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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  March 20, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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of this bacterial infection, ...ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction, ...and don't take it if you're on dialysis. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. lower a1c and lower risk of a fatal heart attack? we're on it. we're on it. with jardiance. ask your doctor about jardiance. arthel: it is day 25 of vladimir putin's brutal invasion of ukraine. it's bringing new allegations of war crimes. officials in the besieged port city of mariupol say russian airstrikes have targeted an art building where 400 people were taking shelter. it is the second time in a week that russia has shelled a civilian shelter in mariupol. welcome to "fox news live," i'm arthel neville. hi, eric. eric: hello, everyone, thank you for joining us here on the fox news channel, i'm eric shawn. negotiations, efforts for that
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to try to end the unspeakable carnage in ukraine caused by one man, vladimir putin, well, right now seems to be going nowhere. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy is calling for putin to meet with him, but so far the russian leader reportedly not ready to do so. experts say putin is waiting to get more gains on the battlefield before he considers a meeting. all this as zelenskyy slams russia for war crimes and says he'll be remembered, putin will, for generations as the world sees putin now as a war criminal guilty of committing crimes against humanity who should be held to accountment -- account. take a look at this moving picture from the if western city of lviv. those are 109 baby strollers placed in the square there to represent the 109 children who were killed during the russian invasion so far. europe's worst refugee crisis since world war ii getting worse, it seems, by the way. more than 3 million people have fled are ukraine and the life they once knew.
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well, they're now sharing their horror stories. >> translator: i could never imagine that an air bomb would hit a house next to mine. now my district will be literally wiped out. the outskirts of the city were simply if destroyed, and then i realized there were no safe places in the is city anymore. >> translator: i call my parents once a day just to ask how they are. sometimes i could not reach them, but i asked my mum, call me every hour. i these to know how you are, just tell me one word, any word. i just need to know that you are alive. arthel: a desperate plea. in a moment the former president of ukraine is here and a british ambassador to the united states. but first, we're going to go live to lviv, ukraine, where our mike tobin is reporting. mike. >> reporter: hi there, arthel. to the south of this country mere the coast of the black sea rescuers are colminging through the rubble -- combing through the rubble of a barracks trying to rescue ukrainian marines. the town was struck while the
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naval infantry troops were sleeping, as many as 40 ukrainian marines have been killed this in that attack, and that would a make it one of the deadliest russian strikes on a military target since this invasion began. the civilian casualties outpace the military casualties particularly in the town of mariupol. it is estimated that 80-90% of the civilian housing has been destroyed. people have resorted to mass graves and burying the dead next to their homes. two bomb shelters filled with women, children and elderly took direct hits. the casualties are unknown. ukrainian leaders say putin is trying to wipe ukraine off the map. >> putin and kremlin are the war criminals. they commit the war crimes, and they do this targeted attacks to attack ukrainian population. and you see by the wording on -- is using. it's not a question, it's simply the reality we all face.
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>> reporter: now, amid if reports that russians have pushed into mariupol, we see russian armor on the next town over. that is a town that russia claimed control of early in the invasion. now russia a claims they are tightening the noose on mariupol. our colleagues at foxnews.com have, are reporting gnat shadowy wagner group has activated mercenaries to assassinate president volodymyr zelenskyy and other ukrainian leaders early in this war. the ukrainian defense ministry said they thwarted a plot by this group to do just that. assassinate the top echelon of the ukrainian leadership. arthel, back to you. arthel: and, mike, it's 6:04 p.m. i see behind you a couple of pedestrians walking on the street, a few cars driving by. how are the people, the residents living there in lviv coping with what could be coming to a neighborhood near hem?
