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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  March 4, 2022 9:00pm-10:00pm PST

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get started with internet and voice for just $64.99 a month. and ask how to add securityedge™. or, ask how to get up to a $650 prepaid card. >> announcer: this is cnn breaking news. and welcome to our viewers joining us from all around the world. live from ukraine, i'm michael holmes. thanks for being with us. and our breaking news this hour, a dire warning about the civilian toll from russia's shifting invasion tactics here
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in ukraine. a senior western intelligence official telling cnn that u.s. and nato officials believe that russia is poised to, quote, bombard cities into submission. already ukrainian civilians have come under increased attacks. you're looking there at the aftermath of fighting on the outskirts of kyiv. the u.s. says about 92% of the forces russia staged outside ukraine's borders for its invasion are now inside ukraine. and we're learning russia also plans to deploy an additional 1,000 mercenaries. meanwhile, we're getting an inside look at that ukrainian nuclear power plant now occupied by russian forces. ukrainian authorities releasing video of a warning sounding inside the control room. have a listen. >> you're endangering the security of the entire world. attention. stop shooting at the nuclear hazardous facility. stop shooting at a nuclear
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hazardous facility. stop shooting at a nuclear hazardous facility. attention. stop it. >> now, the head of the international atomic energy agency says while the attack on the plant was a close call no radioactive material was released. meanwhile, as russia continues its advance ukraine's president says nato is giving russia what he called a green light to bombard ukrainian cities by not implementing a no-fly zone. >> translator: nato has deliberately decided not to cover the skies over ukraine. we believe that nato countries have created a narrative that closing the skies over ukraine would provoke russia's direct aggression against nato. this is the self-hypnosis of those who are weak, insecure inside. despite the fact they possess weapons many times stronger than we have. >> now, the russian president vladimir putin spoke with the german chancellor olaf schultz
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on friday. germany says mr. putin told the chancellor that a third round of talks between russia and ukraine is scheduled for the weekend. all right. now to i achilling video that captured the moment a sky news team say they came under fire from russian forces near kyiv. reporter stewart ramsey was wounded in the incident. the camera operator took two rounds to his body armor. here's some of what happened. [ gunfire ] >> what [ bleep ] -- >> stop! [ bleep ]. >> we think it's a ukrainian checkpoint and a mistake. so we identify ourselves. >> british journalists! journalists!
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>> journalists! >> journalista! >> is everyone okay? are you okay, dom? >> journalists! >> somehow we have to get out of this, but the rounds keep coming. it's a professional ambush. the bullets just don't miss. [ gunshot ] >> whoa! [ gunfire ] >> [ bleep ]. >> stop! stop! [ bleep ]. >> stop! journalists! >> i'm hit but escape the car
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and with producer dominik van heerden we make our way down the emba embankment. camera operator richie mockler has taken two rounds to his body armor but is still stuck in the car. he runs for it in a hail of bullets. >> now, the journalists say they were ambushed by a russian reconnaissance squad. cnn cannot corroborate sky news's account of who shot at them. and just a word. these colleagues of ours, they're also friends. dominik van heerden, the producer there, used to work for us here at cnn. i worked with her many times from iraq to here in ukraine back in 2014. we're all very glad they're alive. all right. more now on that attack on ukraine's and europe's largest nuclear power plant. it led to fears of course of a catastrophe in the making. and even though radiation levels remain stable those fears still remain too.
