KHARKIV, Ukraine — The video footage is graphic, but Serhii Bolvinov doesn’t care. He believes the world needs to see what’s happening in Ukraine to stop the terror raining over his city.
He uploads it to his Facebook page and posts it on Twitter.
It’s early September. Days earlier, on Aug. 30, glide bombs slashed the skies above Kharkiv — just 20 miles from Russia — and pummeled a house, a sports field, a warehouse, an apartment building, a city park. In a 1 minute and 20-second video, Bolvinov flips through scenes of destruction.