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near them? >> reporter: well, with each airstrike that comes out west, with each day where you see more civilian casualties, they understand how serious it is. there is still the belief that the ground war won't necessarily come in this direction, but what grows with the serious toness is the paranoia. you have police stopping people at random asking for identification, random people stopping others to ask for verification, the fear that you have some of these mercenaries who might be out in this area marking targets or looking for weak points. arthel? arthel: mike tobin live in lviv, ukraine, where it's 6:05 p.m. thanks, mike. eric? eric: well, the refugee flow is just absolutely astounding, and it grows every single day. more than 3 million ukrainians have now fled to nearby countries besides those who have been so savagely murdered by vladimir putin. the humanitarian crisis
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continues. aishah hasnie live for us now in to poland with the lathe arest on what is -- latest with what is happening there. >> reporter: hey, eric, good afternoon to you. well, this stream of refugees just does not stop. we see waves and waves of people coming in to poland. and here at this train station we just saw9 another group of refugees, elderly women, children, so many babies all over the place. they get off these trains, eric, this may be the first time they actually feel safe. in some cases getting out of the country has now become a deadly game. a humanitarian corridor for evacuations and supply deliveries just opened this weekend in ukraine after days of indiscriminate attacks on eastern ukrainian cities. [speaking in native tongue] >> translator: in my childhood we took shelter in old buildings, and it's the same
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now. once shelling of kharkiv gips, when air raid sirens are on, we go to the corridor. we don't know if it'll protect us or not. it's terrifying when young people die, when beautiful buildings collapse. >> reporter: for those who cannot leave though, eric, things are even worse. the u.n. reports residents in mariupol are now facing potentially fatal shortages of food, water and medicine. meanwhile, in odesa officials are pleading for food for some 450,000 residents. stockpiles of u.n. aid is getting across the border to teamses embedded within ukraine, but aid a workers, eric, are struggling to work the displaced, often times they're having to take shelter along with the -yard lines -- ukrainians under constant air raids. >> we know it is getting very difficult to deliver into eastern ukraine. we know the infrastructure has been damaged. but we will continue to work with non-governmental
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organizations and others on the delivery of the supplies. >> reporter: and, eric, just a reminder when all of this began, the u.s. predicted that we could see this refugee crisis hit somewhere around 4 million refugees. we're about three weeks in, we're almost to that number already with no signs of this in the slowing down. eric? eric: you know, this is what putin did in chechnya and syria, just killing as many civil civilians as he can and destroying as much of the country's infrastructure. so as this continues and if people show up where you are, where do they go? and how do they, can they rebuild their lives? do they have any hope that they will return to ukraine? >> reporter: yeah. you talk to any refugee, they tell you they want to go home. a lot of them are trying to stay as close to the border as possible because, eric, they've got family members that are still across the border, their husbands and their fathers who are fighting a war.
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they don't want to be separated too far from them. but here's the thing, this is a process, right? they get off these trains, they come into the train stations, they get loaded onto buses, then they get taken to refugee centers where they might sleep there for a night or two because there's so many people coming in, these refugee centers can really only hold them for one or two nights, and then they have to go on to other cities like warsaw in poland. but then when they get there, they're told, okay, you can't also stay here forever, so then they have to find another city or town to go in or go further into the e. e.u. but, again, people don't want to go further into the e.u. because they want to stay as close to ukraine as possible, they do think they will be able to get back. as you know, as i know, the way these things go and with the video that we're seeing prosecute ground in ukraine with, there might not -- from the ground in ukraine, there might not be a home or neighborhood to go back to, there might not be a school, a job because some of these places
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are just now being leveled. eric? eric: all caused by vladimir putin. arab shah of theny, thank you. arthel? if. arthel: thank you. for more you, we're going to bring in the former president of ukraine, petro por schoen sew -- poroshenko. he has a new five-step plan for peace. first of all, thank you for joining us, and i'd like to commend you for your valiant and heroic example of leadership by joining the fight yourself against russian forces. and and now i want to get right to the interview. you have invited president biden to visit kyiv while in europe this coming week. do you really think it's safe or ad good idea on any level to have the president of the united states enter an active war zone? >> i definitely -- first of all, i want to thank the fox news for the objective information are
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from ukraine. this is extremely important. right now i hear the sounds of missiles and just returned back from our front line within 10 kilometers from here we have russian tanks. but for the last 10 days, we don't allow russian troops to move any one steps more. and if you're asking me is it safe? no, this is not safe. this is not safe for my 40 million nation. but three prime minister come here, prime minister of poland, of czech republic, of slow vain ya, and with -- slow vain ya, and it has extreme symbolic importance, and that would be the demonstration, very good friend of mine, very good friend of ukraine, president joe biden