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our sam kiley is in dnipro in ukraine with details. >> reporter: the russians have admitted they have sent troops into the nuclear power station just south of zaporizhzhia, itself about 80 miles south of where i am in dnipro. they say that they captured it to keep it out of the hands of a terrorist regime here in ukraine. the ukrainians have said that main battle tanks fired their guns, their big guns, against this nuclear facility. we don't have independent verification of that, but we have seen video evidence that it was struck by at least one missile on the outskirts of the nuclear facility in a room designed -- described as a training area. this has been a catastrophic event that could have been utterly, utterly devastating with international condemnation of the russian move coming from around the world. but equally desperate video evidence of the efforts made by
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the control room inside that location have also emerged with the scientists there working inside the control room, broadcasting on the public address simm saying "this is a dangerous nuclear facility. stop your firing. do not attack. stop it." those sorts of remarks indicating just how dangerous they felt it was. now, those self-same scientists are now being held at gunpoint by the russian military to continue to work to keep that nuclear power station running and to keep it safe. now, they would normally have been switched out several times by now. it's more than a day and a half since they were overrun by other crews. they are, though, in the view of the ukrainians being held hostage much like the crews still working at the chernobyl nuclear site in the north of the country. that was of course the scene of a nuclear catastrophe in the 1980s that poisoned huge swaths of the landscape from the british isles to russia when it
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melted down and was brought under control with a great deal of loss of life. the teams there who were captured by the russian military had been there for more than a week also unable to switch out. putting enormous stress on these nuclear facilities and coming at a time when the u.s. ambassador to the united nations has said that russian forces are now about 20 miles from the southern ukraine nuclear facility, one that has three reactors rather than the six just south of zapor zaporizhzhia. but nonetheless the second largest in the country. and there are deep, deep fears that that too could fall into russian hands. so far, though, the international atomic energy authority has said that the reactors are in the hands of the russians, have not had any serious damage done to them, there are no radiation leaks. sam kiley, cnn, in dnipro. >> now, the biden administration is watching all of this from washington of course and keeping
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a close eye on russia's escalating violence in this country. cnn's phil mattingly with the latest from the white house. >> reporter: u.s. officials are watching near minute by minute what's happening on the ground in ukraine as russia's invasion continues, the escalations continue and there is real palpable concern about how things may ramp up in the days ahead. however, top administration officials from the white house, the state department, the united nations, u.s. ambassador to the united nations all across the board continuing to condemn russia's actions, call for de-escalation and make clear allies are as united as they've ever been. president biden meeting with finland's president in the oval office and underscoring that point and the stakes. take a listen. >> we've been in regular touch for some time now and coordinated a united trans-atlantic response to russian -- holding be russia accountable for the unprovoked and unjustified aggression against ukraine.
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and we agreed it's not only an attack on ukraine, it's an attack on the security of europe and on the global peace and stability. >> reporter: that meeting occurred as secretary of state antony blinken was in brussels meeting with allies, a critical alliance that over the course of the last week has deployed the most comprehensive and biting sanctions package for a country against russia's size that's really ever been seen. more than 30 countries, more than four continents cratering russia's economy in an extraordinarily short period of time. however, both nato officials and the u.s. making clear one thing they will not do is something president volodymyr zelenskyy has requested, and that's implement a no-fly zone. very real concern on the u.s. side of things that that would lead almost certainly to a war with russia. something the president has made clear he does not want and is not willing to pursue. however, $350 million in lethal aid did arrive from the u.s. to ukraine over the course of the last several days. those weapons already being put to use and that aid is expected
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to continue to flow if the administration has its way. they've submitted a request for $10 billion in lethal and humanitarian assistance to the united states congress. they expect action on that as soon as next week. all underscoring the realities of this moment. as tense and tenuous as things appear to be, as russia continues to escalate, the world, at least the western coalition, is extraordinarily unified. and while there will be no ground troops to assist the ukrainians, that assistance in money and humanitarian support and in lethal aid will certainly be there. now, when you talk to u.s. officials they made clear they know things are going to get worse before they get better. they expect a very bloody escalation in the days ahead and there's nobody at the white house or in the biden administration who believes that if russia goes all in that there's much that the ukrainians can do to stop them in the end. however, everyone here at the white house acknowledges what they've seen from zelenskyy, what they've seen from the russian military has gone far beyond their expectations in terms of efficiency, proficiency, and also courage,
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something that gives them hope and at least provides what has been the underpinning of the resolute response from the west. phil mattingly, cnn, the white house. >> and for more i'm joined now by malcolm davis from the australian strategic policy institute. he is a senior analyst at that think tank working on defense strategy and capability. and thanks for rejoining us to discuss. what struck me is you have predicted russian tactics and territorial moves with remarkable accuracy during all of this. especially in light of what nato and the u.s. is saying about putin's plan to bombard cities into submission, give us a sense of how you see putin's forces positioned and next likely moves. >> thanks, michael. look, i think that they are intending to move to that phase. i think they've realized that their initial phase of light and
