tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN March 16, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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one expert does warn if zelenskyy reaches a peace deal with the russians, they might see this as an unacceptable compromise given how he's framed this as good versus evil. >> thank you very, very much. that's it for me. thank you very much for watching. erin burnett "out front" starts right now. "out front" next, president biden says flat out that vladimir putin is a war criminal. what is the united states prepared to do with that? how has ukraine's military kept russia from taking over the country and who are the top generals leading that fight? we have a special report for you this hour. i'll speak with a man who lost his wife and children in that horrific attack. found out about their death on twitter. the image seen around the globe of that innocent family lifeless on the street. what he wants you to know now. let's go "out front."
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good evening, i'm erin burnett. "out front" tonight, the breaking news. president biden accusing russia's president vladimir putin of war crimes for the first time. >> i think he is a war criminal. >> well, those are significant words because it's something the biden administration has not said before and they came shortly after the president announced today that he's sending hundreds of millions more dollars of aid to ukraine. a list which does include defensive items, stinger antiaircraft and stingers and javelins and 20 million rounds of small arms and grenade launcher and mortar rounds along with guns, 7,000 of them. this after president zelenskyy asked the u.s. to do more today to help ukraine in a speech via video before the u.s. congress. zelenskyy appealing directly to the american people, first in ukrainian, but then he spoke in english directly to president
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biden. >> translator: remember pearl harbor. terrible morning of december 7, 1941, when your sky was black from the planes attacking you. just remember it. remember september the 11th, a terrible day in 2001 when each tried to turn your cities independent territories in battle fields, when innocent people were attacked, attacked from air, yes. just like nobody else expected it. you could not stop it. our country experienced the same every day, right now. >> as the leader of my nation i'm addressing the president biden. you are the leader of the
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nation, your great nation. i wish you to be the leader of the world. being the leader of the world means to be the leader of peace. >> and here is some of what zelenskyy's country is experiencing today. in the city north of kyiv the shallow rocket killing people. they were waiting in line for bread. at least ten people were killed waiting in line for bread just standing there. a month ago with a normal life, today killed by shelling. in the southern city of. >> mary joe:mariupol, it was bombed by russia. it was roughly 2 1/2 miles from another shelter. a theater where hundreds of civilians were taking refuge also was bombed by russia. a fire is raging in the ruins.
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we have no idea of casualties here. you know, it could be horrible, we don't know. no one knows. new satellite images show children spelled out on both sides of the theater before the bombing. earlier today i spoke with arena gretere, she works for the mariupol city council. >> translator: the city is simply flattened down. it's shelling all the time. planes fly over the town and throw bombs. they roast themselves. it's huge craters. because of the bombs and shelling. i saw with my own eyes how very hungry people were breaking into some food shops. >> hungry people breaking into food shops. there's been no food delivered
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there, we understand, since the 24th of february invasion. many citizens headed to zaporizhzhia for relative safety. arena got out yesterday. zaporizhzhia was shelled for the first time today and that hit a rail station. ukrainian officials say five people were injured. and arena told me that now the fear is permanent. >> translator: even when we came close to zaporizhzhia, the town of zaporizhzhia, the fear was still there that maybe the shelling will start again. maybe the bombs will start dropping again. the fear is now in our skin, engrained in our skin. >> fear is now engrained in our skin. our reporters are on the ground tonight. i want to begin with sam kiley. he is "out front" again in kyiv.
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sam, what is the latest where you are? >> reporter: well, we've had air raid sirens. there have been distant sounds of shelling. we don't know if that's incoming or outgoing. there has been a curfew coming to an end tomorrow morning. 36 hours of curfew. there had been supposed to be potentially to clear the ground to deal with fear of a russian thrust from the east or the northeast, but actually most of the fighting seems to be concentrated in the west of the city. really the local horror has been the nearby town of cherniav to the north where ten people were killed in some kind of missile or artillery strike. others wounded. people waiting for bread reminiscent for syria, the tactics of syria where the russians systematically bombed
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hospitals and other civilian areas in support of president assad have been repeated across the country here clearly expanding now with the attack you're reporting on there in zaporizhzhia. we were in zaporizhzhia just last week, indeed, covering a mass evacuation of people from the railway station, and that was before they started to get refugees from other cities. these were just people trying to flee the city because they worried that the route out might be broken by attacks on the train station and attacks on civilian areas in general. it was very swiftly put-back together. the tracks very damaged but the station is fully functional again. it goes to show the scale of putin's intent in this country once again, erin. >> the scale is intent and the speed with which they fixed the rails, it was incredible what it showed on the ukrainian side. sam kiley, thank you very much.
