Ukraine Teen Nude

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Nastsassia Nasko says she came up with the idea by accident.
A few days after Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, she had posted on Twitter asking if someone with a car could help evacuate an acquaintance out of the Kharkiv, one of the first Ukrainian cities to be besieged by Russian troops.
When nobody responded to her, the 23-year-old tweeted, half-jokingly, that she would send a nude picture of herself to whoever was able to help.
Within five minutes, she had more than 10 messages in her inbox, she told Insider. After she sent a nude picture of herself to a man who offered to help, her acquaintance was safely driven out of Kharkiv.
The experience sparked an idea and several days later — on International Women's Day — Nasko and her friend, Anastasiya Kuchmenko, launched "TerOnlyFans." ("Ter" is short for territorial defense.)
The project has a similar model to OnlyFans , the subscription-based social platform which has become a lucrative way for adult content creators to earn money. (It has no connection to OnlyFans, and the company did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.)
But on TerOnlyFans, the money goes straight to the Ukrainian army, rather than to the creators. Three months on, the group has raised more than $700,000, Nasko told Insider. 
The majority of the donations go to Ukraine's Territorial Defense, although Nasko, said the project had also sent some money to refugee or animal-shelter organizations.
Since the website's launch, 35 women and three men, most of whom are based in Ukraine, have signed up to send pictures to donors. Only 10 of them have had previous experience with OnlyFans, while the others told Nasko they wanted to volunteer to help Ukraine, she said.
Most of the donors are from Ukraine, though the group has also received money from people in the Netherlands, France, and the UK, Nasko said. The highest donation the group ever received was a cryptocurrency payment of $2,800.
Also unlike Onlyfans, the project's volunteers don't take requests for pictures, Nasko said: "We are not sex workers, we are trying to raise money for the war."
Nasko, who is originally from Belarus but lived in Kyiv before the war, told Insider she is proud of her unique approach to collecting donations for Ukraine.
"I feel happy because I can support people in Ukraine and show that not all Belarusians like Russians and that we are good people. We want to help our neighbors," she said.
Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko leader is a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin and has supported him in the invasion.
After Russia invaded of Ukraine, Nasko decided to leave Kyiv and moved into an apartment in Warsaw, Poland, where she manages TerOnlyFans alongside her full-time job as a marketing manager at an esports company.
Together with Kuchmenko, who decided to stay in Kyiv, she continues to promote the project on Telegram, liaises with the volunteers, and double-checks the legitimacy of donations.
The amount of work can be grueling, but Nasko said she had no plans of winding down. 
"We will end this project when Putin dies and Russia stops their aggression," she said.






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Published: 16:55 BST, 14 November 2016 | Updated: 16:26 BST, 16 November 2016
Ukraine 's bid to join the EU took a new twist today when semi-naked pictures of the country's deputy interior minister in charge of European integration were revealed.
British-educated Anastasia Deeva, 24, was already under fierce attack in Kiev for being too young for the job, and to have been appointed without proper vetting - which her boss dismissed as 'bigotry' and 'ageist'.
Now Interior Minister Arsen Avakov has defended the married minister's topless photographs, claiming critics were 'asexual' or obsessed by moralising.
Tasteful: The naked pictures were found on Anastasia Deeva's social media by Ukrainian journalists investigating allegations she was in a relationship with her boss, something which an Interior Ministry source has denied 
He said her pictures were 'private' and taken when she was a student, a time when she also worked as an aide to various Ukrainian MPs.
Despite this, the revealing photos remained on her social media after her appointment as being one of the key figures in the Ukrainian government's aim of integrating with the European Union.
A source in the ministry denied she was in a relationship with her boss after a flurry of social media speculation.
Anastasia Deeva (pictured, right) has been defended by Interior Minister Arsen Avakov (left) 
'That she is having an affair with Avakov - it's all nonsense,' said the source.
Ukraine's deputy speaker Irina Gerashchenko said: 'The question is not about the nude photos.
'People can take any pictures they like and the photographs cannot be the basis for any appointment or dismissal.
The pictures of Ms Deeva are a mixture of artistic (left) and jokey (right, with spaghetti dangling from her mouth) but were not removed from social media after her appointment as a minister 
'Nor is the question about hypocrisy, which, like sexism, we really should overcome together. The question is about violation of procedures,' added Ms Gerashchenko.
She claimed the deputy minister was appointed 'without any competition' and her official CV contains 'wrong data'.
