tv Newsday BBC News March 8, 2022 1:00am-1:31am GMT
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welcome to newsday, reporting live from singapore, i'm karishma vaswani. the headlines: russian attacks intensify, civilians are trapped as ukrainian forces fight for control. hundreds lining up, hoping to escape to the west. moscow suggests those fleeing can go straight to russia or belarus. ukraine called the move "completely immoral." the un's humanitarian chief urges all sides to ensure safe passage for those trying to flee the fighting. and from living in peace to living in a war zone: our special correspondent, fergal keane, speaks to ukrainians he met before russia's invasion.
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live from our studio in singapore, this is bbc news. it is newsday. it's 9:00 in the morning in singapore, and 3am in kyiv where ukraine's foreign ministry says russia has continued to bombard mariupol, kharkiv and other key cities, preventing the evacuation of civilians. the russians are now said to be in control of these areas that you can see shown in red. negotiations to agree humanitarian corridors broke down after moscow said it would open routes leading to its own territory or to belarus, its ally in the war. the ukrainians dismissed the proposal as completely immoral and russia accused ukraine of blocking the corridors. in the city of irpin,
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1,000 people were ta ken to safety after ukrainian forces repelled russian attacks. 0ur international correspondent 0rla guerin is there, and has been watching people flee their homes. the only way out, and he stumbles, hands shaking, but he summons his courage and carries on. the desperate exodus from irpin today across the wreckage of a bridge blown up by ukraine to slow the russian advance. how scared do you have to be to take your child and flee like this? and here, a woman lies conscious, but immobile. she fell, and there is no stretcher to move her. well, this is a difficult journey every step of the way, especially for older people, trying to pick their way out across rubble and concrete, having to balance
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on bits of wood. ukrainian troops are trying to help them make their way forward. some are coming with their children. most are coming with a few small things they can carry. they've been under bombardment in irpin for days and they're not safe now. even as they try to leave, the shelling has been continuing. explosion for many civilians in the town, that shelling hit home, like anastasia, whose son, 0leg, is just five months old. "the day before yesterday, a shell hit our house," she tells me. "we spent two days at my grandmother's. "now we are leaving because it's too dangerous "to be in any corner of irpin
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with the child." suddenly, this. gunfire some ukrainian forces running for cover. 0thers getting civilians out of the line of fire. kyiv is just half an hour away. if ukraine loses this town, and it's already lost some of it, the russians will be on the road to the capital. andrei, like many here, is begging for a no—fly zone. tell everybody to close the sky urgently. all people need it in ukraine, really. many people stay in irpin for now, they can't go outside, some old people, some young people, they try to do their best there. but we see the russian soldiers, they don't fight with the army,
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they fight with anyone, so tell them please to close the sky. for now, all many can do is cram into minivans bound for the railway station in the capital. generations of ukrainians at the mercy of an increasingly brutal russian advance. and in the city, outside the registry office... air raid siren wails ..the new soundtrack of kyiv. not what kate and artur had hoped for on their special day. the war has tightened their bond, but upended their lives. firstly, it was very scary when it started, but me and... my family and me, we are all christians, we pray to god and we believe that he cares about us and protects us. and you're getting married today,
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which is a very hopeful thing to do. yeah. what kind of future do you see for you both? ah, i see that ukraine will win and we will help to restore the country and make everything possible to make it... air raid siren there were no guests at the ceremony. it was too dangerous for loved ones to join them. the newlyweds say they will have a party when ukraine is victorious. 0rla guerin, bbc news, kyiv. let's take a closer look now at that proposal by russia for humanitarian corridors from key cities where civilians are trapped by the fighting without enough food or water. four of the six routes to safety that moscow suggested go to russia in the east, or to belarus, its key ally, to the north. the other two routes take those fleeing further into ukraine. president zelensky
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has condemned the proposals as "completely immoral". meanwhile, there are desperate scenes at the train station in dnipro where families are trying to flee from the fighting. from there, our correspondent sarah rainsford sent this report. kharkiv is burning again. a russian speaking city, bombed by russian planes, battered by russian shells, in a war vladimir putin says is to protect russian speakers. but his troops are destroying their homes and their lives. the woman who filmed this footage told us ukraine's being punished for its free will and its democracy. valentyna sent her sister and mother to safety today. she told me she wants one thing now — for nato to stop russian
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planes flying over ukraine. "we see them," she said, "and it's terrible." we found families from kharkiv here in dnipro today, trying to flee even further. but it feels like half this city is now leaving too, lining up for evacuation trains as soon as the curfew lifts. shelling, bombing and really loud in kharkiv and it was a really terrible situation because when everything started, our house was, like... i don't know how to tell it, like... every time. her mum is staying put, though it's breaking her. ukrainians are still fiercely loyal to their cause, but realistic about the danger now. we've spoken to people in this queue who've been standing here for six hours in the cold, in the snow, hoping to get a train out of here to the west and to relative safety. but it is only the women