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quick operations to seize cities has failed comprehensively. so they're reverting to type in the form of combined arm operations and that means bringing in lots of heavy artillery, long-range missiles and rockets, air power, and bombarding cities into submission. they did it in grozny in 1994. and that's the way they're going to do it here in ukraine. and the tragedy is of course that so many civilians are going to die. so i would expect to see the russians move their forces from the south towards the north. now that the russians seem to be making headway in the south. and from the east to meet up with that stalled convoy along the north. and then you will see, to put it bluntly, hell unleashed on ukrainian cities. >> yeah, it doesn't bear thinking about. i mean, the thing is throughout this -- i mean, there's been sanctions. there's been more sanctions. brutal sanctions. but how does nato and others
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deal with such brutality as might be coming without, you know, triggering a broader conflict? what can they do? >> this is the ethical and moral dilemma that we will face in coming weeks as we watch large numbers of ukrainian civilians die under hails of russian or tillery and rocket fire. we are going to face incredible pressure to do something more substantial than simply sanctions. there's already a lot of discussion on social media about no-fly zones. president zelenskyy has called for no-fly zones. i think we all understand that if we do a no-fly zone the russians will challenge it and we will have to shoot down russian fighters. and that could then lead to escalation. i think there's also been discussion about increasing the different types of weapons we supply ukrainians but then the practical aspects of how we get those weapons to the ukrainians, how we train them so they can use them effectively, and how we
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prevent the russians from intercepting or interdicting those weapons supplies and thus generating another chain of escalation comes to the fore. so really i think that what we're facing is that in putin -- with putin playing the nuclear card by rattling nuclear sabers he has effectively warned off nato from further intervention. and it's left us in a difficult place because we can't easily increase our involvement in this conflict without risking rapid escalation to a full-on nuclear war. >> speak to the dangers, too, of a man like putin. if he feels cornered or threatened or if he feels he's got nothing to lose. >> look, that is the issue here. if it becomes clear that russian forces failed to achieve their objectives in the coming weeks and the whole war is a failure,
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then putin will be cornered. and there's two ways out of it i see at that point. either he's deposed in a coup d'etat or he escalates. i don't see him coming to the negotiating table in humiliation and accepting a peace agreement that sees russia withdraw with him having lost huge amounts of facts. so the risk is we are left with one of two scenarios going forward. either russia wins and we end up with a devastatingly bad security environment in europe where we face russia across international borders that is thinking in terms of possible next steps against other nato states. or we face the possibility of the uncertainty of a coup d'etat in moscow or the horrific thought of escalation and what that could involve. >> yeah. and i suppose another option is that this could for years be a
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simmering insurgency and continue in that vein as well. to that point do you think putin wants to occupy the whole coun country? which is a pretty impossible thing to do with a hostile local population. could you perhaps see some sort of rump state of ukraine in the west of the country around lviv where we are? what would that look like? i mean, what would that be? >> yeah, i think that's right. he doesn't have the forces to occupy the entirety of ukraine. i think what he will seek to do is seize control of kyiv to remove the zelenskyy government from power. now, i would hope that zelenskyy and his people would rapidly relocate to lviv, where you are, to set up a government in exile there, to create a rump ukraine, and from western ukraine they would then support an insurgency, a war resistance that would continue to drive up the cost for russian occupation forces in the east and the
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south. and i would hope that nato would then support that rump ukraine with the aim being to one day see ukraine recaptured. but that's a long-term strategy. we're talking years. and with the danger that goes with that outcome of the constant risk of escalation and inadvertent miscalculation leading to a direct russia-nato clash. so i think what you're suggesting there is quite a possible outcome. >> always terrific analysis. malcolm davis, appreciate it. thanks so much. all right. coming up here on the program, some of ukraine's youngest and sickest were already fighting for their lives. well, now war is forcing them to flee. we will travel with them on their journey to safety. we'll be right back. (johnny cash) ♪ i've traveled every road in this here land! ♪
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1.2 million have already fled to other countries. nearly 650,000 people seeking refuge in poland alone. many have fled to polish border towns where they've been reunited with family and friends. now, the plight of the refugees also mobilizing volunteers around the world to help. ukrainian and italian volunteers in rome joining forces to send humanitarian aid to war-torn ukraine. badly needed items including food, blankets, warm clothes, and medicine are on the way. >> translator: we hope this war will end as soon as possible. we are worried because ukraine is our homeland, the country where we were born and where we hope to return. i think people feel a great sense of injustice because ukrainians are quiet and peaceful people who live in their own country. we had no demands from anyone. we just wanted to continue our european journey. >> now, the masses fleeing ukraine include children with heartbreaking illnesses.
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arwa damon rides along on a train carrying some of them out of the country to find safety and the medical treatment they desperately need. >> reporter: a train speeds through the darkness and crosses the ukrainian border into poland. most of these children are from hospices in and around kharkiv. it had the best pallet of care for children in ukraine. now one of the areas most intensely bombarded. the carriage is filled with the source of emotion that is too intense, too incomprehensible for words. but it is also filled with so much love. love among strangers, seen in the tenderness of the touch of the medical team, the whispered words of "you're safe now." love of a mother who will dig up superhuman strength just to keep her child safe. >> hi, victoria. hi. oh, look at that smile.
