Solidrones
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Drony pro antiautoritářské bojovníky v Ukrajině
/// Drones for anti-authoritarian fighters in Ukraine

🔗 https://linktr.ee/solidrones
💸 https://donio.cz/drony-solidarity-ctyri
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Report: November 2024 — February 2025

Hello, friends!

The past four months — from November to February — have been incredibly intense and productive for us. We stepped away from the format of monthly reports due to the pace of work and the constant stream of events. But today, we want to share the highlights and outcomes of this period with you.

Key Events and Achievements:

Solidarity Week

The brightest moment of this winter was Solidarity Week — when dozens of initiatives, activists, and groups around the world united in acts of support for the Ukrainian resistance. From Tokyo to Tel Aviv, voices of solidarity rang out, highlighting the global unity in the fight for freedom.

Entering our third year

We marked the start of our third year of activity. We summarized the previous year in a short video report, showcasing our key achievements and plans for the future.

Fundraising and Procurement:

Thanks to your support, we raised and allocated significant funds to meet urgent frontline needs:
Two vehicles: Mitsubishi L200 (already delivered) and Pajero Sport (in the process of being purchased)
Sich UAV: currently being purchased
Avenger antennas: two units delivered
Steiner DBAL-A3 laser designator: delivered

Total spent on these items: approx. €46,990

Additional Deliveries:

Beyond the big purchases, we carried out dozens of other transfers, including:
10 × direct financial aid (for soldiers without salaries)
8 × vehicle repairs
72 × tourniquets
9 × generators
11 × power stations
430 × chemical hand warmers

and hundreds of other items — full breakdown available in the slides below.

Drone Workshop:

Over the past few months, our drone workshop — in cooperation with Czech initiatives Solidrones and Resistance Support Club — produced and delivered:
45 ten-inch FPV drones
23 seven-inch FPV drones


This is the result of cross-border solidarity and grassroots technical collaboration.

Humanitarian Missions:

Our humanitarian team completed two trips to frontline areas, visiting: Sumy, Izium, Kupiansk, Kramatorsk, Dobropillia, and Vysokopillia. We delivered aid to local civilians and the animals they care for, while also gathering updated requests for future missions.

Thank You:
We are deeply grateful to each and every one of you for your support, trust, and solidarity.

Together, we’re not just responding to urgent needs — we’re building networks of care, mutual aid, and resistance.

Solidarity is our weapon. Free people are our strength.
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[CZE] Děkujeme, díky vašim příspěvkům posíláme drony, které jsme vyrobili za peníze z poslední sbírky, kamarádům antiautoritářům na frontu. A pokračujeme, další novinky přijdou brzy.
[ENG] Thank you. Thanks to your donations in the last successful fundraiser, we are shipping the drones we made to our friends, anti-authoritarian fighters on the front lines. We keep on working, more news coming soon.
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[CZE] 🎮💸🖤 Je to tu! Další možnost přispět na drony pro antiautoritářské bojovníky a bojovnice proti ruské invazi. Sdílejte, šiřte, díky!

[ENG] 🎮💸🖤 Here it comes! Another chance to contribute for drones for anti-authoritarians fighting against Russian invasion. Share, spread, thanks!

https://donio.cz/drony-solidarity-3
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[CZE] 💣 Drony solidarity pokračují. Antiautoritářským obráncům a obránkyním Ukrajiny jsme díky vám a vašim příspěvkům předali už stovky dronů. Máme za sebou tři úspěšné sbírky a nezastavujeme.

[ENG] 💣 Solidrones keep on working! Thanks to you and your contributions, we have already delivered hundreds of drones to the anti-authoritarian defenders of Ukraine. We have completed three successful fundraisers and we are not stopping.

https://donio.cz/drony-solidarity-ctyri
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Dnešní díl Toulky Českem budoucnosti – Výroba bezpilotních strojů nabízí stručný přehled aktuálních témat kolem vývoje a výroby dronů:

🚁 Dronetag
📜 Historie bezpilotních strojů
🎓 Drony z ČVUT
🔧 Vrtule Tomáše Mejzlíka
📈 Trendy oboru

https://www.ceskatelevize.cz/porady/13375839333-toulky-ceskem-budoucnosti/225562221510004/
🇬🇧“Solidarity Collectives” continue supporting new fighters — meet Dmytro, an activist from Zhytomyr, a self-taught architect, and an anarcho-communist who recently joined the army.

“In general, I wanted to join from the very beginning, but I was really scared. I tried to overcome my fear — and joined on the second attempt.
The first time I just chickened out during recruitment — I said: ‘Sorry, goodbye, not interested.’ But then, at the end of this summer, I started seriously thinking again, because the only thing stopping me was fear. I never had those thoughts like ‘I don’t want to go because…’ followed by some of those silly excuses. And it’s not about politicians’ kids or anything — just fear.

So I had a beer, wrote to my future commander: ‘I’m really scared, but I want to join.’ We talked. I’m a self-taught architect, and my direct commander happens to be an architect too — though we probably won’t talk much about architecture, since it’s an artillery brigade. Still, it’s nice to work with people who speak your language.

I had a few options — building defensive lines, piloting drones — but I decided to go into artillery.
Previously, I only did my mandatory service in a pontoon-bridge brigade as a firefighter, back in 2016–2018. In our platoon we actually put out two fires. Once, the paint shop in our unit burned down; another time, a nearby barrack caught fire — the one where contract soldiers lived, those who get housing from the army. Apart from that, nothing special — marching drills, straightening corners on the blankets. We had these blue blankets with white lines, and we had to align everything along those lines — that kind of army madness.
But even that kind of service helped me as a man who grew up without a father. Of course, it was a real pain in the ass, but it showed me that I can handle more than I think.

Not all instructors here have combat experience, but we got a real combat scout. He teaches us not from books, but tells us what actually matters — what to bring, how much, and why. And the commander, he’s kind of a ‘military type,’ but a really good person, an exemplary officer for greeting newcomers.

It’s a bit hard to maintain a long-distance relationship with my girlfriend, but we agreed on it and she supports me.
In the first year of the war, in summer, one of the Solidarity Collectives’ members hosted me. That’s how I met Finbar (Cafferkey), and I realized — being among leftists is another thing. Earlier, I worked with guys on developing my hometown Zhytomyr, but they weren’t leftists, just urban activists. We did projects, applied for grants, did tons of work — and kept getting rejections.

I guess my leftist views helped me take this responsibility — gave me the understanding of why this fight matters, why society has to resist. Because if I thought only about myself, I probably would’ve fled Ukraine in the first months of the war. Working in Lviv, it was easy — you could just grab a backpack and go; hardly anyone was being stopped. But I didn’t see myself doing that.

Now I’ll have an interesting and meaningful position. I still see myself as a civilian who joined to do a job — because someone has to do it.”
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