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and children who are being allowed through. the men are being pulled out of the crowd and told they have to stay. families who have no idea when or whether they'll be united again. paulina had to hug her dad goodbye at the border. we first spoke to her in kharkiv, but the little girl has now made it to poland and can get the cancer medicine she needs. paulina... so today, her mum was able to smile. "the only thing is, "she sometimes asks where her daddy is," she tells me. "and i don't know what to say to her." but for the first time in two weeks, paulina is playing again. sarah rainsford, bbc news, dnipro. the united nations�* head of humanitarian affairs has called for civilians in ukraine to be allowed safe passage out of areas under russian attack on a voluntary basis and in any direction they choose. martin griffiths told an emergency meeting
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of the security council in new york that corridors were also needed to deliver aid. meanwhile, speaking at the meeting, the ukrainian representative to the un said russia is cynically disregarding international humanitarian law by blocking human corridors. he also accused russia of deliberately attacking civilians. it is even more appalling that the russian troops are firing on recreation vehicles, on the roads allocated for human corridors. they shower them with evacuation buses. they blew up a railway in the kyiv region to prevent evacuation by train. destroyed the bridge on the way. all the main roads for
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civilians. in return, russia accused ukraine of using civilians as human shields. translation: we are accused of breakin: translation: we are accused of breaking off _ translation: we are accused of breaking off the _ translation: we are accused of breaking off the operation - translation: we are accused of breaking off the operation to - breaking off the operation to evacuate people through the humanitarian corridors, but everything is actually quite the contrary. it is the ukrainians that won't agree to our proposals for a ceasefire and won't allow people to exit through these corridors even though we have ready said these national battalions are holding people hostage in these towns. they are like human shields, putting military technology in accommodation blocks. 0ur un correspondent nada tawfik gave more details on the exchanges at the security council meeting. what we have seen time and time again at security council meetings is the ukrainian ambassador relays what is happening on the ground, the russian ambassador presents his own version of events that really i have to say quite frankly and nobody else on the
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council really buys into. we have martin griffiths here, the un humanitarian trees, saying they have had their first technical meeting with members of the russian ministry of defence, and they are trying to work out a way to allow for the safe passage of humanitarian aid, the safe passage for civilians, and this comes after the secretary general had a conversation on friday with the defence minister of russia, again trying to see how they can make it so that un organisations on the ground can work to help those most in need. we also heard from the us ambassador to the un, linda thomas greenfield, saying as well maybe there should be a framework, away on the ground to communicate when there is going to be civilians coming through, humanitarian convoys coming through. everyone on the council really urging russia to abide by its international
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obligations, and to find a way to ensure that civilians won't get harm trying to flee. you're watching newsday on the bbc. still to come on the programme: our special correspondent fergal keane speaks to ukrainians he met before russia's invasion, whose lives are changed forever. the numbers of dead and wounded defied belief. this, the worst terrorist atrocity on european soil in modern times. in less than 24 hours, then, the soviet union lost an elderly, sick leader, and replaced him with a dynamic figure 20 years his junior. we heard these gunshots in the gym. _ then he came out| through a fire exit and started firing shots. god, we were all petrified. james earl ray, aged 41,
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sentenced to 99 years and due for parole when he's 90, travelled from memphis jail to nashville state prison in an eight—car convoy. reporter: paul, what's it feel like to be married at last? - it feels fine, thank you. what are you going to do now? is it going to change your life much, do you think? i don't know, really — _ i've never been married before. this is newsday on the bbc. i'm karishma vaswani in singapore. 0ur headlines: russia's proposal for civilians to escape to its own territory is condemned as immoral by ukraine. the un's humanitarian chief insists on safe passage for those fleeing the fighting. opposition to the war is being suppressed in russia,
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where thousands have been detained for protesting against the invasion. meanwhile, world leaders are stepping up diplomatic efforts to find a way through the crisis with the us secretary of state antony blinken in eastern europe for talks. 0ur diplomatic correspondent caroline hawley has the latest. they flew in from their battle—ravaged nation, the ukrainian delegation arriving on the border with belarus for a third round of talks with the enemy, with more meetings planned, but there is almost no faith in the sincerity of russia's side. the russian defence ministry today released these images, said to be of tanks around ukraine's capital, kyiv. it is the military hardware, the guns and the bombs, that are doing the talking, and the kremlin has repeatedly made clear it will be satisfied by nothing short of ukraine's surrender. he chants "no to war," this russian man shouts before he's carted away. independent monitors say 5,000
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people were taken into custody over the weekend at protests in dozens of russian cities at a war that you're not even allowed to name. russia is now stepping up its repression, silencing all opposition, virtually all independent media in the country has ceased to function. and a new symbol has emerged to signify support for president putin's war. the letter z first appeared on tanks and military vehicles, but it's now also on bus stops and businesses and elsewhere. look carefully and you'll see it even on this gymnast�*s chest as he took bronze at a world cup event in qatar. it was ukraine who took gold. the quick victory moscow had hoped for in ukraine has failed to materialise.
