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A Ukrainian-based web site inspired by OnlyFans is soliciting donations in exchange for nude photos of women. All of the proceeds go toward funding the Ukrainian military as well as humanitarian assistance.
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A web site inspired by OnlyFans is inviting users to donate money and receive a nude photo in return — with the proceeds going to fund Ukraine’s war effort and resettle people displaced by the Russian invasion of the Eastern European country .
Users log into the site, TerOnlyFans, and contribute a sum of money to one of several bank accounts linked to the Ukrainian armed forces as well as humanitarian groups. They then must send a screenshot of the donation receipt to one of the “initiative participants.”
After the screenshot is verified, the donor receives a photo of one of 35 women and three men as a “gift.” The participants are all volunteers.
Nastsassia Nasko told Insider that she came up with the idea to create TerOnlyFans just days after Russian troops launched their invasion of Ukraine in late February.
Nasko, 23, took to Twitter to ask if anyone with a car could help evacuate an acquaintance out of the besieged town of Kharkiv. When she received no response, she half-jokingly wrote that she would be willing to send a nude photo of herself to whoever was able to help.
In less than five minutes, she had more than 10 messages in her inbox. After she sent a naked picture of herself to a man, the acquaintance was safely driven out of Kharkiv.
This led Nasko and her friend, Anastasiya Kuchmenko to launch TerOnlyFans — a play on words combining “Ter”, which is short for “territorial defense,” with OnlyFans.
Nasko told Insider that in the three months since it launched, TerOnlyFans has raised more than $700,000.
She said that most of the donors are based in Ukraine, though some have given from Holland, France, and the United Kingdom.
Nasko said the largest ever donation was a $2,800 gift made in cryptocurrency.
Unlike OnlyFans, the subscription service in which users are treated to more explicit content the more money they give, TerOnlyFans doesn’t allow donors to make requests.
“We are not sex workers, we are trying to raise money for the war,” Nasko told Insider.
Nasko, a native of Belarus, was living in Kyiv at the start of the war. Since then, she left the Ukrainian capital and moved into an apartment in Warsaw, Poland, where she works as a marketing manager for an esports company.
Kuchmenko, who decided to remain in Kyiv, jointly runs TerOnlyFans with Nasko.
The two keep busy by promoting the site through the encrypted messaging app Telegram. Nasko said they have no plans to stop as long as the invasion continues.
“We will end this project when Putin dies and Russia stops their aggression,” she said.

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 to their graduation prom, now in the colors of the Ukrainian flag. Since the last revolution, more young people have been wearing these colors, and embracing traditional textiles and hair styles, in their daily lives.
Teens are, in their developmental stages, driven by hormones. Surprisingly, Chelbin’s photos are relatively unsexualized. According to Vlada Nedak, who leads mother-daughter workshops in Ukraine for Project Kesher —an organization that seeks to promote Jewish community and gender equality—young people’s knowledge about their bodies comes from the Internet, often from pornography that kids first see in grade school, and includes even fewer empowering messages about consent or women’s rights to pleasure than in the United States. These days especially, teens are focussed on their visual representation, as so much of their lives are lived online—even in Ukraine, where the average income is less than a tenth of what it is in the U.S. Chelbin’s photos, however, are not performative in the ways of most young people’s photos in the twenty-first century—the emotiveness is paradoxical and emerges from what isn’t shown.
These pictures should make us think about the possible futures of these young people, and of their country. Parts of the Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine are still under Moscow’s control, and the rest of the region is struggling to rebuild from the war. In Kyiv, Ukraine’s biggest and richest city, teens have been found living in tunnels underneath the infrastructure that was built for the 2012 European Football Championship. One in five of those who age out of the internat system end up in prison; one in ten attempt or commit suicide. In some parts of the country, rates of H.I.V. infection are higher than in the rest of Europe. Conscription for men, a Soviet legacy, was scrapped in 2013 but then reinstated just a year later, owing to the war. Women, too, have volunteered in greater numbers, and bans on women in combat and military leadership were recently lifted. Jobs, especially working-class ones, are few and underpaid, though they have a new resonance following the Russian invasion, as illustrated in a new documentary, “ Heat Singers, ” about heating-utility workers who sing folk songs in national dress. There are also unexpected new jobs, such as de-mining the Ukraine-occupied areas of the Donbass, a tedious but important job done predominantly by women. Experts estimate that it will take decades to make this region safe again for the common pastime of mushroom hunting.