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demonstrated the real global leadership. being here in ukraine, in kyiv, our capital, and don't tell our putin to have any hopes to capture kyiv because we ukrainians never give up. we many kyiv standing here -- we in kyiv standing here in front listening to missile sound don't give them any, any chance. we want to have two recommendations. recommendation number one, please, don't be afraid of putin. do it exactly like the ukrainians do. and point number two, don't trust putin because putin many times promise not to take ukraine, and he now crazy person, mad person opinion, attack ukraine and killing ukrainians. arthel: your successor, another brave soldier, president zelenskyy, who told cnn this morning that he wants to speak with and negotiate directly with putin, saying that without negotiations this fighting and
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innocent people dying, that it's all if in vain. he's calling it shadow, and -- shallow, and he adds that without such negotiations it would mean this is a third world war. do you agree, and do you think putin is ready to negotiate in good faith? you just said don't trust him. >> i think that ukrainians surprise, that putin -- surprised putin and the world with our unity. we have a meeting between me and zelenskyy and do our best to start with a clean sheet of paper and demonstrate a unity to the world. we think that putin attack not only ukraine, putin attack the whole west, our principles, the necessity that the answer of the corrective west should be destructive for putin. and with that situation, i definitely support president zelenskyy in any form of meeting
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with president putin. and his request are, until be my recommendation, it is very simple. this is help us to save you. the americans, the europeans. and with this situation, as you're absolutely rightly assess, we have a plan for the five necessary points. point number one is urgency to vote the land lease act 2022 edition. and with this situation we need everything from nutrition to ammunition. and we are fighting here. this is not the system, this is the investment of the world in your own security. point number two with this situation is to close the sky. we are not talking about that americans close the skies for us. we need anti-aircraft missiles,
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we need jet fighters, old jet fighters from the soviet union, and we have one of the bravest and greatest pilots in the world to hit russian planes because we already hit more than 200 helicopters and jet fighters. point number three, this is the position of the second version 2022, everything but soldiers. with this situation we need every single day while putin continue to kill ukrainian civilians, ukrainian children, more sanctions. we need embargo on the oil, embargo on the gas, embargo on whole russian exports because this is a disaster. when putin receive $70, 80 million an hour for serving the money to killing ukraine. and point number four, this is the marshall plan version 2022. i would happily named it biden,
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johnson plan for assistance -yard line, and -- ukraine, and we have the russian money which can definitely go to support ukraine. and point number five also very important, this is the case for support ukrainian ally european integration because we may be the most difficult test, and is we already pay the highest price with the tolls of ukrainian blood and with thousands and and thousands of lives of ukrainian heroes demonstrating that we are for freedom and for democracy, and this is exactly the place which we should rise up this question what's happening next week, the assignment of nato which happening in europe. and definitely that would be right place to declare to ukraine their status for candidate country for the e.i. membership. e.u. membership. arthel: okay. you mentioned the candidate for e.u. membership, that perhaps means that, you know, membership
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into nato is definitely off the table. but bear with me here for a second, sir, because you had a lot to say. i do, in fact, hope that the unity that ukraine has exhibited so valiantly is going to be infectious throughout the world. you also know that india just this week purchased more oil from, crude oil from russia. so they're lining his pockets, continuing. and, obvious, any plan for peace requires cooperation from putin. so if he refuses a peaceful option to end his war on your great nation, a compromise, there has been some controversy here in the u.s. about ways to remove or force putin from power. how do you think putin should be handled at this time? >> well, my the following, that we should increase the effectiveness of ukrainian armed forces.
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and i'm proud that it is we who create the new ukrainian armed forces in 2014, and we demonstrate that the russian army was underestimating ukrainian armed forces. and we just need to enforce putin to peace. this is the absolute stratosphere -- arthel: and, sir, if i, and i beg your pardon, sir, but that's what i'm asking, because as you're crying out for help as you rightly should and as the world is watching this horrible war on your people and the war -- and the world supports you -- putin continues to shell, you know? he's indiscriminately killing civilians. so, yes, equipment is there, humanitarian aid is there, more is on the way, but time is of the essence. if is there a way, in your estimation, your experience --
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this is all new for everybody, i understand, but how can putin be stopped immediately? >> i just thought i explain you. the -- first of all, the assistance, the weapons is not enough. we talking about the anti-aircraft missiles, we're talking about the jet fighter, we talking about the new armed personnel carrier. please, help us to save you. this is the message. and just you should understand that putin go as far as we allow them to go. putin don't stop in ukraine. arthel: i understand, sir. what should be done, sir, with the little time heft? and i don't want to rush you, but what should be done to stop him? i understand that you're saying that all of the humanitarian aid, everything that's happening and you appreciate it, we understand that, but he keeps killing your people. so do you have an idea of how to stop him immediately? >> this is exactly what i explain to you. i am not a terrorist.
