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
Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands, but the southern port city of Mariupol is in a dire situation.
Ukrainian officials say Russia's military bombed an art school sheltering ~400 people, adding to already unbearable and deteriorating conditions in the city
This is the second bombing of a building where civilians have taken shelter as the Russians encircled the city
Thousands have died in the city, as food/water/electricity has dried up
Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands, and this morning is emerging from a multi-day curfew.
It coincided with a Ukrainian mil counteroffensive; and such curfews have been implemented in part to root out saboteurs, which is the topic I want to start with...
Our All Things Considered story showed saboteur hunting efforts in W Ukraine, along Belausian border, and central Ukraine.
We began in a small village outside Lviv, W Ukraine, where territorial defense members were taking reports of suspicious activity
Pictured: A Ukr village
In NW Ukraine, along the border with Belarus, in Rivne Oblast, the deputy police chief tells us they are detaining around 16 people per day suspected of passing on information to the Russian government/military:
Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands, but is under a city-wide lockdown until Thursday morning. Local authorities have not said why.
Zelenskyy speaks to the U.S. Congress shortly, and is poised to ask for more help.
Meanwhile: positive signs for civilians as more than 20K have been able to evacuate the embattled southern port city of Mariupol.
The UN now says that the number of refugees that have left Ukraine due to the war exceeds 3 million people
We are soon entering the fourth week of the war.
Beyond the incalculable damage in death and human suffering, Ukraine has estimated that in the last few weeks its economy has lost more than 1/2 a trillion due to the war.
Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands, but was subject to airstrikes Tuesday which hit residential buildings areas around the city.
And tension is rising in the city due to a curfew that will begin this evening, and run until Thursday morning.
The curfew in Kyiv is the longest of its kind since a multi-day curfew was implemented in the first days of the war.
Back then, local authorities said they were on the hunt for Russian saboteurs in the city. This time, they are less descriptive as to why the curfew is necessary
NPR's @LeilaFadel reported from Kyiv that "the sounds of artillery, Russian strikes, that's commonplace" -- but also that Russian forces are 10 miles away from the city center and face enormous challenges if they attempt to breach the city's defenses