tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN March 3, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PST
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this is cnn breaking news. >> march through ukraine has been slower than expected. there is growing fear that the kremlin is about to intensify the onslaught. minutes ago brittain's defense ministry said major cities like kharkiv and mariupol that are under siege remain in ukrainian hands, however. some local leaders say the cities are close to breaking point. a few hours ago a shell hit an oil depot in an airstrike north of kyiv. these satellite images from earlier this week show homes in the same city where that strike occurred with fire damage and kralters dotting nearby fields.
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they are taking serious hits. on wednesday fighter jets screamed overhead before a jarring blast followed. this is on the northwestern edge of the capitol. and just hours ago images posted online show an explosion southwest of kyiv. and as for that long russian convoy we've been reporting on trying to close in on ukraine's seat of government, the pentagon says it has stalled or continues to be stalled. the ukrainian president meanwhile hold up in a bunker he claims some russian occupiers have given up. >> translator: our military, our border guards, our territorial beacons, even ordinary farmers capture the russian military every day. all the captives say only one
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thing, they do not know why they are here. despite the fact there are dozens of times more of them, the morale of the enemy is constantly deteriorating. >> reporter: however, russian droops take one area, the fall of kherson. it is located near the black sea just northwest of occupied crimea. a former nato commander said vladimir putin is eager to establish a long wanted land corridor from russia to crimea. it is unclear how many lives have been lost. the u.n. says at least 227 civilians have been killed so far. ukraine's state emergency service had a much higher toll, more than 2,000 dead. but it later backtracked on that number. cnn of course cannot
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independently confirm any of those figures. something we do know, however, 1 million people have fled ukraine in just one week according to the u.n. high commissioner for refugees. it took three months for 1 million people to leave in afghanistan. we're talking before and that number is so staggering. you had to ask your beam just how big it was. >> absolutely, michael. speed and swiftness and immense sorrow. it's unprecedented. we've never seen anything like it. a million people in seven days, that's half a million boys and girls, half a million children.
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half of these are kids. we are watching another nation where children, there's no school. they're learning what conflict looks like. they're learning air raid siren, get out of my bed, flee to my bunker. >> a mother the other day on air had to tell her children when the explosions are coming, lay down on the ground, open your mouth, cover your ears, telling a 5-year-old that. can you imagine? what is the latest you were hearing. what's it like? >> much improved. there's backlogs in cars but they're not out freezing. the kids in bunkers. i spoke to a little girl two days ago who said through their mom when she was in the bunker, there were rats. sophia, yes, but there's no bombs. it's madness of what kids are
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starting to deal with. there are parents who don't want to leave and decided the only place to be safe is out of the home country. the idps, there are a lot of them. >> there are a lot of them. there are a lot of reception centers in lviv. i see families saying, we've been here for 12 hours, do you want a bed. there are a lot of people who don't have anywhere to go. a lot of people in kyiv who have had to leave bunkers. they try to go to farm land. they're in farm land and there's an attack. conflict like this, they're out of options. the only option is they pray the conflict stops. >> what do you call on nations to do to help alleviate the situation? >> tolerance and physical support unfortunately for an
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operation like this. women having babies in bunkers. emergency sanitation and so on. it needs funds. countries have to back their words with fiscal support and tolerance. we know that migrants bring value and culture in a place they want to go. at least when they get across the border, make sure there's welcome and supplies. >> you were telling me earlier you're more effective in lviv than perhaps kyiv. speak of that, the difficulty of operating in a war zone. >> it's a great question. we have to have humanitarian space open. that's not the case when you've got civilians being hit. we know children are being killed. we know we have hospitals being
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hit. that's our job. we have to reach children wherever they are. >> there are already some children, i was reading the other day one of the main storage places for insulin is cut off. that's going to be a problem. what other shortages do you worry about in terms of medical supplies, food? >> absolutely. we worry about water in the east. ukraines are pretty hearty. it goes to the river. water is everything. it's about disease. medicines, we're seeing shortages. for sure people who leave with what they've got, they run out of money. very hard for food. stop the missiles, stop the problems. >> the idps, the staggering number of people who have crossed the borders. how much worse can it get? >> oh, my god. much worse. we are seeing incredibly, incredulously more people every
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day. 100,000, 150,000 people a day. husbands and wives are embracing, ripping apart. fathers are ripping apart. this is why you're going to a country you don't know. they are teachers, physios, mechanics. the only way to keep safe is to go and they are still going. >> there will be time later to talk about this. what you're mentioning there, this is a massive brain drain. that's not the immediate concern. james elder with unicef. thank you for all the work you are to go. important work. >> thanks. all right. well, america's top diplomat will soon be on his way to brussels to meet with the nato allies. this as the biden administration rolls out more sanctions. president joe biden will convene his cabinet in the coming hours for a meeting largely about this crisis, of course. he says, quote, it is clear
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russia is targeting ukrainian civilians but says it is too early to call them war crimes. white house reporter kevin liptak joins me from washington. what are the new sanctions the u.s. is going to implement? fill us in. >> reporter: these are sanctions both on russia and very importantly on belarus which has been russia's ally in this conflict allowing russian forces to amass on their border with ukraine and enter ukraine from there. now on russia the u.s. has sanctioned mostly sectors related to the defense industry. companies producing aircraft, vehicles, weapons, systems that manage warfare. now most interestingly i think are the sanctions that the u.s. has applied on the energy center. abandoning export into russia used for the extraction of oil and gas. when you talked to u.s.