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we protect our own country and our own freedom. and as i said, weapons, sanction russia. sanctions should be increased also for the countries and companies who violate the sanction no matter what nationality it is. india and others. putin start to be extremely toxic, and everybody should put him in complete isolation. and then russian people definitely erase him. and my request is very simple, please stop finance russian war. make a full embargo for the whole russia, and and that immediately liquidate russian possibility to attack us. and make pressure to withdraw putin's troops from ukrainian soil. definitely this works.
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and, please, just need -- sorry. arthel: no, no, i'm sorry, sir. yes, i hear you. i hear you loud and clear. you are not a terrorist, i understand that very much, sir. we respect your resolve, your resilience, we are here with you. i hope you get everything that you need to stop the killing of your people, and i thank you for your messagings. i hope they have been -- messages. i hope they have been communicated loudly and very clear everyone who needs to hear. former prime minister of ukraine, do -- president of ukraine, petro poroshenko. glory to ukraine. >> thank you. [speaking in native tongue] eric: a brave leader and a brave people. you know, as ukraine pleads for more help, it does have the overwhelm whenninging support of the world, and that is seen in the condemnation of russia at the united nations. on friday the russian ambassador to the u.n -- down on a resolution introducing more humanitarian efforts in the
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security council. that russian-backed resolution did not even acknowledge that moscow is to blame for this catastrophe. the united states' ambassador called it a farcical effort saying it is more prop began da from russia, and earlier at the security council i confronted the russian ambassador about putin's war. here is his chilling response. ambassador, when will vladimir putin stop his war crimes? when will you sop this obscene assault existence ukraine, and will vladimir putin surrender? >> [inaudible] surrender, what -- >> reporter: surrender your assault and barbaric war against ukraine, will you stop in the stake of humanity? >> when the goals of the special military operations are achieved, it will stop. eric: someone who knows the halls of the united nations very well and the russian playbook is
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with us now. former british ambassador to the united nations, now her imagine city's ambassador to the united states -- her majesty's ambassador to the united states, dame karen pearce. >> thanks very much, eric. could i just offer my condolences on the fox journalists who were reporting for ukraine and got attacked. i just wanted to put that on the record. lots of journalists there doing very brave work. eric thank you so much. we appreciate that, those sentiments for our colleagues who were killed and also for reporter benjamin hall who was wounded. we've just heard here on "fox news live" from former president poroshenko with his plaintive plea for the allies to do more, get those anti-aircraft weapons systems in and the like. what can we do to help ukraine further than we have? >> i think we keep going, eric, we keep going on getting more defensive lethal weapons to them. we keep going on tightening the
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noose on the russian economy, and we keep going on putting international pressure and isolation on president putin as you were just describing. nato leaders will meet on thursday this week, and they mar international meetings as well. they'll be looking at the strategic impact of sanctions and what more can be done. they'll be looking at how we can accelerate getting anti-tank and anti-air missiles into ukraine. i stress those are defensive, those are not to attack russia in russia, those are to help the ukrainians defend their country, and leaders will also want to talk about the humanitarian situation. eric: we've heard a lot about a no-fly zone, and there is concern that putin could potentially resort -- he's used threats, nuclear threats, that is in place. we just heard president poroshenko talk about lend-lease too. and as you know, the original program from president franklin
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delano roosevelt to your country and our allies in oil and food and weapons to face the nasties, do you see a similar -- nazis, to you i -- see a similar type of program happening now? can there be more brought in to ukraine, as much as possible? >> well, we were very grateful as a country for american assistance in world war ii, and that fundamentally cemented the special relationship. lend lease might be an option, but i don't know that we actually need to go down that road. what we're doing at the moment through various hubs is getting very serious defensive equipment into ukraine. we, the brits, have sent 4,000 anti-tank missiles, we're going to send something called star streak which is a very capable anti-air missile. the united states and other allies are doing likewise. quite how rewe arrange those programs might be something on people's minds, but the priority at the moment is to get the