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"out front" now u.s. state department spokesman ned price. ned, i appreciate your time. i want to start with president biden today calling putin a war criminal. he did that for the first time, of course. there is not yet a formal designation from the u.s. state department on that front. are you prepared to make that statement tonight? >> well, erin, you're right. president biden, as he often does, was speaking from the heart. when you are speaking from the heart, speaking as a human and you're seeing what we've all seen, these zeros images on tv, a russian strike on a maternity hospital in mariupol, strikes against residential buildings, schools, civilian neighborhoods, it's hard not to walk away with that thought. we are collecting every piece of information, evaluating it and documenting it and sharing it with our partners. there is a process and there are people working almost around the clock to document, evaluate,
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share as we all watch what is happening with some horror. >> you talk about those searing images. i spoke with sergei paravenus. his wife and children were killed. the world saw it. his wife and two children lying dead on the road. it was taken by lindsey dario of "the new york times." i talked to sergei about his children and his wife. he told me this. >> translator: i saw a photo on twitter and i recognized my children. i recognized their things and their clothes and i called my friends to say the children are dead. their bodies are lying on
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pav pavement. >> ned, how is that not a war crime? >> well, erin, we have all seen these same images, these shocking images. as i said before, as a human it is hard to walk away from these images, from these videos without coming to that conclusion. there is a formal process here at the department under international humanitarian law to document war crimes. we're involved in that. look, i think you heard from the president the same way many of us feel. what is happening should not be happening. what is happening is needles. it is unprovoked. it is something that must come to an end at the earliest, earliest possibility. this is -- this violence is just unconscionable. >> it is unconscionable. when it does come to an end or when does it come to an end? zelenskyy said russia's negotiating position is, quote, more realistic. zelenskyy has moved to say nato
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membership for ukraine is pretty much off the table. do you have any indication that a real meaningful lasting peace agreement could happen in the near term? >> well, erin, these decisions are going to be up to ukraine to make in terms of its diplomacy with the russian federation. we are supporting those efforts, but first and foremost we're supporting our ukrainian partners. what we're doing is trying to give ukraine the strongest hand it can possibly have at the negotiating table. we're doing that in a couple of different ways. we're providing massive amounts of security assistance to our ukrainian partners, more than $1 billion in the past week has been announced, more than $2 billion during the course of this administration. at the same time we're putting mounting pressure on the russian federation and you look at any metric, any financial or economic metric emanating from moscow and you see a very grim picture. the russian stock exchange has
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been closed for weeks. the ruble is virtually worthless. russia's credit rating is junk. on the verge of default. dozens of countries are fleeing russia with more every day. both of these things together, what we're providing our ukrainian partners and the pressure on the russian federation is strengthening ukraine's hand. what we want to see is genuine good faith diplomacy on the part of the russian federation. we've seen the pretense of diplomacy. the russians are going through the motions as they continue to bombard ukraine. what we want to see is deescalation, diminution and genuine diplomacy. >> obviously when the invasion happened you were clear it was the -- the time for talk was over between president biden and president putin. putin is open to speaking with president biden. is president biden open to a conversation directly with putin
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right now? >> well, you may have seen earlier today the national security adviser had a discussion with the russian counterpart. the tenor of that conversation was really an opportunity for the national security adviser to underscore the profound concerns we have with the russian conduct and senseless war and our concerns that the russian federation may be preparing or planning to use chemical weapons or biological agents. so we do have lines of communication open. we have always said that we are going to do everything we feel is appropriate to bring this war to a close. we have lines of communication with our embassy in moscow. there are other ways to convey messages if we need to do that, but right now we have not seen any concrete indication from president putin that he is serious about diplomacy, that he is serious about putting an end to the violence. much to the contrary in some instances. >> ned, thank you very much.