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officials any kind of sanctions on the energy industry were considered off the table given the effect that might be on the global oil markets, on gas prices potentially here in the united states. now you're seeing the u.s. inching sort of towards that direction. we talked with president biden. we asked if there was a ban on russian oil imports. he said nothing was off the table. that's a change from the u.s. stance if a week ago. we're told the u.s. treasury is developing additional lists of oligarchs to potentially sanction. you heard president biden in higgs state of the union address saying he wanted to go after the ill begotten gains from the oligarchs, yachts, private jets, luxury apartments. they're forming a task force that would look to seize these assets in the united states,
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find them and seize them. they're calling it the clept tow for tunes. the big question is whether any of this can change the events in ukraine. you are starting to hear some pessimism even as the umpt s. officials say the russian advances have slowed, potentially stalled. we talked with one u.s. official who said they expects the slow annihilation of the ukrainian military in the days ahead. you heard president biden say russia is now targeting ukrainian civilians. he stopped short of calling it a war crime. certainly here in washington the picture of the next coming days is not a bright one, michael. >> yeah. yeah. absolutely. kevin liptak in washington. thanks for the update, kevin. we'll be checking in with you. meanwhile, i'm michael holmes in lviv.
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we've seen videos of russian forces moving exceptionally lethal weaponry into ukraine which has no place on the battlefield. that includes cluster munitions and vacuum bombs which are banned under the geneva convention. >> that is the u.s. ambassador to the u.n., linda thomas greenfield speaking at the united nations today accusing russia of war crimes. putin's forces inch ever close to kyiv. the u.n. general assembly voted on a resolution demanding he withdraw from ukraine. only four countries out of the 181 nations voted against north korea, belarus and surprisingly russia. a handful of nations abstained including china, iran and cuba
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all of which are reliable russian allies, of course. >> often next steps he is meeting with the ublt cravenian employees. krchb's natasha bertrand joins us. i want to start this hour if i may reply to refugees. what is the eu doing trying to protect ukrainian refugees? >> reporter: well, they're meeting today, the justice and home affairs ministers, to implement a protective order.