Journalist Konstantin Stogny wrote: 'I'm terribly sorry...but is this really the next head of the law enforcement agency (Interior Ministry) in Ukraine?
Many politicians in Ukraine feel that Anastasia Deeva (pictured) is not qualified for the role
'I'm not trying to moralize on what is bad or good. I'm just trying to understand the trends.'
She has also faced criticism for her expensive taste in Western clothes brands.
Mr Avakov hit back saying that in Soviet times the position would have been held by a 'real monster - and she is just a girl.'
Mr Avakov has defended her 'high capacity for work and communication skills' and pointed out she was fluent in French and English
She had a 'high capacity for work and communication skills', an excellent Masters degree and was fluent in English and French, he said.
She was facing attack because of her young age, she said but her appointment had been approved by the Cabinet.
'Photo albums, thrown onto the Internet with such an effect, feed low feelings,' he said.
Anastasia Deeva (pictured, left, during a meeting in parliament) had previously lived in Sweden, where she worked on green technology
'Has a student no right to private photos? It is bigotry - or you are incorporeal or asexual, or moralising on her bright clothes and bare lines?'
Deeva spent her childhood attending a school in 'a small town near Manchester', according to her social media.
She said: 'The first time I earned money, when I was 8 years old, was when our Ukrainian delegation in the UK collected money to build a house for street children.'
The images of Ms Deeva (pictured) are believed to date from her student days and are artistic, rather than pornographic
She later switched to study in Kiev doubling up as a political aide to MPs for the party headed by toppled pro-Russian dictator Viktor Yanukovych.
Her first official work was when she was 18 - she became an aid to a deputy.
Her husband, Grogory Deev, 33, co-owner of an advertising agency, has not commented on the images.
Anastasia Deeva's job is to help Ukraine move further down the path towards eventually joining the European Union. The ethnic Russian east of the Ukraine looks towards Moscow, rather than western Europe
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Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

HOLIDAY BLUES Fourth of July travel chaos as 600 flights are canceled and 5,200 delayed
AIR SHOW HORROR Driver killed at Fourth of July air show as 300mph jet truck explodes
HITTING BACK Brian Laundrie's dad blasts media as ex-prosecutor warns of criminal charges
BLOODBATH Tourist, 68, dies after having arm & leg ripped off by SHARK in Red Sea resort
THE models who are facing jail after posing naked on a Dubai balcony are mainly from Ukraine, it is claimed.
Footage taken from a next door building shows over a dozen women pose for the shoot at an apartment in the city's upscale Marina neighbourhood.
Do you know those involved? Call The Sun Online news desk on +44 (0) 207 782 4368 or email tariq.tahir@thesun.co.uk
Dubai police said they arrested a “group of people who appeared in an indecent video” on charges of public debauchery.
Videos and photographs showing the naked women, lined up on a balcony while being filmed, emerged on social media on Saturday evening.
Those detained face up to six months in prison and a fine of around £1,000 for violating public decency laws in the United Arab Emirates, which includes nudity and other lewd behaviour.
The sharing of pornographic material is also punishable with prison time and hefty fines under the country’s laws, which are based on Islamic law, or Shariah.
All of the models are understood to be from the ex-Soviet Union including Ukraine, Belarus and Moldova. 
A Russian man has also been detained and named as the organiser of the “lewd” shoot.
He is understood to claimed he was in a nearby apartment and had filmed the spectacle showing the naked women.
TASS news agency later cited the Russian consul in Dubai as saying that a Russian man was being held in connection with the incident.
But a consulate source told Russian media outlet LIFE that no Russian women had been detained.
It cited a consulate source as saying: ”According to the latest data received from the police of the Emirates, there are no Russian women among the detained.
“A Russian man was detained. According to the police, they suspect him of being one of those who sponsored the entire event."
State-linked newspaper The National reported it appeared to be a publicity stunt, without elaborating.
It came as a shock in the UAE where tamer behaviour, like kissing in public or drinking alcohol without a license, has landed people in jail.
Dubai police said those arrested over the indecent video have been referred to public prosecutors.
“Such unacceptable behaviours do not reflect the values and ethics of Emirati society,” said police in a statement.
The UAE, while liberal in many regards compared to its Middle Eastern neighbours, has strict laws governing expression and social media.
People have been jailed for their comments and videos online.
The country's majority state-owned telecom companies block access to major pornographic websites.
Dubai also has strict social media laws that make it an offence to insult others or even use language where people feel insulted.
The laws also forbid anything “defamatory” against the UAE and this can even include the reporting of a news article.
