel the same way, that the war is impossible, Father Andriy points out.
ADVERTISEMENT
"They are not ready to accept it. They have a calm, comfortable life," he said, adding that now Europeans are in a state where they are beginning to understand, but they are not ready to give up what they had or accept things as they are.
'If this continues, there is a danger that they will have to learn Russian. Because if Ukraine falls, Poland and the Baltic states will be next.'
He believes that when it comes to any talks with Russia, the crucial issue is the understanding of what "peace" essentially means, which is very different in Ukraine and Russia. Even if the conditions and terms of the agreement are good, the question is, will this make Russia's Vladimir Putin and his forces stop shooting?
'Ukrainians understand the word 'peace' when they are not killed, when there is justice, when criminals are held accountable for their crimes - this is peace," Father Andriy said.
ADVERTISEMENT
"From Putin's point of view, I think, 'peace' is something like when they don't shoot anymore because there are no more survivors left on our side, no one alive, only territories left," he concluded.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
12 minutes ago
- Euronews
Trump says 'big day' ahead as Zelenskyy arrives for Washington meeting
US President Donald Trump hailed what he said was a "big day" Monday as his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his European allies all arrived in the US capital for a major meeting on ending Russia's war in Ukraine. The Washington talks follow a summit Trump held with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska last Friday. After the meeting between the two heads of state, Trump revealed that negotiations over a possible ceasefire have been pushed aside with a view to finding a quick peace deal, as Moscow's all-out war continues well into its fourth year. However, this has led to concerns over possible concessions made to the Russian side, which is believed to have reiterated its maximalist demands, including asking for full control over four Ukrainian regions -- Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson -- and retaining the illegally annexed Crimea, mobilising Kyiv's European supporters gathered around the "Coalition of the Willing". The list of those expected to be in the room on Monday includes German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni and Finnish President Alexander Stubb. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte will also be in attendance. Follow our live blog below as Euronews' journalists from around Europe bring you the latest updates on the talks in the US capital:


Euronews
3 hours ago
- Euronews
Melania Trump's letter to Putin goes viral for possible use of AI
Following Donald Trump's summit talks with Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday and ahead of the landmark meeting of the 'Coalition of the Willing' in Washington today, the White House has released the letter from first lady Melania Trump to Putin. In the letter, hand-delivered to Putin by Donald Trump, Melania Trump raised the plight of children to the Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'Every child shares the same quiet dreams in their heart, whether born randomly into a nation's rustic countryside or a magnificent city-center. They dream of love, possibility, and safety from danger,' wrote the first lady. 'As parents, it is our duty to nurture the next generation's hope. As leaders, the responsibility to sustain our children extends beyond the comfort of a few. Undeniably, we must strive to paint a dignity-filled world for all - so that every soul may wake to peace, and so that the future itself is perfectly guarded.' She continued: 'In today's world, some children are forced to carry a quiet laughter, untouched by the darkness around them - a silent defiance against the forces that can potentially claim their future. Mr. Putin, you can singlehandedly restore their melodic laughter. In protecting the innocence of these children, you will do more than serve Russia alone - you serve humanity itself." 'Such a bold idea transcends all human division, and you, Mr. Putin, are fit to implement this vision with a stroke of the pen today. It is time," it concluded. Une publication partagée par First Lady Melania Trump (@flotus) Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy conveyed his gratitude to the first lady on his call with Trump on Saturday, according to Ukraine's Minister of Foreign Affairs Andrii Sybiha, who added on X: "This is a true act of humanism.' The United Nations Human Rights Office has said Russia has inflicted suffering on millions of Ukrainian children and violated their rights since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Donald Trump then also shared the letter on Truth Social, after making multiple posts criticizing the media and Democrats' reactions to the Alaska summit, which did not result in a deal to end the war. However, once it circulated and went viral online, critics quickly pointed out that the letter was not only vague about the children Melania Trump was referring to, and many started to question whether the letter was generated using artificial intelligence. Democratic strategist Keith Edwards wrote on X that the letter 'says a whole lot of nothing" and that it "many have been written by AI." One account asked Grok, X's AI chatbot, for its verdict on whether the correspondence was produced by AI. The bot responded that the contents were 'likely 85 per cent AI-drafted, with minor human edits for tone." This is not the first time that Melania Trump has made headlines regarding the use of AI. For instance, she wrote on X that the audiobook for her memoir 'Melania' would be narrated by artificial intelligence, instead of her own voice. "Let the future of publishing begin," she wrote on X. "I am honored to bring you Melania – The AI Audiobook – narrated entirely using artificial intelligence in my own voice." Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy is set to meet with Trump today at the White House. A delegation of European leaders is also attending including UK PM Sir Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, Germany's Friedrich Merz, EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and NATO chief Mark Rutte.


Euronews
3 hours ago
- Euronews
Debunking Russian claims the EU is plotting Hungarian 'regime change'
Russia's intelligence service, the SVR, has alleged that the European Commission is "studying scenarios" for "regime change" in Hungary. The accusations, which are not backed by any evidence, have been widely amplified by both Russian state-sponsored media as well as disinformation actors on social platforms. EuroVerify detected the unfounded claims circulating widely on Telegram, Instagram, Facebook and X. In a statement published on 13 August, the SVR says "significant material, administrative, media and lobbying resources have been mobilised" in support of Peter Magyar, a former insider in the government of Viktor Orbán whose centre-right TISZA party is currently topping the polls. The statement also alleges that the Ukrainian government has "actively joined the campaign to 'dismantle' the Hungarian government on orders from Brussels.' A European Commission spokesperson described the allegations as "completely false". Independent Hungarian journalists, who strive to report independently despite the democratic backsliding of the government of Viktor Orbán, have expressed alarm at the SVR statement, saying Russia is "meddling in Hungarian politics". The disinformation has been quoted by Hungary's state news agency. It suggests Russian interference in Hungarian politics could increase in the run-up to the 2026 parliamentary elections, expected in April. Orbán, considered a Kremlin-friendly voice within the European Union, has consistently stalled EU support to Ukraine by wielding Hungary's veto power on foreign policy decisions. The polls suggest Orbán could be unseated as Hungary's prime minister next year after 15 years in power. Watch the video in the player above for more.