A study shows that the number of people displaced by the fighting in eastern Ukraine who intend to return to the Donbas has decreased, from 32 percent in Sept. 2017 to 25 percent in Sept. of this year:
An RFE/RL Ukrainian Service photogallery of today's momentous religious event in Kyiv:
There were three candidates to be the head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church:
Ukrainian police say some 35,000 people came to St. Sophia's to stand outside and await the announcement of the formation of the united Ukrainian Orthodox Church:
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew has invited the newly slected head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, Metropolitan Epifaniy, to come to Istanbul to receive the "tomos" on January 6.
Jailed Ukrainian filmmaker Oleh Sentsov gets a tribute at the EuroFilm Awards tonight:
Former world chess champion and Kremlin critic Garry Kasparov speaking in an interview on December 14 with Mikhail Sokolov of RFE/RL's Russian Service in Vilnius. Note last two comments about Ukraine.
"The main problem of the Kremlin is not connected to the ability or inability to control the processes inside the country, but the fact that the regime began to rapidly lose international status. Again, sooner or later it had to happen, because this aggressive policy of the Kremlin, it had to convince the free world that it was pointless to negotiate with [Russian President Vladimir] Putin."
"Actually, [Putin] now has achieved what the Russian opposition could not achieve in many years. He convinced the free world that he is the enemy who must be fought."
"It is clear that the tool kit that is used by the free world in this fight is different from Putin's. And yet, we see how gradually and steadily this machine spins up in defense of the free world from [Russian] attacks on [its] internal structure."
"In fact, Ukraine’s withdrawal from the [Russian Orthodox] Church space means breaking up these cultural ties that have linked Russia and Ukraine for so long, and practically nullifies the Kremlin's ability to influence the social and cultural life of Ukraine through the [Russian Orthodox] Church's institutions."
"We will inevitably witness how Russia will have to, how the future Russia will have to pay for all of Putin's adventures, no matter whether in Syria, in Ukraine. Just as nations have always paid for the crimes of their dictators."