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>> reporter: victoria, who has cerebral palsy, can't sit up. her mother ira doesn't know what to say. she has so much pain in her soul her tears just won't stop. they had to get closer to the border with poland before this humanitarian train could pick them up. ira carried victoria for three days through the panic of others trying to flee, trains so packed she could not even put her down. until now. dr. ugenia shushkovich worked to bring the families on this train. to warsaw's central clinical hospital. it's a trip that could have killed any one of these children, even without a war. that reality had the medical team so understandably anxious
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we were not permitted to film anything until the children were safe ly on board and stabilized. how old are you, sofia? 5. thank you. while this train was heading toward safety, ira heard her town was bombed. ira follows quietly as victoria is carried quietly off the train. they are now away from their home that was filled with such
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love, a home and family that may no longer be. arwa damon, cnn, warsaw. >> a quiet ukrainian village becomes a target of russian airstrikes. we're going to show you what a reporter found when we come back. any year, any condition. really!?!? even if my old phone looks like... this?!?? ♪ dude! why?! how could you! it's ok, people! ...i've trained for this. it's not complicated. everyone gets a free new samsung galaxy s22, with a galaxy trade-in. any year, any condition.
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hello, everyone. i'm michael holmes in lviv, ukraine. bringing you the latest now on the russian invasion of this country. and the u.s. says russia is poised to send up to 1,000 mercenaries to ukraine. and according to both the u.s. and nato, russia is now prepared to, quote, bombard cities into submission. a chilling statement.
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that is a move of course likely to cause even more significant civilian casualties. and it comes as the ukrainian president, volodymyr zelenskyy, is blasting nato for not approving a no-fly zone over ukraine. he said that gives russia the green light to bomb ukrainian towns and villages even more. and he called the nato countries weak and insecure. >> translator: nato's summit took place today. a weak summit. a confused summit. a summit that shows not everyone considers the struggle for freedom to be europe's number one goal. >> now, we're learning around 100 people could be trapped in the rubble of a wrecked apartment block in borodyanka. it was hit by shelling on wednesday. you can just see there the devastation. the town just northwest of kyiv has seen a persistent shelling the last few days. just a devastating scene. now, by the way, in a phone call
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with the german chancellor on friday the russian president vladimir putin called news of russia shelling ukrainian cities, quote, gross propaganda fakes. just look at the video for yourself. now, some people in eastern ukraine thought an idyllic village, a place with no military or strategic importance, could perhaps be a safe haven from russian bombs. well, you guessed it. they were wrong. as itn's dan rivers reports for us now, it has become a target for russian airstrikes. but a warning, some of the images in this piece are disturbing. >> reporter: at first glance it appears a peaceful sanctuary, which is why those bombed out of kharkiv so the refuge here. but a closer look shows the village of yakovlevka is anything but safe. it was devastated by what locals say were four russian airstrikes, and this was the result.
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the body of victor lies in front of the home where he perished. as firemen search for that of his wife oksana, still buried under its ruins. what we're seeing here is the true face of this russian invasion. president putin doesn't seem to care whether civilians are caught b and rockets. he's not liberating this country. he's destroying it. there is no hearse for the bodies. one week on and this war has already robbed the dead of their dignity and left the living seething with fury. "putin, you should die," he says. in natasha's garden they're sifting the rubble for anything worth salvaging. she was sheltering nine people
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in her home, including several young children. their car had been shot as they ran the gauntlet from the city. and two children were here. she shows me where they were sleeping when the first missile hit. the shock wave ripped through every room, lacerating them all with glass. the children escaped without major injury. >> [ speaking foreign language ].
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>> reporter: across the street a garden hewn apart by the impact. the blast so powerful it overturned cars. the crater so deep you could bury one inside it. people are left sifting through what's left without the support of any aid agencies, wondering what will come next. as the shelling continues to echo across this shattered community. there is no obvious military target here, just a village which tried to offer shelter to those in need. dan rivers, news at 10:00, eastern ukraine. >> now, ukraine's capital bracing for more onslauts as the russian invasion drags on.
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coming up, we speak with a woman who is taking cover in a shelter, and she talks about what people like her are going through right now. we'll be right back. we have to be able to repair the enamel on a daily basis. with pronamel repair toothpaste, we can help activevely repair enamel in its weakened state. it's innovative. my go to toothpaste is going to be pronamel rerepa.