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it will give them residence for up to three years. it will allow them to access the labor market and education and minimize the red tape that would prevent refugees from moving into the european union and quickly getting settled there. it's recognized and they're hoping to get all e.u. states on the same page and get them settled as quickly as possible. we know the refugee situation is quickly escalating and it's exponentially increasing every single day. almost 1 million refugees already fled the war and it's putting a burden, as i said, on the e.u. member states. in the next several days they're
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hoping to implement it. the situation is goating more and more every day. the system is getting over burdened. in the coming hours we expect to hear more about how this is going to be implemented. secretary of state antony blinken will be here in brussels meeting with foreign leaders and allies. they will be discussing increased humanitarian assistance and increased lethal weapon deliveries to that country as they fight off russia. >> i know you're bringing us the very latest when we hear from secretary blinken. thank you very much, natasha. you are looking at russian anti-war protesters chanting for
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an elderly woman arrested in the streets. she was detaped for 1350eking out against the war in ukraine. a local monitoring group says more than 7 600 protesters have been detained in russia since the conflict began. antiwar rallies included 1200 students, staff members of the top foreign service member. he published against the war. adding to the anger will be among growing russian two turmoil. jpmorgan now warns the sanctions by the west sharply increased the chance of a russian default. we are also seeing the price of oil continue to surge as we have seen the last few days which means increased pressure on gasoline prices. since monday's crude has spiked
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more than 50%. anna coren is here to discuss it. let's start, anna, with what jpmorgan is saying. we could be looking at more than a default. we could be looking at depression, economic depression in russia. >> in terms of default, that is no, sir surprise but also the fact russia pants to see that being drawn up. it has financial connections with the world. yes, we're looking at a diver sauce of the ruble, that will make imports and everyday life, just the general products and services that you expect to be able to use, apple pay, being
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able to buy nike shoes, connections with the west are being severed. you have big shipping giants who say they will no longer take any cargo that isn't food, medicine or humanitarian aid. that will impact imports. >> bring that graphic up again. the corporate squeeze of how much that will impact russia. also i know that oil and gas isn't sanctioned, anna, but already we're seeing a lot of companies, all companies leaving, reconsidering whether they do any investment in russia at this point. >> exactly. that list is getting longer and longer. some of the first are the energy companies, bp, shell, all pulling out of the country. that's not helping oil prices. once again, another record high,
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brent at $118 a barrel. that is despite the fact that oil and gas in russia is not curr currently sanctioned but it is being sanctioned tnd that is a result of them through the sanctions and president biden entered. he has indicated. coming up, russian attacks, ramping up, ukrainians remain defiant. we'll take you there next. when the history of this area is written, ukraine will have left russia weaker and the russians of the world stronger. . - i love my home.
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sergei lavrov, the russian foreign minister, is speaking in moscow. we are monitoring that. we will bring you any noteworthy comments out of that as soon as we get them. we are following that for you. i'm michael holmes live in lviv, ukraine. its invasion of ukraine goes into an eighth day. satellite images showing destruction 50 miles or 80 kilometers now .
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they could see more civivilians targeted but ukrainians remain defiant. protesters in mariupol blocking a russian military convoy on tuesday. the lead vehicle was able to inch forward until the protesters eventually moved out of the way. we continue to see that kind of resistance despite the increasing resistance. >> reporter: russia's assault on ukraine continues without mercy. this is what's left of a university in kharkiv, the country's second city.
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they say hundreds of casualties are now feared. united nations has confirmed more than 200 civilians are killed. ukrainians say the figure is much higher. you'd think those figures would scare people off the streets. look at this scene from the town where they hold up two grey nats for protection after delivering an ultimatum demanding surrender. shame on you. go back to where you came from. minutes later the local mayor sets out russia's terms.
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if we start resisting, they will shell the city, he tells the crowd. but if you vote for it, we will fight back. the decision has to be taken by everyone because the artillery is aimed at us. across ukraine there continue to be courageous acts of defiance against russia. this was a southern town now under russian control. locals lying in front of the military vehicles to resist. there's resistance on the battlefield. nearly 500 of their own soldiers have been killed so far. ukrainians say it is closer to 6,000. either way, human cost of this war has already been tragically
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high. matthew chance, cnn, kyiv. >> all right. want to play you now the heartbreaking plea of the ukrainian refugee. have a listen. >> ukrainians, we're friendly. we don't want to have war. we don't want to have war. we want just peace. we want to have children to go to school, to go to work. we ask russian president, all russians, please stop the war. it is so dangerous. >> she is among the 1 million people who have fled ukraine to escape this war in just over a week according to the u.n. some getting out by trains like this one in kharkiv which are taking people across the border where humanitarian aid is ready
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and waiting. cnn's scott mcclain joins me with more. you covered the polish border. it was pretty crazy up there for a while. what are you hearing now? >> we're hearing that they're finding more and more unaccompanied children. i haven't seen that but it's becoming more and more of a problem, perhaps people getting separated along the way. wherever the chaos. perhaps men are finding it difficult to leave so they're sending children with others. it's not entirely clear. every circumstance is certainly different. the bottom line is it is getting easier to get out of the country. we're seeing less traffic by foot and by car. at the train station things are getting more orderly. there is a steady stream of people trying to leave.