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i appreciate your time. >> thank you very much. "out front" next, what vladimir putin didn't expect, well-trained, well-equipped and determined ukrainian forces. you'll see the generals leading the ukrainian fight next. plus, putin trashes some of his people as traitors as dissent grows. marie ibanovich is my guess next. the man who just learned about the death of his wife and children on twitter, why he doesn't want you to look away at the graphic images of his family. nexium 24 hour and prilosec otc can take one to four days to fully work. pepcid. strong relief for fans of fast. stuff. we love stuff. and there's some really great stuff out there.
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new video shows ukrainian forces knocking out a russian tank in a ukrainian strike. they are generally stalled outside of kyiv and have made no apparent progress around the second largest city of kharkiv either. all of it the result of the ukrainian army. yes, equipped with weapons from the united states. let's just be honest, exceeding nearly everyone's expectations so who's leading it. fred pleitgen is "out front" tonight in ukraine. >> reporter: this is how ukraine's army is halting russia's advance, using anti-aircraft weapons like the u.s. made stinger against low flying helicopters. now answering ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy's plea, the u.s. says longer range anti-aircraft missiles are arriving in ukraine, including
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the powerful s-300. >> translator: you know what kind of defense systems we need, s-300 and other systems. you know how much depends on the battlefield on russia's ability to use aircraft. >> reporter: after zelenskyy's empassioned speech to congress, president biden announced a massive new security assistance package worth $800 million including drones, antitank weapons and 20 million rounds of ammunition. >> it includes 800 anti-aircraft systems to make sure the ukrainian military can continue to stop the planes and helicopters that have been attacking their people and to defend the ukrainian air space. >> reporter: despite being drastically outgunned, they have been putting up a tough fight. being led by colonel alexander sirski. the chief commander of the armed
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forces, who's widely credited with reforming ukraine's military, vows to fight the russians with the last drop of blood. i don't have any illusions. i fought and have been preparing my armed forces. the weapons are giving them a fighting chance. ukrainian units blowing up russian tanks with shoulder fired missiles like the javelin or in laws, a similar anti-tank weapon made in brittain. >> we're at a crucial point in the battle where ukraine is tipping the balance. russia is clearly in trouble. >> reporter: ukrainian troops have fought tooth and nail with the russian tanks on the ground despite being massively outgunned by putin's army. while the u.s. and nato still reject the idea of a no fly zone, the biden administration has made clear it will continue to arm kyiv's forces to help as
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they bog down the russian military and inflate massive casualties. those casualties are massive on the russian side. both the u.s. and ukraine estimating, erin, the russians have lost thousands of soldiers, hundreds of pieces of equipment and the ukrainians are going on the counter offensive in certain areas. one sort of information that really stands out in all of this, we are now three weeks into this war and the russians still have not been able to take a single major city inside ukraine. nevertheless, president zelenskyy, he came out with another new address tonight and he said of course for him the main priority still remains ending the bloodshed but of course russia has to get real about negotiations first, erin. >> thank you very much, fred pleitgen. i want to go to lieutenant general mark hurtling. in that capacity, general, you spent a lot of time, we were
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talking about the area near lviv. you worked with the generals fred was talking about. you know them. they are obviously putting up an incredible fight, both strategically and a much more limited supply of weapons. tell me what you know about them. >> first of all, erin, i'd like to refute the statement you made at the very beginning of this. many were surprised at what ukraine's forces were doing. there were a few of us not surprised at all. wee have seen these guys. we have worked with them. they started a program in about 2008 where they started to change their army.mmders on the scene. they knew they were plagued by several things. they had a corrupt general officer core, very core leaders and poorly trained soldiers. much like the russian army does now. so they had some visionaries within the ukrainian force that said we need to change that. the guy i worked with between 2011, 2012, mikhail barobiov
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said, hey, i have to get rid of my corrupt generals. have i to professionalize my force and he asked me in 2011, could you help us do that. so from a european command perspective, u.s. army europe perspective and especially interesting the special operations command europe perspective under a guy named general mike recast, all of us pitched in to start training from the colonel level all the way down to a new nco corps. i'm going to throw out sargeant major davenport who taught them into building a professional sargeant's corps which i think we're seeing is the back bone of any army. >> you talk about that training and that you weren't surprised. one of the things in the days leading into the invasion, you
