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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  March 5, 2022 2:00pm-2:16pm CET

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[000:00:00;00] ah ah, the faces dw news live from berlin. evacuations of 2 ukrainian frontline cities are postponed, made reports that russian forces are violating a temporary cease fire, and the bombing continues elsewhere with russian forces attempting to surround the capital, keith and the 2nd largest city of hot cave. also coming up we hear from some of the many ukrainian children, flaying the war, bringing with them the trauma of displacement and fear. last families torn apart
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with all ukrainian men between 18 and 60 required to stay and fight at their side. teenage is even younger than 18 who are choosing to join the resistance. ah, i'm or becker, it has welcome to the program. evacuations of 2 besieged cities in ukraine of being delayed and made reports that russia is violating a temporary cease fire. earlier moscow announced a 5 hour holt to its attacks on volva and the strategic port, city of matthew pole in south eastern ukraine to allow civilians access to a safe humanitarian corridor. but officials in mario pulse a russian forces are not observing the sci fi along the entire route. the city is without water and power and is fast running out of food up to being surrounded by
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russian forces. off to days of relentless shelling in the key port city of matthew paul, russia said on saturday morning, it would stop firing and allow civilians to flee from the area and hid the nearby city of an africa. but just hours later, ukraine's deputy prime minister complained that russia wasn't respecting the partial ceasefire yet was neither did the thing is, you know, from 9 o'clock in the morning on march 5th, we had a preliminary agreement that we will create to humanitarian corridors. long a vaca and mario full yackel, so i note the fact that russia has violated its agreements even with the red cross and has not complied with its commitments and the shelling the city of alma vodka. europe studia mr. val navarro. but the 2 cities of fall from the only areas devastated by russian bombardment zalinski has been pleading with nato to set up a no fly zone. to stop russian asked writes like this one outside, keith. but nato has ruled that out and will out war in europe. that's what the alliance wants to avoid. according to
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u. s. secretary of state and he blinking the nato. the only way to actually implement something like a no fly zone is to scenario planes into ukrainian air space and to shoot down russian plants that are crudely teufel fledge. war in europe. prism bite has been clear that we are not going to get into a war with russia as fighting and to the 10th day the situation, ukraine becomes more and more desperate casualties, amounting and over 1000000 people have now fled the country or our reports of severe food and water shortages in some cities, including keith in the occupied city of millette to paul to the south. russian soldiers handout food. it's the 2nd city in ukraine said to be under the invaders control after hassan, with russian forces on the move across the country. a nature ruling out a dimension. people here preparing for a long,
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bitter battle ed data will correspond mathias bellinger joins us from key is mathias. i wanted to start by asking you about that humanitarian situation in mary paul and surrounds and variables authorities. deputy mayor saying that humanitarian sci fi is not being upheld. what more can you tell us where we've heard that the situation is really, diane marie, paul, we've seen we've seen news from, from the past few days. but some pictures have made it out that much of the city has been damaged or destroyed, and people have been hiding in shelters for days. there's no water, no electricity. there has been water, no electricity for some days now. and it seems to be very, very bad. there the city is surrounded by the russian forces from 3 sides from the, from, from, from the land side and from the seaside. there's the russian navy, so it's very dire. we have, there was a corridor,
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was planned to evacuate people from there. and we've heard that it has not happened that russian forces have continued to show the city. that's what the mayor has said . we have no information, of course. no, no, no real time information of what's going on in the city. i have just arrived back in here, what's the situation where you are today? well, you can see this my dog, which is usually quite a busy square and the center of key is almost completely empty. there are few other journalists and then some, some people are crossing those square, maybe to get home or, or so, but very few people on the street. the city feels almost empty. many people have left the city so far, it's quiet. we've heard from people here that they have been hiding and bunch of just for quite some time. the have also been a bombs coming down on the city in the past few days at the moment is very calm.
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you really quiet? eerily empty. is there a big difference from when you were there a few days ago and in 10 to in the terms of that feeling that sense of what's going on there? it started already a few days ago when we left the city earth and we heard frequent bump alarms there and this, this area was also empty. the difference is that we see a lot more military in our road blocks, etc, etc. so the feeling is definitely that it has gotten worse or more terms here. that's for sure. i'm here. thank you for that update has been again keith. maria sera shanker. is a resident of that save city. marian poll that we've been speaking about, she's now safely evacuated and in the western city of live, if she joins me now. right, thanks so much for joining us. and i very happy to hear that you've been evacuated from mary paul. your family however, is still there. what are they telling you? what are you hearing about the situation there? hi, yes,
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this is station is maribel is getting worse. and i been in here from my relatives, from my family, from my grand mind. my france, what seems to be in a row, they don't have any electricity, they don't have heat and there is no bio connection in the city for the seas days. and there is a lack of food and water in the city. and right now we, we are trying constantly to reach them. we are trying to call them, but still no luck. and this morning there was some news that the invitation might part right now. the official news, however, since the russians they didn't see the fire, the citizens of mary, tim can't go out of the cd because it's not safe. so i'm really worried about my family and everyone in mariel to whole 5 days that you haven't been able to contact
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any of your friends or family in the city. yeah, that's right. oh, it will tell us a little bit about your evacuation when you left and the journey that to live. if you have to basically i li, i left here because i wasn't here when the was targeted. i was there for 2 days and 2 nights, neighbor hiding in the basement and we were hearing all that tag. go in there. but after today's right before the breach was basically floated, we managed to leave here, i drove with my car and with my, with my friends and race. now one movie, it took maybe a few days of the journey because there were some shortages. i'll get you in our course and right now we are safe. and so what's your next step then? are you planning to stay there in la vega until you hear word from your family or
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are you looking to evacuate ukraine altogether? well, it's a hard question because right now what i can do, i try to help here. i try to volunteer and beat and we have some people here who want to buy medicines and especially the medicines which is really difficult to find in the ukraine and movies. so we are trying to get them from paul and to and this is maybe the main mission. and also we're trying to find some humanitarian house and to provide it to keith and 2 other cities which which are not closed or surrounded lake mary paul, because currently there is no way to provide humanitarian how to marry info because the cd is surrounded among your friends and family, older people that you speak to, they're even strangers on the street. is this still that sense of defiance that we've been hearing about and determination?