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i'm michael holmes coming to you live from lviv in western ukraine. now, as russian heavy weapons pound towns and cities in this country, civilians hunkering down in any shelter they can find. to give you an idea of what they're going through, we spoke with elena gunesh. she's sheltering in kyiv with her three children including one infant. cnn's anderson cooper spoke with her earlier. >> elina, how are you doing? how is your family? >> fine. >> i see your little one is awake. i think that's the first time
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we've seen her actually awake. >> oh, really? i've done so many interviews. she's like a superstar now. it's my three dragons. >> she's beautiful. she's so beautiful. >> thank you. she is. today my husband visited us. he came to the shelter. well, basically the reason why he came, because he was probably scared. there was very heavy shelling at bucha. this is very close to kyiv. and he decided that it's enough and we have to leave here. so he came like took back us into the car and he said you have to leave because it's your last chance. and it shouldn't be like this. this is wrong. our kids shouldn't live in this shelter, in the basement. they need to grow. they need to have normal future. and we talked again basically about what we should do.
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and i said that i feel i need to be here and our children need to be here because this is how i feel. and he agreed. so we had about 30 minutes of time together. all family united. and i really hope it will repeat again. like this. >> can you talk about that decision? that's obviously an incredibly difficult decision to make. and i know i've received a lot of e-mails from people or messages from people saying that they hope you will leave with your children. can you explain your thinking on this? >> yeah, you're right that this is a very difficult decision of course. because obviously i'm risking. but i feel if i turn my back towards the enemy and i will start running i will never stop running.
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and i will become weak. i will lose the ground under my feet. so while we are here, we can be strong because this is the place where we are supposed to be right now. because if we leave, yes, we will lose our native ground. another reason is basically, see, this is what russia wants us to do. she wants ukrainians to live. she scares us. and then they will just come and take our homes. the same that happened eight years ago in the east of ukraine. you see, they scared some of the local ukrainian population. people left, became refugees. and then russians came on their place. and now it is more russian-controlled territory. i do not want my country to be russian controlled. so this is my part of the battle. obviously, i will not throw my kids on the tanks or anything like this. i don't want them to be hurt.
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but if our like mission to stay here. and another reason, you know, to leave ukraine sts not that easy. and with three children too. i mean, people who are leaving ukraine, they're risking too. people who became refugees in europe and elsewhere, for them life is not easy. moreover, they are having the feeling of guilt, i suppose, that they left, even, some of them. i understand it shouldn't be. but this is what i feel, what i hear from the people. and today i was outside on the street and i saw really many people. many people from our neighborhood. almost all of our neighbors. i do not want the west to have -- the world to have the wrong feeling, that everybody left ukraine. i mean, even if 1 million people left ukraine, there are 43 million people who stay. and i'm not the only mother with children. we have other children in this shelter. we have other women and children
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in this neighborhood. and life of each of us is -- means something. and because like you are talking to me over there from cnn, you are showing my story and i am one of very few ukrainian women who is eager to speak and can speak english, yes? i can talk to you. i just want you guys to know that we are here. we ukrainian people, we are civilians and we stay here on our native land and we have our ukrainian army that protects us and we need help. we need no-fly zone here for putin not to kill us all. and we still need help. we are strong, yes. we try our best. but we need more help, please. >> i think for people who i know reach out to you and say you should leave, i think nobody can understand what it is like to be in the situation you are in unless it actually happens to
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them in their country. and i think people make choices that may seem strange to people outside but when you're in a situation, when it's your country and your home and your husband fighting and these are your streets, it's -- >> exactly. >> -- impossible to know what decision anyone would make. >> i will give you one example like before we were thinking sometimes from time to time what about like emigrating somewhere to another country with like a higher level of life? no, but when this started it became obvious like no, this is the place where we belong. this is our nation. and this time it's our challenge. and we have to face it. and you know, 80,000 ukrainians who emigrated before, they came back now to ukraine to protect ukraine. so how can i leave in this situation? i just can't.
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>> years from now -- your daughter is three months old. when she -- years from now what will you tell her about this time? this time that she lived through but won't remember. >> i will tell her that she was the cutest baby ever. and that she played a very important role because she is like relief for everyone in this shelter. you know, like everyone is so stressed and there is a lot of fear, anxiety. you know. but when people take her on her hands, you know, they feel -- it's like a piece of life here. something very kind. and it helps us to fight the devil, the darkness. and that's the things that are happening right now to ukraine. >> well, if she doesn't believe you you can have her call me and i will confirm that she is the cutest baby in the world.