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had all of the men showing up to join territorial defense forces. they hadn't been able to be trained. they are still training, right? even amidst this they're training them. they're not literally sending them out to fight, but what do you make of that, that even now they still are having these mass men who are coming in to fight who are not trained and they seem to be successfully training them in the midst of the war. >> well, any kind of an existential threat to your country tends to motivate you a little bit to ensure that you're trained, especially when you're going against a force like russia had on the battlefield. you also have to remember, erin, a big part of these folks that are coming back and joining the territorial, some of them are untrained but other of them have been fighting against russian backed separatists on the
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western part of their country -- excuse me, the eastern part of their country so they do have training. it's like a national guard or a reserve element that's coming back into the fight during a period of time when everyone is needed. >> all right. thank you so much. i appreciate your time, general, and your perspective knowing those individuals. now we're starting to see their faces, the men leading this. >> a great bunch of soldiers, erin. >> as we are seeing. next, can the u.s. and other countries do more to help ukraine? if so, what? what can people do with this feeling of utility. marie ivanovich is "out front." his wife and two children were killed. i'm going to speak to this grieving father and husband about what he wants the world to know aboutut his family. [upbeat music playing]
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what does a foster kid need from you? to be brave. to show up. for staying connected. the questions they weren't able to ask. show up for the first day of school, the last day at their current address. for the mornings when everything's wrong. for the manicure that makes everything right, for right now. show up, however you can, for the foster kids who need it most— at helpfosterchildren.com tonight russian president vladimir putin slamming his own people saying this about russians who sympathize with the west. >> translator: they will try to bet on the so-called fifth column on traitors, on those who
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earn their money here but live over there. live not in the geographical sense but in the way they think with the mindset of a slave. these people cannot live without oysters and gender freedom. >> and that was just the beginning. putin continued. he said in part, quote, russian people will always be able to distinguish true patriots from scum and spit them out onto the pavement. i am convinced that such a natural and necessary self purification of society will only strengthen our country. that was actually in a speech from a president of a country. we're joined by the u.s. ambassador to ukraine under both presidents obama and trump and served in russia and entered the foreign service. she is author of a new book "lessons from the edge, a memoir." ambassador, i appreciate your time and perspective. obviously from all of the places
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you have spent an extraordinary amount of your professional life, you have been studying and exploring putin for decades. you hear about russians who don't agree with him and can't live without oysters and gender freedom. it's quite bizarre. what do you make of the comments? >> pretty typical putin, actually. he's made comments like that before, but there's a new intensity to it. new vitriol to it. he has a very evocative way of speaking, kind of crude at times as well, that he seems to want to put out there. but it's all in line with the repression that we're seeing and the increased repression, i should say, that we are seeing in russia today, whether it is of journalists, people in civil society, demonstrators. it just goes on. >> so the ukrainian president zelenskyy obviously made that
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powerful and emotional appeal asking for more to help ukraine in the fight against russia and he made it very personal. he was obviously -- to the u.s. congress, it was very personal to americans. here he is. >> translator: remember pearl harbor. terrible morning of december 7, 1941, when your sky was black from the planes attacking you. just remember it. remember september the 11th, a terrible day in 2001 when evil tried to turn your cities, independent territories in battle fields. you could not stop it. our country experienced the same every day. >> each city they are marching through, they are taking down ukrainian flags. can you imagine someone taking down your canadian flags in
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montreal or other cities? >> i would like to remind you the words that the united kingdom have already heard which are important again. we will not give up and we will not lose. we will fight till the end, at sea, in the air. we will continue fighting for our land, whatever the cost. >> ambassador, that last was a quote from winston churchill looking there at members of parliament and they were emotional, right? and then it was talking to canada about, you know, flags being taken down over their cities and then to the u.s. referencing pearl harbor and september 11th. he has made it so deeply personal and so relevant to every country that he speaks to. how effective is it? >> i think it's very effective. i think that vladimir putin -- excuse me, volodymyr zelenskyy is one of the great
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communicators of our age and he is not only uniting and inspiring his own people, he is inspiring the world. you can see it in terms of the assistance that is being provided not only by us on an unprecedented scale but by other western countries. publics are being moved by his communication and very evocative messaging as well as by the bravery of the ukrainian people, as are our politicians. they want to do more. >> in your book you write about returning to moscow after 1993 after part of the cold war. you write about how many saw the collapse of the soviet union, ab overnight loss of a great empire. up against the post 1991 uncert uncertainties, the old social contract seemed preferable. what do you think about now? you don't have a stock market. you have a ruble worth a penny.
