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Ukrainian citizens are supporting the resistance against the Russian army in various places.

A Ukrainian brewery that used to make beer has started making Molotov cocktails, and a boycott of Russian products is spreading around the world.



Correspondent Hong Young-jae.



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At a brewery in Lviv, Ukraine, his employees gather to make Molotov cocktails by filling oil in bottles instead of beer.



He came out to add even a little bit of strength to the unfavorable war situation, but on the outside of the beer bottle was engraved a picture of the naked President Putin and a phrase mocking him.



[Yuri Zastavni/Brewery Employee: Why do you make Molotov cocktails instead of beer?

The answer is simple.

Because all Ukrainians do what they have to do and they know how to do it.]



As voices from around the world accuse the Russian invasion, a video was uploaded on social media in which a Georgian vessel, a neighboring country, refused to refuel a Russian vessel. .



[Is this a ship from Russia?

Then we will refuse to refuel.]



The boycott of Russian products continues to spread.



The states of Ohio, Utah, New Hampshire, and Texas in the United States declared their ban on Russian vodka, and videos of Russian vodka being used to clean toilets or poured into the ground appeared on social media.



[Michael Larson: I used to drink vodka, but now I am trying to find vodka from other countries.]



More and more stores are refusing to display Russian products at all.



Global company Google has blocked a feature that shows real-time road conditions in Ukraine over concerns that the Russian military could use it as a means of guessing the movements of civilians.