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equipment there as fast as possible and in as larging a quantity as possible, and we're working very hard on that that. eric: you just mentioned, let me read you what the new york times reported about what your country is doing. they call it a, quote, a gift from britain is destroying russian tanks. britain has sent more than 4,200 to ukraine. the n-lapp lab is better for -- n-lab is better for close battles. the ukrainians have shown the will and extraordinary nerve to get close to tanks and destroy them in these missile attacks. talk about the use of the n-labs that you have sent to ukraine and how, i mean, putin's probably been surprised that, you know, so many of his tanks are being destroyed. >> i think he's been surprised by the heroic resince -- resistance and the coherence and togetherness that has brought to the country. i don't think he expected that that. i don't think he expected the western nato to come together as
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closely as they have. i mean, fundamentally he's driven nato closer together, and he's driven other countries like sweden and finland closer to nato. it's hard to see that that formed part of his original war aims. and i'd also like to say, if i may, eric, you know, president putin in this war on ukraine set out to recreate the russian empire, and what he's really done is set his economy back to the soviet era. he's reestablished the soviet economy after 30 years of better prosperity for all russians. so really it's very hard to see what the are russian people are going to benefit from this invasion and this awful war that putin is waging. eric: and you have spent many years behind closed doors with the russian counterparticipants, and we heard -- counterparts, and we herald the russian ambassador brush off my questions. when you go behind closed doors and president zelenskyy wants to meet with putin, how do you deal
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with honest nance? how do you -- bobs stance? if how do you deal when they say no -- how do you see this plague out if there are ceasefire negotiations that are meaningful? >> well, first of all, i thought to call it a special operation was just grotesque. it's an invasion on the scale of things we saw in world war ii, and there's another irony there when you think of how many russians died in world war ii fighting hitler. and here is putin taking a leaf out of that book. so diplomacy in general, you're right, you do need to get behind closed doors. president zelenskyy would need to be safe if he entered into any negotiations, and he'd need to know that other people were on their side to counteract the disinformation and other things that the russians might do. so i don't want to speak for president zelenskyy. he's clearly a fantastically brave leader. often in diplomacy it's possible to have a third party come in
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and help broker a way forward, but i do want to stress that this can't be done to over the heads of president zelenskyy or the ukrainian people. it's not another yalta, to use another world war ii analogy. ukraine has a right to its sovereignty, its territorial integrity and its independence. and only, really only ukrainians can decide what the future of their country is. but we are here to help, and we're here to help them resist the russian invasion. eric: 30 seconds left. zelenskyy, of course, channeling the spirit of winston churchill. how do you think this will end? >> well, i hope it will end with a ceasefire, and i hope that ceasefire will come quickly so that we can get humanitarian aid in. and i hope it will end with ukraine's sovereignty and independence being restored. it's hard to see a way ahead at the moment, i'm sure that's one
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thing leaders will be discussing over the current dayses including, obviously, with president zelenskyy. but fundamentally, it needs to end with the russian people recognizing what's being done in their name. hay don't get enough information about the outside world, and it needs to end with people in the kremlin telling mr. putin that this war is not benefiting russia. eric: the people in the kremlin telling putin to stop or stopping him. ambassador karen pierce of great britain, thank you for your time and thank you for joining us here on the fox news channel. >> thank you, eric. eric: of course. and and we'll be, we will be right back. >> tech vo: this cusr had auto glass damage, but he was busy working from home... ...so he scheduled with safelite in just a few clicks. we came to his house... ...then we got to work. we replaced his windshield and installed new wipers to protect his new glass, while he finished his meeting. let safelite come to you. >> man: looks great. thank you.