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russian forces have actually taken very little territory over the past week and instead have resorted to bombing and shelling, causing ever more civilian suffering. translation: what'sl the difference between the peaceful residents of kharkiv or mykolaiv, and hamburg or vienna? we are waiting for a decision. either you clear the skies by the force you have, or give us military aircraft or anti—aircraft defences, which would give us the necessary force. this is the help which the world should provide not simply to ukraine, but to themselves, in order to prove that humanity will prevail. western allies continue to meet day in, day out on what more they can do to support ukraine, what more pressure they can put on president putin, but there's very little hope at the moment of getting russia around a table for meaningful talks that would actually stop the war. caroline hawley, bbc news. the russian ukraine conflict is being fought on many fronts including that of social media, disinformation and cyber attacks. 0lga boichak, a lecturer in digital cultures at the university of sydney and an expert in digital war gave her assessment on the information warfare in this current conflict.
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in this instance, as is the instance with the recent wars we saw, we can intimately observe this conflict, right, there is a lot of footage of films by citizen journalists that makes it to the news, so right now a lot of the imagery, a lot of the witnessing that is happening of this conflict is really raw and unfiltered and hugely traumatising. from what i can tell, it is impressive and amazing that the ukrainian army has been able to do what they did, and i guess the world is watching it has been 12 days of the conflict and they have demonstrated their capacity to defend ukraine from this threat. we know that russia has suffered massive losses, above 10,000 troops, a lot of
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military equipment and such. and so there is, right now, i guess we are all holding our breath and really rooting for the ukrainian army to continue defending ukraine. but the scale of devastation that we are witnessing right now is catastrophic. and, of course, there are some cities that have been subject to two catastrophic attacks. and in this conflict it is really interesting to see how those three kind of layers of conflicts, right, we have this physical boots on the ground, the physical infrastructure, the physical infrastructure, the network layer, the network structure we have the information layer, how they all work sometimes in concert and in the early days especially of this invasion it was russia's strategy to sow chaos and discord so they used sciver... crosstalk. exactly on that point there,
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how is it possible to verify, given we are getting all this information, and possibly disinformation, misinformation, how do people who are consuming this media ensure that what they are getting is the real thing, is accurate?- they are getting is the real thing, is accurate? well, in many instances _ thing, is accurate? well, in many instances it _ thing, is accurate? well, in many instances it is - thing, is accurate? well, in| many instances it is difficult to verify so there are open source intelligence specialists who are much better versed, they are able to check the meta data, they are able to do reverse image search, which is something citizens can also do, but a lot of the times it is about the credibility of the source and it is about whether we can trust the source that is providing this information to us. in the conditions of military conflict it is really difficult to do. so there is no safe way to tell. and a lot of the times we did see a lot of disinformation come out of it, exactly because of these reasons. exactly because of these reason— exactly because of these reasons. ., �* ., . ., ~ reasons. olga boichak there s-ueakin reasons. olga boichak there speaking to _ reasons. olga boichak there speaking to me _ reasons. olga boichak there speaking to me a _ reasons. olga boichak there speaking to me a little - speaking to me a little earlier. let's briefly take a look at some other stories in the headlines.
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as the pandemic enters its third year, more than 6 million people have now died around the world after testing positive for covid—19, according to the latest research byjohns hopkins university. the us has recorded the most confirmed deaths, with almost one million people dying from the virus. hong kong reported more than 25,000 new coronavirus infections and 280 deaths today, as authorities struggle to contain a growing outbreak of covid—19. the virus has hit hundreds of the city's nursing homes and infected many unvaccinated elderly people. hong kong had been successful in controlling the virus, but has recently seen infections soar. back to that war in ukraine. for months, vladimir putin denied repeatedly that russia would invade its neighbour. it means that today's awful reality is one that many ukrainians didn't think they would be facing. our special correspondent fergal keane has caught up with three people he met in the last days of peace.
