His family is in besieged Mariupol, and he hasn't heard from them in more than two weeks.
Photo: A pensioner sweeping in Odesa, near a barricade...
And other scenes in Odesa, which in normal times would be a bustling tourism hotspot
NPR visited military positions in the southern part of Ukraine in the last 24 hours...
...Will share the details in the next couple hours, but standby, I need to run to an interview...
This is the south of Ukraine, along the Black Sea.
It in this region that Ukrainian officials say that they are prepared for the Russian military if they try an amphibious landing
If the Russian military were to do an amphibious landing near Odesa, this is one of the places they might do it
We observed armored vehicles, mined beaches, and entrenched fighting positions meant to fight off any potential Russian amphibious landing in southwestern Ukraine.
We also observed the sign posts that Ukrainians have taken down and replaced with new messages.
This one tells the Russians where they can go… I’ll let you do the translation yourself.
Scenes across southern Ukraine: wind turbines near the Black Sea, a tower with the a Ukrainian flag, if you look closely
Two weeks ago, and 30km away, a downed Russian pilot was captured in this region… and handed over to the Ukrainian authorities, the UKR military says.
There’s a similarity between the badges I see on Ukrainian kit, and those I've seen in the United States, where ‘Molon Labe’ is very popular
Along the way we met another Eugene, who said that he got this suppressor for his rifle eight years ago when the war broke out, and that it's nearly impossible to find that sort of thing for sale now:
Here I am trying to do a stand-up on an armored vehicle that Ukrainian marines use, when they started it up suddenly
Today’s dog of war is Louie, who accosted me as I was trying to get some reporting done
Neither Louie nor Gilza seem to understand the meaning of "I'm on deadline!"
Senior U.S. defense official: Russian forces have shown almost no signs of advancing over past week.
Artillery shelling, air missions, naval shelling in the Black Sea all up, though no momentum and no imminent landing around Odesa
Senior U.S. defense official, cont.:
Russian mil are continuing to have logistics issues, said the official, and a significant # of their precision-guided weapons are failing to launch/not exploding on impact.
But Russia still has close to 90% of their combat power available.
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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
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."
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.