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arthel: the assault on ukraine approaches the one month mark. chilling videos continue to come in from the war zone from massive destruction to absolutely gut-wrenching evidence of victims, young and old, to billions forced to plea
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their home -- to millions forced the flee their homes. >> reporter: more disturbing videos coming across the wires today. we're going to start with a new video that we just got of a confrontation between russia and ukraine, but it's not between soldiers. this is ukrainian civilians protesting against troops. take a look here. [inaudible conversations] they're chanting, go home. conditions in kherson deteriorating. you see the russian military vehicle with the letter z on it back up, eventually the driver is going to turn around and not go home, but they did drive away. we also have new video coming out of kyiv where mayor vitali klitschko is showing the devastation. you see cars burned out, just manage ifinged and melted sheet metal as klitschko addressed his
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people while showing the damage. there's also a large shell crater that he shows i off at one point in this video. listen to what he said, because klitschko believes attacks like this actually inspire ukrainians to fight instead of opposite. [speaking in native tongue] >> translator: they want to terrify people, but a they won't succeed. ukrainians aren't afraid. those kinds of actions just provoke more hatred and fuel desire to fight back against the aggressor who is attacking our wimp and children. >> reporter: in mariupol conditions are even worse. an art school today, we learned, was bombed where 400 people were seeking refuge. we herald president volodymyr zelenskyy call these things war crimes, he has accused vermont myrrh putin -- vladimir putin of committing war crimes, and today ukraine's deputy prime minister is making hit it clear she greece. >> they commit the war crimes, and they do these targeted
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attempts to -- ukrainian population. and you see it by the wording on the identification they're using. so it's not a question, it's simply the reality we all face on 21st century. >> reporter: she went on to say so far in this war there are more civilian victims than there are victims in the yawnen defense -- ukrainian defense forces. back to you. arthel: nate foy, thank you very much. eric? eric: president biden is set to travel to nato headquarters in brussels later this week. he will meet with alliance leaders there about the war. we just heard from former ukrainian president poroshenko pleading for more anti-aircraft systems from the allies to face the russian bombing. the british ambassador to the u.s. karen pierce saying this will stop when people in the kremlin tell putin to do just that. mark meredith live at the white house with more on trying to find a diplomatic solution. hi, mark. >> reporter: eric, good afternoon to you. as you mentioned, president biden will be going to europe,
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but white house aides say there are no plans for the president to step foot in ukraine given the war there. still, this trip that's going to be happening on wednesday and thursday, very important to the alliance for the secretary general of nato who today said that the meeting with world leaders will reverberate globally. >> the meeting of all heads of state and government provide us yet another platform to demonstrate our unity, our support to ukraine but also to protect and defend all nato allies and by sending a message. >> reporter: on friday president biden urging china's president not to assist russia amid the sweeping sanctions now hitting vladimir putin. the chinese though, they are criticizing the sanctions imposed. one official calling it outrageous this weekend. the white house says china could soon face consequences for aid aing russia, but officials are not laying out what those consequences would be. meantime, the u.s. still spending billions of dollars
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sending weaponry in to ukraine, everything from javelin missiles to body armor, but the u.n. ambassador says there are no plans for u.s. combat troops to go into this conflict. >> we don't want to escalate this into a war with the united states. but we will support our nato allies. we have troops, as you know, in nato countries, and the president has made clear that if there is an attack on any of our nato countries under article v, that we will support those countries and defend those countries. >> reporter: we expect the president to talk about u.s. commitment to nato when he goes to brussels this morning. he had a bike ride this morning in delaware, but he is due back here at the white house in about an hour or so. eric. eric: thanks so much. arthel: we're going to go to arkansas where police say one person was killed and 20 wounded last night in a shooting at a car show. they say multiple gunmen opened
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fire at the event about 90 miles southeast of little rock. one suspect is in custody. organizers say this was a first for the annual auto show. >> we've been doing this for 16 years and never had a problem, and everybody been loving. sometimes it takes one bad apple, but we ain't gonna let out ruin us. we're going to stand with our community, stand with our town, stand with our loved ones. arthel: well, the group hosting the show said it promotes nonviolence and raises money for scholarships. police say multiple children were hurt but are expected to survive. eric: and it was a chaotic scene in the heart of miami beach early this morning as bullets flew near a restaurant where spring breakers were partying just after midnight. some were wounded and others trampled, it happened right in the heart of miami beach sending those spring breakers stampeding out of there. the gunman still at large.