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you have an economy that could shrink faster and by a larger amount than any economy has in the history of this planet. is the outcome of that going to be good? >> well, the russian people are really going to bear the brunt of this. the elites, including putin, probably will not, but let's see what happens. we're seeing the journalists on channel 1 who put up that placard saying stop the war. we're seeing people demonstrate. maybe -- maybe this will be a moment in russian history, but generally the russians have not, you know, risen up to protest against their leadership. so we'll have to -- we'll have to wait and see, but i think the collapse of the russian economy is going to be a real tragedy for the russian state and for the russian people. >> ambassador, i really appreciate your time. thank you so much. >> thank you. next, a husband and a father
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still coming to grips with something no one can ever come to grips with, the killing of his family by russian shelling as they tried to leave ukraine, a killing that he found out about on twitter. russia's president uniting the people of ukraine against a common enemy. with relapsing forms of ms... there's a lot to deal with. not just unpredictable relapses. all these other things too. it can all add up. kesimpta is a once-monthly at-home injection... that may help yoput these rms challenges in their place. kesimpta was proven superior at reducing the rate of relapses, active lesions, and slowing disability progression vs aubagio. don't take kesimpta if you have hepatitis b, and tell your doctor if you have had it, as it could come back. kesimpta can cause serious side effects, including infections.
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ukrainian president zelenskyy said 103 children are killed. it's at least. at least 103 children will never grow up. among them, 18-year-old mikita pair a venus and his 9-year-old sister and they were killed with their mother. they were trying to cross a bridge to escape the violence and get to safety. it's a graphic image that the world has seen that was taken by a "new york times" reporter. it is difficult but it is important to show this image because this image is how my next guest, sergei paravenus found out his children were killed by russian fire. he wants the world to know.
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>> i'm so deeply sorry for your unbearable loss. have you been able to see tatianna and your children? have you been able to bury them? >> translator: yes, i've managed to bury everyone. i was driving for three days and i broke in there and managed to bury everyone. i even managed to take away a pet dog from there. >> sergei, i know you had a chance to speak to tatiana the night before. it was so brave of her to try to leave. she had waited because she was caring for her own mother. what do you remember from that conversation, your last conversation with her?
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>> translator: last conversation before her death, that was the day when already there was no water, electricity, gas and we discussed -- i spoke to her at 10 p.m. even though at that point there were nothing either. i managed to get through and we had a discussion about possible evacuation. at the last moment, the convoy she was planning to travel with was shelled and fired at and then she came on foot to the bridge trying to make an escape on foot. >> sergei, i have seen the pictures of her going to work,
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you know, smiling, you know, in what her life and your life was like a month ago. can you tell me about her? i know that you've been together for decades, you know, what we would call high school sweet hearts. can you just tell us about her so we know sort of the woman behind that smile? >> translator: yes. we have been married for 23 years and in 2012 we even had a second marriage, second wedding because we wanted -- at the church. we wanted to make our marriage lawful in the skies above us. she was a very cheerful person. she was the financial director of a large american company. we spent lots of time together
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as family. we laughed, bicycles. in winter we went skiing. she loved very much planting flowers, countryside cottage. basically we loved our weekends to be very, very active. >> sergei, as a parent, any person around the world can't imagine your unbearable loss, above all losing your chi children -- can you tell me about snem them? >> translator: i call this the world line because we used to be in our family, we used to use
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google geo location. we used to see each other with my wife on google maps, and that morning i noticed that there was unusual geo location between kyiv and their ping and then 20 minutes later her phone moved to another location, to a hospital in kyiv and i suspected something was wrong. and i asked friends to come to the hospital and find out whether there were any bad news, and then twitter, there was news on twitter, there was mortar shelling and that family died, two children, their mother and
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their father. and then i saw a photo on twitter and i recognized my children. i recognized their things and their clothes. and i called my friends to say the children are dead. their bodies are lying on pavement and i asked them, please could you help me to find my wife. >> sergei, if anyone watching could learn something about -- about elysa and nikita, who they were, what would you want the world to know about them? >> translator: they were normal, cheerful children. my son was -- was older.