There is another future possible in this era. Young people have been mobilized by grassroots activism, which sprung up out of the Revolution of Dignity, in 2014, centering on issues such as fighting corruption and supporting the environment, feminism , and the war effort. According to Emily Channell-Justice, the head of Harvard’s new Temerty Contemporary Ukraine Program , “Ukraine is at a point where young people are trying to build the world they want to live in, but they are limited by the economic instability they inherited from previous generations and an unending war caused by an aggressive neighbor. They are making change wherever they can, whether at the institutional level or in their own communities and everyday lives.”
Chelbin’s photos elicit the timelessness of portraiture but also the timeliness of this moment, inviting all of us to reflect. Looking at the eyes of the young people photographed in 2008, before the global turn to illiberal populism, with its demagoguery and myopia, we can wonder what has happened in both their and our lives over the past decade. Looking into the eyes of the recent graduates, we draw back and see that we have to enter into the third decade of this new millennium with a commitment to try better for them.
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Ukrainian models pose ahead of England game after jail for nude photoshoot in Dubai
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The balcony photoshoot on a skyscraper in Dubai caused outrage when it went viral and 13 members of the group were held in a "hell" jail in the United Arab Emirates
Ukrainian models who were jailed for a racy photoshoot in Dubai this year have today posed in Kyiv to support their country ahead of tonight’s game against England.
The women have used blue and yellow Ukrainian flags as props to back their team hours before the Euro 2020 quarter-final clash.
Yana Graboshchuk, 27, says she is proud of her team, which beat Sweden in an epic tie that went to extra time in the last round. They also overcame North Macedonia in the group stages.
Yana, a trained lawyer, said: "Our team is our pride, I believe in victory.
"We will watch and support Ukraine."
Yana and three of her friends posed overlooking the River Dnipro and People’s Friendship Arch in Kyiv ahead of the fixture.
The models were dubbed the "Butt Squad" after they and several of their pals held a scandalous naked shoot on a balcony in United Arab Emirates.
The 13 women were held in a "hell" jail in Dubai with American playboy Vitaliy Grechin, 41, who is based in Kyiv. They had flown out together for the stunt in April.
Despite being accused of public indecency, the women were eventually released and ordered to leave the United Arab Emirates.
Soviet-born Grechin was a donor to ex-US president Barack Obama.
Speaking in the days after his release, Grechin said: "When people make a mistake and apologise for it, it has to be taken as that.
"Clearly, there was no intent to offend anybody. Clearly, they were not climbing a mosque naked.
"It’s not porn. Everywhere else in the world it would be considered normal. In magazines it would be considered art…it was a unique shot."
The model also tested positive for Covid-19 during his stay behind bars.
Pundits have his country down as underdogs for the tie with England in Rome tonight.
Although England fans were ordered not to visit Italy as it is on the amber list, some have managed to get there .
The majority of these actually live elsewhere in Europe and so won't have to abide to the UK's strict quarantine rules. Italy is currently on the UK's amber list.
Luke Curner, originally from Folkestone, Kent, was able to avoid isolation as he travelled from Helmstedt, Germany, where he lives with his wife and children.
The 36-year-old bought tickets for the match in 2019 as it falls on his birthday weekend.
He said: "I feel very privileged to be here, I'm usually on the wrong end of these kind of situations."
Jack Francis, 20, from Southampton, travelled to Rome from France and said he feels "lucky" to be able to go.
"It feels very surreal, and hopefully it will be a memorable game which will be talked about for years to come if we go all the way," he added.
And back in England, large cities are starting to fill with passionate fans ready to watch the 8pm kick off.
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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
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