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arthel: a eric, we're back to the war in ukraine. the u.n. reports nearly 900 civilians have been killed since russia's invasion. that grim number likely to rise, unfortunately, once crew members are able to dig through the rubble. if our coverage continues right after this. / ( ♪♪ ) ( ♪♪ ) you're a one-man stitchwork master. but your staffing plan needs to go up a size. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire welcome to ameriprise. i'm sam morrison, my brother max recommended you. so my best friend sophie says you've been a huge help. at ameriprise financial, more than 9 out of 10
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unjustified russian war has created a hue hand marijuana -- humanitarian crisis and instructs authorities to consider exempting migrants with ukrainian passports from title 42 so they can somewhere the country. they are allowed to be processed under humanitarian parole on a case by case basis. one ukrainian native, who lives in beverly hills, waited in tijuana with her cousin and her cousin's young son last monday to get them9 into the u.s. her relatives escaped the bombing and gunfire in ukraine, now they're safe here in california. marina says she actually saw more russians waiting in line at the southern border than ukrainians last monday. local immigration attorneys say some of these russians are trying to steer clear of anything having to do with putin opinion's war. >> they are typically dissident, they oppose putin's government, and they a oppose the policies. >> we're all brothers, sisters. like, it's unbelievable what is
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going on. russia and ukraine with, like, we are almost alike. like how many years, i remember, i saw my best friend here in united states, she's russian, you know? what is going on, we just keep crying, like, it's so sad. it's, like, insane. >> reporter: one of by sources at the border tells me border patrol agents don't expect in the to situation overwhelm them as they continue to focus on the surge in illegal border crossings that they've been dealing with for months now. arthel? arthel: christina a coleman live in our l.a. bureau, thanks. eric? eric: well, in a break from our coverage for a moment, fox nation, as you know, has a new episode this week about the search for jimmy of hoffa. it is our exclusive series, riddled: the search for james r. hoffa, and reports that he is buried in a barrel in new jersey. it's under an elevated a highway in jersey city. for the show i interviewed i-vonny rock coe who went
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undercover for the fbi in the new jersey if media -- mafia, and he says, yes, burying him under the ground there by those mobsters in the mobsters' own turf, he says it does make sense. ♪ eric: that message could be hoffa in a barrel under the skyway. >> sit there forever as a trophy. bring him back home, bring him here, you know? think about it. what do you do in sports? we all collect autographed balls and put 'em on our mantel. that that's our trophy, our way to remember things. these guys, yeah, it could be a as simple as bury him there, and every time we drive by we'll laugh, you know? that's as simple as it goes. yeah, there's so and so. every time they drive, there he is, that's where he still sits, you know? and that as they ride by, they give him the finger. in that life, it sounds crazy, but that's what they do. eric: all the episodes are streaming on fox nation now.
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go to fox nation when you have a chance, check it out. the show called the government's pot about that spot. -- property about that spot. and we will be right back. versus 16 grams in ensure high protein. boost® high protein also has key nutrients for immune support. boost® high protein. to see my ancestors' photos was just breathtaking. wow, look at all those! what'd you find? lorraine banks, look, county of macomb, michigan? oh my goodness... this whole journey has been such a huge gift for our family.
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eric: as vladimir putin's attacks leave a path of death and destruction in ukraine, journal is are risking their
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lives to document the horrors of this war. some are ukrainians, and they're sharing stunning videos like what you see here of the damage done to their homeland. sherry is a ukrainian journalist and joins us now. i want you to know that americans are with you. what have you seen, what is going on right now? >> good evening. it is already evening in ukraine and this was just a few seconds ago airstrike alarm is sounding here where i am at at the moment. so what i want to show you now is this building behind me, you see it's an apartment building. usually there is a lot, there are a lot of lights in windows, but now there is just a few of them. so this is because with most of people from here and from other houses surround me, they just
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went away from the city. and, you know, this city is not the most damaged, yes? this is not the most danger in this city, but people afraid, and they're trying to escape, to run away some more places. but, actually, another thing that i wanted to tell you today is that, a little bit about my home city. there was a few bombings this week in kyiv, and if you can show some videos from there that i showed you by our rescue service, so one of this rockets just fell very close to my home, house in kyiv. to have chew nately, as i know for -- fortunately as i know for this moment my apartment is not
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damaged. but around there lot of damaged houses and school and the kindergarten and is just a few hundred meters from my home, my apartment. just today there was another missile that fell in another area of ukrainian capital. is another terrible damages in the city. eric: we have two minutes left, serhii. how do you deal with this? how are your spirits, and how do you hold up? >> well, you know, more than three weeks passed since the beginning of in the war -- of this war, and what i realized today is that we started to get used to the situation, you know?
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one of the, lot of the best news of today is that i managed to my haircut, you see? it feels as if some small businesses are starting to work again despite of the sirens all day. fear, starting to get used to this, and i think that this is a hope for a fast finish of this war. eric: we do, we all hope that this will finally end, that putin are come to his senses, that he will stop this humanitarian carnage and the war crimes. serhii popov, getting a haircut in the middle of the carnage. please stay safe and please know that we are all with you. that is our newscast for arthel neville and myself. thank you for watching. woo hoo! ensure, complete balanced nutrition with 27 vitamins and minerals.
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>> everybody know that aircraft defense is the best. everybody knows that arms are strong. we can ask why we cannot get-- why israel didn't introduce powerful sanctions, why russian businesses-- but, you have to make a choice. you have to choose the answer and you have to live with this answer, people of israel. mike: that was

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