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he was 18 and he was in second year of university. he started -- wants to become an i.t. professional. started programming and my daughter -- and my daughter was 9 years old, and what she liked, dancing, painting. she studied english. they were normal, cheerful children. and we have here where i am now four families. all of us resettled from the donbas area, and this house where i am now is where my wife had to be evacuated. i have here got children and we will not leave kyiv. we will stay here till the end. >> sergei, thank you so, so much for speaking with me and for sharing this, such deeply
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personal loss. thank you. >> thank you. next, homes, child care, even teaching kindergarten in ukrainian. the refugees who are getting out are trying to start new lives and we'll show you what they are doing in romania. and a message of hope amid the great loss and destruction. the people of ukraine are vowing to rebuild. ything we buy has that new car smell. -stahphp. -i will not. food's here! this smemells like a brand-new car! yup. best-in-class rewards, and a great way toward your next chevrolet, buick, gmc or r cadillac. and with all those points on everything we buy... ...we're thinking suv. with leather! a new kind of appreciation with that new car smell. ( ♪ ) ( ♪ )
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bath fitter. visit bathfitter.com to book your free consultation. ready to style in just one step? introducing new tresemme one step stylers. five professional benefits. one simple step. totally effortless. styling has never been easier. tresemme. do it with style. f0 one and a half million children have been forced to flee ukraine. it comes to a staggering right of one child per second in the nearly month since vladimir putin's invasion began. here is more from romania. >> reporter: a stream of ukraine refugees, old and young, even a
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dog named oprah oh pra. >> who are we with here? >> [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: her and her husband and two kids 11 and 2, david has autism. >> how do you explain what is happening? yes. i explain that there is a war but they don't really understand sheetz. it is important for david for both of us to be with him. the family from odesa has now found a house here and plan to stay. their lives up in the air. >> [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: i hope there will be no people like vladimir putin, then adds in english. he is like hitler. >> the city in central romania's transylvania region hosting up to 250 ukrainian refugees. >> you can see on them, they are being more and more affected on
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what is going on. we have had stories with people trying to contact their beloved ones for two days in a row and seeing them walk around worried about what is going on back home. >> reporter: a business center two weeks ago now an oasis of support, a place to sleep, eat, get a change of clothes and there is a play area and childcare, all free of charge. >> next week we will have a kindergarten group starting with ukrainian volunteer. >> reporter: she is from nico live, a city under relentless russian artillery and rocket attacks. >> vladimir putin united ukraine with this war she said. ukraine is now united in its tragedy and pain. natalia lives there, but her sister, cousins, half brothers and others are back home in ukraine.
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[ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: every morning when there is an attack, we check on our shared attack to see if everyone is okay. >> she arrived here on march 8th with her daughter and their friends. her husband who was a driver is now fighting on behalf of the country. >> reporter: we're all worried she said, but there is no other choice and i'm proud he is defending our country. ukrainians united, those who come here leave messages like, thank you for the care. all people were nice to us and we never felt hungry, cold or lonely. >> that message really struck out to all of us who read it. there is about 450,000 ukrainians who have come through romania. most move on to other countries but for some reason 70% there of the reeves who come here are planning to stay here so the town is planning for the short
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term which they are doing right now, the medium and long term. back to you. >> miguel, thank you. >> a next, the red cross telling me it cannot get into the city of mariupol where fights have broken out over food. i may have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. or psoriatic arthritis. but we are so much more. we're team ayers and artists. designers and do-it-yourselfers. parents and friends. if joint pain is getting in the way of who you are, it's time to talk to your doctor about enbrel. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop permanent joint damage. plus enbrel helps skin get clearer in psoriatic arthritis. ask your doctor about enbrel, so you can get back to your true self. play ball! enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system
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the red cross tonight saying the organization cannot even reach the battered city of mariupol where food is running out, there is no power, heat or water. >> unfortunately we're not able to get them humanitarian aid and thousands are still trapped in the city. there is no safe way out. >> the people of mariupol, hope is not lost for some. here is more, she just fled her
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hometown of mariupol. [ speaking foreign language ] they are hoping the war will end soon and we'll be able to come back to our houses, to our towns and our houses if they are still there, but if not, we'll rebuild them. >> we will rebuild them. we have heard this again and, again. a powerful reminder again tonight of the strength and fortitude and resolve of the people of ukraine. thanks for joining us. a 360 starts now. good evening. the fight of hundred is is unknown and mariupol's largest bomb shelter. this was the theater hit by an air strike. it was for civilians a place of comparative safety in a city under almost constant bombardment. the satellite image showing what is more
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