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>> thank you. thank you. >> i mean, my baby's pretty cute, too. but your baby is beautiful. and as are you and your family. and i appreciate you talking to us tonight again. thank you. >> thank you very much. you give me hope. >> i think you give a lot of people hope who are watching right now. so thank you for that. your strength is awe-inspiring. take care. >> now, amid the outpouring of support for ukrainians from across the world, an idea to send payments to ukrainian airbnb hosts has gone viral. now, this began with a tweet from a social media influencer who encouraged people to book rooms from ukrainians on the lodging app airbnb, telling followers to reserve a stay but message the host that payments are being made as a donation
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only. within 24 hours hundreds started taking part. some sharing the responses they received from airbnb hosts in ukraine. many hosts moved to tears, one writing, "the world is not without good people. now i have tears in my eyes and i cry with happiness in the first of these terrible days. thank you very much." another just says, "i'm just crying. i'm just crying right now. i'm shocked. i'm incredibly grateful for your support." now, in response to the trend airbnb confirmed that it is waiving all guest and host fees on all bookings in ukraine at this time. well, the people in ukraine may be in need of the very basics, shelter, food, water, clothing. if you would like to help go to cnn.com/impact. you're going to find a lot of resources there for ways that you can help. coming up on the program, my colleague paula newton will have the day's other stories
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including legendary australian cricketer shane warne's passing. his amazing career. after the break.
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hello. i'm paula newton here at cnn center. north korea has fired what appears to be a single ballistic missile into the waters east of the korean peninsula. now, that's according to south korean officials. seoul held an emergency meeting of its national security council in response to pyongyang's ninth test of the year. analysts say the increased testing shows north korean leader kim jong-un is trying to show his nation remains a key player in the struggle for power. ukraine has won its first gold medal of the 2022 beijing winter paralympics. now, it was in the parabiathlon men's sprint standing event. the games kicked off with a message of peace. during the ceremony on friday, the president for the international paralympic committee made an impassioned plea for dialogue and diplomacy, not war and hate. earlier in the week, the committee banned russian and belarusian athletes from competing in the games.
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chinese state media censored a large portion of the speech. the country has repeatedly refused to call russia's military operations in ukraine an invasion. now, some shocking news from the world of cricket. ozzie shane warne, who is widely considered to be one of the greatest to ever play, passed away suddenly of a suspected heart attack on friday. he was just 52 years old. cnn sport's patrick snell looks back at his remarkable career. >> reporter: shane warne is regarded as not just one of the greatest cricketers of all time. a showman and an entertainer as well with a flair for brilliance when it came to spin bowling, taking over 1,000 international wickets with one above all others in 1993, setting him on the road to global sporting stardom. warne with his very first delivery in an asher series in england producing the bowl of a century. the bowl spinning so
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dramatically, it left the opposing batter absolutely bamboozled. >> without question, the greatest bowl he ever bowled. that bowl of the century will live on long after all of us are gone. it really is that ingrained not only in cricket folklore but in sporting folklore. i've had people who really don't give a damn about cricket who have been absolutely bewildered by the news today. he had cut through. he had this ability to transcend the sport that he played. >> reporter: warne's 708 test wickets, the second highest of all time. he was inducted into the sports hall of fame in 2013. t at times the subject of tabloid headlines, he was the megastar cricketer turned pundit and businessman. a cricket icon whose death is being widely mourned. pla
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players paying their respects in the caribbean ahead of the forthcoming test series. india's legendary cricketer tweeting, i cannot process the passing of this great of our sport, greatest to turn the cricket ball. the last tweet from warne himself came in tribute to rodney marsh, who had passed away hours earlier. on friday, meantime, australia's test captain honoring warne. >> we love so much about warnie, his showmanship, his charisma, his tackics, the way he just willed himself and the team to win games for australia. the game was never the same after warnie emerged, and the game will never be the same after his passing. rest in peace, king. >> reporter: shane warne was just 52 years of age. i'm paula newton. stay with us. we will have more of our
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breaking news coverage live from ukraine and michael holmes just after the break.
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>> announcer: this is cnn breaking news. hello and welcome to our viewers joining us from all around the world, coming to you live from ukraine, i'm michael holmes. and our breaking news this hour, the pace and the strength of russian attacks on ukrainian population centers, including the capital, kyiv, is expected to increase. a senior western intelligence official telling cnn that u.s. and nato officials believe russia is poised to, quote, bombard cities into

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