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far fewer men trying to get out. women and children are lined up. the folks waiting for the train last night, they were there for hours. they didn't know when or if that train would come at all. they are allowing men on board, lesser numbers, only specific trains they are delegating. other than that, it is the smallest, most vulnerable children getting on the trains first. i spoke to one man who was in line. i spotted him because it's unusual to see men in line, especially ukrainian men. he wasn't there to try to get on the train, he was there because he knew what he was going to have to do. he knew he was going to have to go sign up for the military. he just wanted to spend every last moment that he possibly could for them. he was in line with them for a couple of hours. he walked them up to the door of the train, gave them a kiss and hug and it was an emotional moment. you can understand why. he has no idea if they're going to be gone for a few days or a couple of months. this is what he said. >> this is war and for me it's
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better that they will be safe and that's why i have feelings. i have to understand they are in safety. >> translator: it is very difficult. i don't feel any emotions. i hope i will come back. i don't think it's going to be for a long time. i think everything is going to be fine. we will wait, i believe. >> reporter: the chant you heard from the crowd is glory to ukraine. glory to heroes. there was a lot of patriotism in the line. a lot of people feeling optimistic and that man himself is going to enlist in the military this morning here in lviv. he says he has some level of confidence that the war could end in a matter of days but obviously they simply don't know. the trains that are coming in
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are specially just shuttling back and forth between poland. they don't have anybody coming this way. we are expecting to see trains packed with humanitarian aid for ukraine. >> i had a representative from unicef on earlier and we were talking about how incredible, he's never seen anything like it, a million people in eight days fleeing the country. half of them are kids, half of them. what are some of these parents anything. >> it is remarkable. by the time i have spoken to them, whether it's at the border or in lviv, they have traveled sometimes two or three days because it is difficult to get out of kyiv, difficult to get out of other cities especially if you are relying on these packed trains. they're coming sporadically and a bit of chaos. others are coming by car but it's difficult with log jams and checkpoints, different things
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like that. they're exhausted by the time they get here. they're exhausted, overwhelmed. the tears come easily, everything doesn't take much to set you off. it's difficult enough just surviving, getting along in everyday life with a small child and keeping them safe, healthy, happy. just imagine doing that in circumstances where you're waiting outside in hours on end. >> and explaining to them what a war is. >> yeah. exactly. difficult conversation for sure. >> scott mclean, great to have you on set here. we will be back with much more after the break.
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coming together to gear up for a fight against russians in ukraine. lviv is untouched by ground battles or artillery or missiles. as anderson cooper reports, the residents still want to be ready. >> they are welding steel to block roads, hedge hogs they're told. >> these are most effective when the ground is soft and they can get dug down into the earth or on a cobble stonestreet. they can dig down. with hedge hogs this size, it's unlikely to be able to stop a russian tank but perhaps a vehicle or humvee. la viv so far has been unscathe.
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each night, each day a determination here grows. at a brewery in lviv they make molotov cocktails. this man says they've made 2,000 at least using empty bottles of the popular anti-putin beer. the beer is called putin dickhead? >> yes. we started to brew it in 2015 because in 2014 russians came to crimea peninsula and got it. this label has the history. >> that's quite the image. primitive weapon, potentially deadly. they have additional things in it to make it stick.
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>> pet troll alone -- >> yeah, stick on the surface. you have maybe 70 or so men standing near a car and there was a ukrainian in uniform explaining to them how to throw a molotov cocktail inside a vehicle. there's a lot of people here trying to get as much training as they can in order to be able to face russian forces if and when they come. in another neighborhood residents gather supplies and accepted them wherever they're needed. spike strips to puncture tires. flak jackets with metal inside. we're continually sending them to our guys there throughout the day. here you can see camouflage nets used as cover so the enemy doesn't know where our tanks are
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located. in others we have medicine and groceries. a week ago he was a construction worker but then putin invaded and everything changed. >> reporter: you have a message to vladimir putin. what is it? what would i tell him? i would tell him he can go [ bleep ] himself. 14-year-old andre's school is closed. volunteering makes him less nervous about the war. are you scared? >> first time i was but now i understand that we need help and support our soldiers and people a and. before we leave we meet pave slow and his son artur, 10 months old. >> i want to say my son archer will learn to say glory to
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ukraine faster than mom and dad. >> reporter: those will be his first words? anderson cooper, cnn, lviv, ukraine. joining me now from kyiv is lycia vasalenko. i'm glad we were able to connect with you. it wasn't easy. i want to start with a tweet that you posted. i want people to hear it and see the words. you said this, i don't know what to write anymore. second time in three months i had to hand off my 9 months baby girl not knowing if i will ever see her again. this is a pain only a mother can know. it is more painful than all of war put together. the amount of hatred in me grows every day. it is painful to read that let alone you living those emotions. try to explain what that feeling is like? >> that feeling can only be understood by mothers and fathers and as to mothers and
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fathers i appeal with the words save ukraine. we are being exterminated by russia. what we need is a no fly zone over ukraine. the flee that i'm making to the parents who know what i'm talking about. when it comes to making hard choices, you will spare that child away from you just to keep him or her safe. i had to do that. i had to go through that as many, many parents across ukraine. what we need for our children to be safe is the no fly zone. you can appeal for that to your members of parliament, to congressmen, to your governments and ask for a no fly zone over
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ukraine to be introduced. without that, us ukrainians are going to carry on dying because russia is carrying on with the massacre of the ukrainian nation. >> your twitter feed overall is heartbreaking to skrool. you are there in kyiv. what are you seeing and hearing? >> today i was driving through the city from point a to point b. the city is pretty empty. a lot of checkboints but everything is gunfire. your usual places you would have coffee or drinks, everything is closed. literally all restaurants have put kitchens to work 24/7 to supply the needs of the army, territorial defense, of the hospitals.
