Ukraine will mark the day of remembrance for the victims of the great famine allegedly caused by the then Soviet Union 90 years ago.

While public opinion against Russia, which was the center of the former Soviet Union, has increased further, in Ukraine, power outages continued due to infrastructure attacks by the Russian military, and President Zelensky called on the people to be patient.

The Holodomor famine killed millions of people in Ukraine in 1932 and 1932, and on the 26th, the victims will be remembered.



The famine was blamed on the Stalinist regime in the Soviet Union, and a poll of 1,000 people conducted by a Ukrainian civil society earlier this month found that 93% of respondents believed the Holodomor was a genocide against Ukrainians. about it.



In Ukraine, many people associate this "Holodomor" with the ongoing military invasion by Russia, and public opinion for a thorough resistance against Russia is increasing.



Despite this, Russian military attacks continued in various places, and the council of Kherson, a key city in southern Ukraine, posted on SNS that 15 citizens, including one child, were killed and 20 injured between the 20th and 25th of this month. .



Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky inspects a residential building in the outskirts of Kyiv that was hit by a Russian missile attack.



And he denounced the attacks targeting civilian facilities, posting on his own social media that he was "the result of Russian missile terrorism on our people."



Furthermore, in a video released on the 25th, after clarifying that more than 6 million people are still affected by the power outage, he said, "Electricity consumption increases at night and power outages occur. Currently, we are still saving electricity. It's a time when we need it," he called on the people to be patient.