Show All Ukraine: War Teens Orikhiv: City on the Verge General Marchenko: Russia Will Fail Ukraine: The Lost Paradise Tortured for a Lesser “Crime” in Kherson Demonstrators face Russian peacekeepers in Ivanyan, a town about 10 kilometres from Stepanakert, where Karabakh’s airport is located. The airfield was renovated in the late 2000s and due to open for commercial flights in 2012 but remained closed due to security reasons, as Azerbaijan has threatened to shoot down flights. As the blockade continued, on January 5 Karabakh authorities called for support for operations of an air bridge “to prevent an urgent humanitarian crisis”. © Siranush Sargsyan/IWPR Supplies Dwindle as Karabakh Siege Continues “Happy Chanukah” and a menorah stitched on cloth during a children’s gathering at the Mygdal Jewish Centre. © Zhenia Pedin / IWPR Light Over Darkness: Hannukah in Odesa Ukraine’s Blood Donors Simple wooden crosses with numbers mark graves in Pishchanske cemetery on Shakespeare Street in Izyum’s outskirts, where Russians buried most of the residents who died during the occupation. © Danil Pavlov Ukraine: “I Want My Mother to Have a Grave” Show moreGALLERIES All regions, Any mediaAll regionsAfricaAsiaEurope & EurasiaLatin America & the CaribbeanMiddle East & North AfricaMediaAny mediaPhotosVideosAudioMultimedia
Demonstrators face Russian peacekeepers in Ivanyan, a town about 10 kilometres from Stepanakert, where Karabakh’s airport is located. The airfield was renovated in the late 2000s and due to open for commercial flights in 2012 but remained closed due to security reasons, as Azerbaijan has threatened to shoot down flights. As the blockade continued, on January 5 Karabakh authorities called for support for operations of an air bridge “to prevent an urgent humanitarian crisis”. © Siranush Sargsyan/IWPR Supplies Dwindle as Karabakh Siege Continues
“Happy Chanukah” and a menorah stitched on cloth during a children’s gathering at the Mygdal Jewish Centre. © Zhenia Pedin / IWPR Light Over Darkness: Hannukah in Odesa
Simple wooden crosses with numbers mark graves in Pishchanske cemetery on Shakespeare Street in Izyum’s outskirts, where Russians buried most of the residents who died during the occupation. © Danil Pavlov Ukraine: “I Want My Mother to Have a Grave”