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it's good that the city was on lockdown because there were threats that people would not be getting food and would not be getting any water. so that problem is fixed but, still, there was a sense of war. you can smell it. you can smell it in the air and every street corner. the same thing throughout ukraine. i've been driving around several cities, it's exactly the same everywhere. at night sirens go off, children go to bed under lullabies of sirens. we wake up every morning in every city, every village of ukraine. we thank god that we are alive, that we see the sun sometimes when it comes out and we carry on fighting hour by hour. this is how we live our day to day. hour by hour of fighting against the russians, of fighting for the very sake of our existence.
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>> always you are painting an eloquent portrait. ukrainian mp. we will be checking november with you. stay safe. >> thank you. all right. i'm michael holmes in lviv. we will have more ahead on the war in ukraine. for now let's go back to isa soares in. >> there is a sense of war. you can smell it. we have developments on the investigation into the capitol riots in a new court filing. the january 6th committee alleges that former u.s. president donald trump and john eastman were part of a conspiracy to overturn the 2020 presidential election. the committee alleges eastman helped to allege to orchestrate the plot and they're attempting to obtain his emails. he's claiming attorney-client privilege. the e news continues after this
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eventually they abandoned the car on foot. what came next we'll hear. >> after sleeping in the car overnight we were within we felt like 20 kilometers of the border. after three or four hours in the car we found out that we were -- we had just very little. at that point we decided it was going to be the warmest part of the day and the only opportunity to make it to the border before night fall would be to get out and walk. our biggest concern with our daughter being four days old was hypothermia. it was really cold and -- but we felt like if we didn't act then, then we wouldn't know how much longer it would be until we would make it across. >> when we first got out of the car i was worried jason and i had made the wrong decision. i'm sure the wind chill was
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colder than 30 degrees but we constantly stopped to make sure the baby was warm enough. as the walk went on i realized we had made the right decision. we walked through miles and miles of cars that weren't moving at all and so i knew at that point our walk to the border was the best decision we made. >> the couple and their newborn are now safe at home in california. we wish them the best. the russian owner of the legendary english club chelsea said he plans to sell it. he made the announcement announcing the move would be in the best interest of the club and employees as well as sponsors. we learned last year he handed stewardship of the club over to trustees. once the sale takes place net proceeds will be donated set up to help those affected by the russians. russian and belorussian
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athletes will no longer be able to compete in the paralympic games. they were allowing those athletes to compete as neutrals. the president of the icc said the decision was made to preserve the integrity of the games. i'm isa soares in london. we have "new day" coming up with brianna keilar and john berman. you are watching cnn. i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now, there's skyrizi. ♪ things are getting clearer, i feel free ♪ ♪ to bare my skin ♪ ♪ yeah, that's all me ♪ ♪ nothing and me go hand in hand ♪ ♪ nothing on my skin, that's my new plan ♪ ♪ nothing is everything ♪ achieve clearer with skyrizi.
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this is cnn breaking news. >> good morning to our viewers here in the united states and all around the world. thursday, march 3rd. i'm john berman with brianna keilar. we do begin with breaking news. kherson has fallen. the first city to be seized by russian forces. i'll show you where this is. this is a strategically vital city not far from the black sea coast. 3,000 people live there. the mayor confirmed they have entered city hall to begin with a new city administration. he ordered them to follow the russian orders. russians are intensifying the air war. a shell hit an oil depot. also, new sate
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