Nataliya Gumenyuk

[3] Towards the end of this period, in 2009, for the first time among Ukrainian TV channels, INTER was nominated for an Emmy Award in the News category for its coverage of the South Ossetian War (reporter Ruslan Yarmolyuk).

[4][8][10] In 2010–2011, Gumenyuk was the editor-in-chief of the project "Ours" (INTER, studio "07 Production") whose focus was on fifteen TV programs about Ukrainians who left Ukraine for various reasons and became successful abroad, including in Norway, Brazil, South Africa, India, China, among others.

[19] In 2020, Nataliya Gumenyuk and other Ukrainian journalists and communications specialists founded Public Interest Journalism Lab, an experimental laboratory that promotes constructive discussion around complex social issues.

[27][28] Within The Reckoning Project, Anne Applebaum and Nataliya Gumenyuk wrote an article for The Atlantic on how Russian invaders unleashed violence on small-town residents.

[29] Gumenyuk has reported from major areas affected by the Russian invasion: the town of Bucha, and the Kharkiv, Mykolaiv, and Kherson cities and regions.

Nataliya Gumeyuk was the head, producer, and editor-in-chief of the multimedia documentary project Our 30 years dedicated to the history of the 1990s presented by Ukrainians themselves.

This project was produced by the Public Interest Journalism Lab team to mark the 30th anniversary of Ukraine's independence.

As a result, 9 documentaries, 20 podcasts, special projects, and dozens of short video testimonies of that time were released on the air and on the platforms of the Public Broadcaster of Ukraine.

[26][32] In Minsk, on August 12, 2017, she married Peter Ruzavin, a reporter for Mediazona and a former journalist of the Russian TV channel Dozhd.