Putin held a stadium rally last night; while Zelenskyy gave a one-on-one appeal to the camera...
Zelenskyy said 180,000 have been rescued by humanitarian corridors, including thousands from embattled Mariupol...
Mariupol is a southern city enduring widespread suffering due to encirclement, bombardment and dwindling supplies of food/water.
Zelensky said 9K people evacuated in last day.
I spoke to a soldier today from Mariupol. He hadn't spoken to his family since March 3.
Zelenskyy: 180K have been rescued fr/cities under Russian attack via humanitarian corridors (7 of which are currently active)
“The initial plan of the Russian military to seize our state failed,” he said, so they have nothing else but “cruel and erroneous tactics to exhaust us."
Vladimir Putin tried to justify the invasion of Ukraine during a Friday evening rally in Moscow, but his speech was cut off due to what was described by the Russian government as a technical error.
I spoke to Serhii, a Ukrainian who seemed to be grappling with the exhilaration/highs & lows of war:
“These are the best weeks of my life. I feel so much love for the people around me. And so much hate for the enemies. This duality is a powerful source of motivation for me.”
The images that Serhii is seeing are images like this…
These photos are from Podilskyi, an area of Kyiv, via the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs:
And this, in western Ukraine... images of the building on the Lviv airport complex that was hit by Russian missile strikes yesterday around dawn:
Before (left) and after (right), via Planet Labs satellite imagery:
As we traveled in central Ukraine, we noticed that parts of the country were adjusting to the reality of war.
Even with air sirens a common occurrence, shops and restaurants made timid steps towards full opening in the city of Vinnytsia
Even the trams and buses were running, although they stopped when there were air sirens:
We also toured playgrounds, schools and apartments near the Vinnytsia city center - largely empty due to the bombing of a television tower in the city
Here’s what it sounds and looks like as you hustle down the street to your bomb shelter
But air raid siren time is actually not a bad way to get a pause and get some work done
This is something we saw as we traveled throughout central Ukraine yesterday: tractors in the field preparing for spring -->
This is Busya, a cat doing what cats do — lie on top of fridges.
She’s hanging out in a private animal shelter organized in the home of one elderly pensioner who is passionate about dogs and cats. (I’m profiling her and others)
Here’s the dog of war for the day, in a private shelter that specializes in taking in dogs and cats with medical ailments.
I wrote the name down but I think autocorrect ruined it! My notes say Dulcimer.
You shelter until the threat is over, so that could be minutes or hours — and there’s no way of knowing in advance
Good morning to readers; Kyiv remains in Ukraine’s hands.
Poland and Ukraine are strong allies.
But unresolved historical tensions strain their relations, threatening Ukraine's accession to the EU.
Many Poles, like ambassador Bartosz Cichocki, cannot forgive the Volhynian massacre.
More than 80 years ago, Ukrainian nationalists killed thousands of Poles in the western regions of Ukraine. They targeted children, women, the elderly, and other civilians. In retaliation, Poles carried out numerous revenge attacks against the Ukrainian population.
It happened almost a century ago, but these historical events have real world implications for Ukraine’s future – it is a bitter point between two countries that are otherwise close allies due to Russian aggression, and a point of friction that could keep Ukraine out of the EU.
Good morning readers, Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.
A Russian documentary that whitewashes the crimes of the Russian military in Ukraine has turned out to be funded by Canada.
Olha Glotka, who saw these crimes with her own eyes, is outraged by the film's debut in Toronto.
This Friday, a documentary film about Russian soldiers illegally occupying Ukraine will make its North American debut at the Toronto Film Festival.
The movie – titled 'Russians at War' – has been criticized by Ukrainians and pro-Ukrainian Canadians as overtly propagandistic.
Filmmaker Anastasia Trofimova not only did the film with the blessing of Russian troops in Ukraine, but also with hundreds of thousands of Canadian taxpayer dollars.
Good morning to readers; Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.
So does the city of Sudzha.
Russia justifies its invasion by reclaiming “historic” territories.
But the past of Kyiv's seized areas in Russia, like Sudzha — a former Ukrainian city — shows the absurdity of such claims.
The history of Sudzha, like many cities along the Russian-Ukrainian border, has ties to both nations.
Putin’s imperial logic would suggest Ukraine would have a claim on this territory – something the Ukrainians themselves have rejected.
Sudzha was founded in the middle of the 17th century as a city of Cossacks – a semi-nomadic peoples who lived on the territory of Ukraine and are considered by many to be the ancestors of Ukrainians.
Good morning to readers; Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.
The Red Cross’s job is to monitor/facilitate international law. In Ukraine, it’s obvious that it has failed.
Meet Illia: His family didn't know he was alive because the Red Cross lost his info while he was a POW.
When Ukrainians were beaten to death in Russian prisoner of war camps, the Red Cross was nowhere to be seen.
The organization left Mariupol early in the full-blown war when more than 300,000 civilians were surrounded by occupation troops, leaving them to their fates.
And it failed to do enough as evidence has piled up that Russia has violated international humanitarian law — time and time again.
That’s despite the ICRC’s role being to enforce the so-called “rules of war”, protecting humanitarian rights.
NEWSFLASH: Children's hospital struck in brazen Russian daylight attack
Just a week ago we profiled the work of the Okhmatdyt Children's Clinic in Kyiv. Today, it was hit. We rushed to the scene to report.
In central Kyiv, you can hear the difference between outgoing air defense missiles, firing up over the city: a hollow ‘poof!’ sound.
And then there’s the kind of explosion you don’t want to hear:
…a crunchier, sharper sound indicating something on the ground has been hit.
Today, the sites hit include a children’s hospital.
Larysa Moisienko, a senior nurse at the trauma unit said:
"The blast wave completely blew us all away to the corner. At that time, all the windows and doors were blown out, absolutely everything was blown out," Larysa said.