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Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered a surprise three-day truce from May 8-10, coinciding with Moscow's large-scale World War II Victory Day celebrations. But Oksana Osaulko, a 44-year-old Ukrainian volunteering to feed her country's troops, holds little hope. "On the part of Russia, I see no serious decisions and no truce," she says. "They say one thing and do something else."
Transcript
00:00.
00:07Our organization is a volunteer organization, which was created by people with each other.
00:15It may be a son, a man, a son, a son, a brother, a brother.
00:19For example, I have a family of six children.
00:22My son is a military man.
00:24He works for three years.
00:26How many are they?
00:30Not always.
00:31Not always.
00:33There are a lot of men who are in position, or in position.
00:37It's hot sauce.
00:39In the past few days, the children have nothing to eat, nothing to eat.
00:43And to support them physically, this is our duty.
00:48It's people who feel for each other.
00:53From the side of Russia, I don't see any serious decisions and any peace of mind from their side.
01:02They say the same thing, but they do the same thing.
01:06We see ourselves, for example, like they said, peace,
01:12in us there were some shaheads, there were some obstreles,
01:18again peace, again a obstrele, if it's a peace, then when will it not be?
01:23This is not our war. We didn't start her.
01:27We just protect ourselves.
01:30The end of the war is just not from us.
01:33We will protect ourselves until the last one,
01:35because this is our land, this is our home.
01:38We are here to go.
01:40Just to go and kill us and kill us, we will protect ourselves.
01:46The end of the war is not from us.

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