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absolutely. people assure that we will wean people want to defend the country and i'm 100 percent. sure that will not stop fighting. so i'm in louie for the atmosphere. it is a really stronger and people are looking for the equipment to our soldiers. and we wanted to advertise it. we can to help our army and our people are in sarah tanka. i wish you all the very best to stay safe. and thank you very much for speaking to us today. thank you. people around the world have been rallying and support of ukraine. president vladimir zalinski has spoken to crowns of demonstrate his my video link, urging them to keep showing solidarity tens of thousands gathered in prague, the check capital to voice their outrage against the war. and in georgia, a country that has a troubled relationship with russia. people filled the straits of the capital
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tbilisi, many waving ukrainian flags. there were further shows of support in other major european cities. the demonstrations have been banned in russia. the u. n. refugee agency says more than 1200000 people have now fled ukraine to neighboring countries. many of them are children playing with their mothers, while ukrainian men have to stay and fight. help of the neighboring countries say children arriving traumatized. dw correspondent monica sh. she reads get reports from near the polish border with you crime around. $40000.00 people are arriving here each day. while the refugee from we'll korean told me, or is something for adults not for children. the children of ukraine are fleeing war and are arriving here at this railway station near the border. they bring with them the trauma of upheaval, fear,
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and sometimes wars. liam of william about if there had been no war, our houses would have stood. my grandfather now sleeps with a gun or a one yet. i think we can do it, that it will get better in ukraine and that we will win. ah, see just that it's i cannot say anything. i waited so long. i cried so much. i have nothing to say. we spend a very long time on the train and a very long time standing. i'm grateful to poland that it welcomes our compatriots in this way, like singular nursery. or what do you feel now as joy at his joy that each him willy city and i wish sometimes there were sirens in the evening. the people hid all day in sellers and bunkers. you really won't get them. yeah. bob. bob crania aiming at them. well,
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my father is in ukraine. a lot of my relatives also stayed. yeah, my younger daughter. oh, i'm afraid that many people will die because of this war. but again, we'll go to buy, given a design, the lima who is prepared to talk to their children about war. the parents are in shock themselves. the country suddenly engulfed in war. the big picture is overwhelming. the focus for now is on their children or not as upper was at them, obviously at the in law that marines and alicia do not need to explain anything to the lawyer is that yvonne is my dad, the children there have seen everything with their own eyes the situation is difficult, does it, but they felt it all around them. every day they sat in sellers without light, some water line or heating. you fly a layer of noth or janitor williams dallas in north city when our region came under
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heavy fire. when tanks were visible, the children were afraid, they said mom were scared, can we leave? the children understood that there was a war that they didn't understand why. why were people shooting at each other? i don't explain it to them because i believe they're too young and general. they know that there is a war that they are explosions and that someone wants to take our homeland away from us, the river to white it national. the resolved was abroad, the war in ukraine is changing everything. here a new generation of european refugees carry the baggage off trauma into their new lives. angel for is a journalist for foreign policy magazine. she's in. she michel near the border with ukraine and i asked her to tell us more about the situation there behind me is the 1st reception santana. this is where the buses that actually are transport a lot of these, a ukrainian refugees land. and from here they go to different places, or journalists are not allowed to go inside anymore. they were until
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a few days ago. so we not very sure what the conditions inside of a week, sort of try to a have a look. and it's pretty packed. there are mainly women with children, a lot of men still back home fighting. we met a woman who said her last words, her husband and she said bye bye to him a well i love you. see you soon, and you know, when we try to ask them, do you think you're going to win the war? do you think you'll actually see your loved ones again? you see men again, they say there's no, we can't think of not seeing them. yes, we have to and we hope that somebody comes to our help in ukraine, so we can see a family members again. so very sort of, you know, it's, it's really tragic what we're seeing. but you know, we're also looking at a great humanitarian response, not just from the polish people, but also from different nationalities in europe. we met a lot of german volunteers who actually come with their wines, come with food, come with medicines and are trying to, you know, help anybody who needs it and are trying to sort of transport it. sorry. take them to germany if that's what they want. the people you're speaking to where they

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