A woman from Surrey, Laleh Shahravesh, 55, is facing jail for calling her Dubai-based ex-husband an “idiot” and his new wife “a horse” under the Gulf state’s draconian social media laws.
Those who’ve fallen foul of the laws in the past include a Brit Yaseen Killick, jailed after venting anger on WhatsApp after being sold a car that broke down.
US fitness professional Jordan Branford was slapped with a nearly £60,000 fine after using the word “bitch” on Instagram, which his ex-wife believed was referring to her.
Glitzy Dubai has been in the headlines after reality TV stars and social media influencers flouted ­lockdown rules to sun themselves on its beaches.
Earlier this year they were still promoting parties there even after a coronavirus spike forced all pubs and bars to shut.
But critics have slammed so-called influencers for not doing proper work – insisting they should not be travelling abroad while the majority of Brits are locked down at home.
Mom 'drowned herself and three young kids' after husband's suicide
Fourth of July travel chaos as 600 flights are canceled and 5,200 delayed
Driver killed at Fourth of July air show as 300mph jet truck explodes
Brian Laundrie's dad blasts media as ex-prosecutor warns of criminal charges
© 2020 THE SUN, US, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED | TERMS OF USE | PRIVACY | YOUR AD CHOICES | SITEMAP

Janet Elise Johnson teaches political science and gender studies at Brooklyn College. She is the author of “ The Gender of Informal Politics ” and “ Gender Violence in Russia .”
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Amid the maelstrom of the Trump-impeachment proceedings, Ukraine has been less a reality than a projection of America’s post-Cold War neuroses. Although we have learned something about Volodymyr Zelensky , Ukraine’s neophyte President, there has been very little said about the lived experiences of the country’s nearly forty-four million people.
One of the strongest states in Europe a millennium ago, Ukraine has had a devastating century, including two forced famines, first under Lenin, in 1921 and 1922, and then under Stalin, a decade later. Since Ukraine’s independence from the Soviet Union, it has faced several severe economic depressions and ongoing violent meddling by Russia. In 2014, Russia annexed Crimea and fomented war in eastern Ukraine, leading to nearly fifty per cent inflation the following year and to more than ten thousand civilian casualties and the internal displacement of some one and a half million people. In their long conflict with Russia, Ukrainians have not been submissive: they burned their own fields and livestock to resist Soviet rule; raised two revolutions, in the pursuit of democracy, after the collapse of the U.S.S.R.; and have fought Vladimir Putin’s invasion, despite lacking a functioning military at the start of the conflict. With the country’s economy unable to recover, many Ukrainians have been forced to work or move abroad, to Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and even Russia.
The Israeli photographer Michal Chelbin has made images of Ukrainian teen-agers at two different locations during two distinct periods: first, in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine, in 2008, and then in and around Kyiv, in 2019. Each time, her subjects were on the precipice of adulthood, attending their high-school graduation, an event that includes a prom. Our view is that of an outsider, although Chelbin’s father was born in western Ukraine, and she grew up fascinated by the black-and-white portraits that he had brought with him when he left as a child. In some of Chelbin’s photographs, the teens re-create those old styles: a subject stands, for instance, with a hand resting on the shoulder of a peer sitting nearby. Unlike teens in the U.S., the young men’s dress varies quite a bit, from tuxedos or conventional suits to brightly colored jackets or uniforms. The young women wear ball gowns or more casual short skirts.
From the photos, we cannot tell whether the teens are Ukrainian- or Russian-speaking. One of the results of the war with Russia has been a stronger civic identity. Russian speakers in Ukraine-controlled territories have become more committed to Ukraine, and Ukrainians as a whole seem more open to Russian speakers—including to Zelensky, who won in a landslide.
A few of these teens, Chelbin told me, are students from an internat , a Soviet-style boarding school that serves mostly poor or under-parented children. Others attend public schools. Some of the teens are pictured as heterosexual couples, but not all of them—though none are likely to be out-and-proud L.G.B.T.Q., even as participation in this year’s Kyiv Pride was nearly double last year’s and as Zelensky offered lukewarm support.
Unlike a prom in the United States, graduation proms in Ukraine include students, teachers, and parents and follow an official school ceremony. Graduates stay up all night and watch the sunrise from an important, scenic locale in their community. Until recently, students usually wore graduation sashes—traditionally red with golden letters—only on the last day before the exam period, known as the Day of the Farewell Bell. But in Chelbin’s photographs from 2019 some of the graduates chose to wear them t
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