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we didn't imagine this. explosion that these streets of chernihiv, where we'd walked last month, would now be a place of fire. but even as we took a group photograph on the nearby northern border, the russians were close, getting ready. a thought that haunts our ukrainian producer, sofia. i couldn't believe that it's happened in the same place. when i was with you, i didn't believe at all. within a fortnight, sofia was a refugee, fleeing tojoin herfamily on the polish border. her daughter, anna, aged four, exiled but safe.
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now, from the polish city of krakow, sofia told me of life outside her country. every day and night, i think of what will be next, so it's very stressful. but still, if i speak with ukrainian people who are still in ukraine, i can't say that i'm stressed because they are more stressed than me. not far from the border, down along the roads now dominated by the russian army... 1989. ..we met valery and galina. he is ukrainian, she is russian. married a0 years, and worried even then about broken relationships with russian friends and family. it's terrible, because we... we lose a lot of friends. we have no food in the supermarket.
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now i can only reach them online. they are trapped inside a town, surrounded by the russians. you even cannot imagine, all people got together, and they are waiting for the russians to kill them. how is galina? hi, galina. hi. translation: | feel only. disappointment and anger. and i cannot understand how this can be happening. this isn't possible. in kyiv, at the end of ourjourney then, we witnessed the beginning of another. hello! hello. vasily and 0lga zelenskyy with their newborn baby, jaromir. his name means peace. translation: we need to think about the better life, _ especially now, when we have such a miracle in our arms. we can't think about bad things any more. but not long after, this came —
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the invasion that forced them to flee to the countryside ahead of the russian advance. 0lga, what is it like for you, all of this now, with the baby and the war? translation: we met your team a week before the war started. - who would have thought that when our son was two weeks old, we were going to speak here, right now, after seeing these rockets flying over our house? to say that i was shocked is saying nothing. that's why our whole lives turned all over, from head to toe. butjaromir gives them hope. he is a superstar! laughter maybe he knows that. all of these people once lived in peace. caused no harm to anyone. that's the kind of world they stand for, and which they hope can return for their children. fergal keane, bbc news, lviv.
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that is all the time we have for you on newsday. thank you for you on newsday. thank you forjoining us. do stay with us bbc for the latest global headlines. hello. a frosty but sunny start to tuesday across many parts of the country. but tuesday signifies the start of things changing for the rest of the week, replacing the sunshine with a bit more cloud. 0ften going to be quite windy at times with all that wind, slightly milder air pushing its way in, but also some wet conditions now, mainly in the west. and that shows up on our forecast rainfall chart for the week — the blue colours here a sign that atlantic is trying to push its way in. but notice how some eastern areas could stay predominantly dry. and it's all down to high pressure holding on here — atlantic low pressure system starting to push its way in, but being kept at bay. just be wary, though, that dividing line could fluctuate a little bit through the week. but that's the scene for today, with winds picking up as those areas of high and low pressure get closer together. it'll feel particularly
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chilly out there — not only a widespread frost, but that added wind chill to go with it. the compensation is lots of sunshine around first thing in the morning, and most places will be dry. but the sunshine turns hazy in the west, the cloud thickens up, skies turn greyer through the morning into the early afternoon, outbreaks of rain in northern ireland, eventually to parts of wales and the southwest, maybe just 1—2 showers ahead of it, that rain arriving in western scotland by the end of the day. and it's in the west where we see the strongest of the winds, could gust around 40—50 mph and, even though it's a south—to—southeasterly wind bringing in slightly milder conditions than we've seen through the past few days. factor in the wind, probably won't feel that much different. but a dry end to the day for eastern areas but, through the evening, we see the cloud, outbreaks of rain pushing its way northwards and eastwards. not a huge amount of rain on it, though, it fizzles out — it means a milder night, then, to take us into wednesday, but more weather fronts starting to push their way in. but they will start to drag in even milderair, up from the mid—atlantic as they work closer and closer, and so temperatures should rise a little bit further. as i said, though, frost—free on wednesday, varying amounts of clouds, some sunshine around
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for many at times to begin, with the exception being northern ireland, western scotland. a rather wet day to come here, some of that rain will be heavy at times, strong to gale—force winds once again. much of eastern wales good parts of england stays dry with some sunny spells, highs around 12—13 celsius. those temperatures could rise a little bit further as we go through into thursday. as you can see still, the areas of low pressure gang in the way up, but fizzling out as they run into that high—pressure system. so it does look like thursday, the driest, brightest day of the week by and large. friday, a bit more rain coming ourway.
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