tv Sky News on MSNBC MSNBC March 26, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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this is sky news. ahead, the headlines. bombarded and encircled. the ukrainians fleeing to safety in a continuous russian bombardment. president zelenskyy calls on nations to increase their outputs in the economic war against russia. the american counterpart continues his trip to nato's eastern fringe.
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meanwhile, there's no let-up in the fighting with russia, launching missiles from the fleet in the black sea. also coming up, a p & o ferry is detained in northern ireland with issues of documentation and training, after 800 staff were sacked. ♪ >> the drummer taylor hawkins is found dead in his hotel room in the middle of the band's tour. good morning. the war in ukraine is now into its second month, but the defiance of its people appears to remain undimmed. the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy says his country has put powerful blows
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on russia which admitted it is giving up on ambitions to take over ukraine. president zelenskyy pushed for more talks with russia and this morning called on other oil producing companies with russia, so russia can't effectively blackmail other nations. and let's look at the key developments in the war. russian forces appear to have shifted their focus from a ground offensive aimed at kyiv to instead prioritizing what moscow calls liberation of the contested donbas region. the latest u.k. ministry of defense intelligence suggests russia is likely to continue to use its heavy fire power on urban areas, and it looks to limit its already considerable losses at the cost of further casualties. ukraine's deputy prime minister has said an agreement has been reached to open ten humanitarian
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corridors today, to evacuate civilians from front line towns and cities. and a curfew in the capital kyiv has been extended until monday morning. as the likelihood of more shelling occurs. northern ukraine, those who described the escape, describe the city as hell as sky news witnessed the destruction of the final route for humanitarian aid. the main road from belarus to the ukrainian capital kyiv, it's continuously bombarded with little access to water and electricity. sky's special correspondent alex crawford reports from the city, now cut off from the outside world. and just a warning that the report contains images of shrapnel wounds. >> this is the last route in or out across an open field, where
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every vehicle could be a target. the city surrounded on three sides by russian troops at this point. and there's a stream of cars carrying the civilians out of the combat zone. the window to get across the last remaining pedestrian bridge, across the river is rapidly closing. but the russians have spotted this escape route, and minutes after we arrived, they hit had. -- they hit it. >> the shelling is very close. >> get in, get in, get in. get in. >> there's a mad scramble to get out of the area and the attacks keep on coming. the russians have used this
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tactic repeatedly in this war. lines of civilians lay on the ground, as the shelling goes on. and pick themselves up to walk through these bombings, they have no option. only chance or prayer will get them through this. there are scores of people trying to flee, with bags on their backs, they are guided through the fields by soldiers whose guns are no match for the heavy artillery. the russians have cut off the area and targeted those trying to escape their bombs. inside, the mayor has filmed some of the destruction. there is still an estimated 150,000 people trapped inside the city. it's strategically important because it stands right across the north route, chosen by russia, for its advance on the capital. its carnage, says the mayor. we take refuge in a gym, in a
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basement, with a group of volunteer soldiers. everyone who has made it out has withdrawn to nearby villages, themselves coming under bombardment. this gives the volunteer soldiers time to make phone calls home. one month on, fighting this war, their families and children are mostly well away from the chaos and death they're seeing here on a daily basis. >> my heart is just breaking, one father tells us. it's very difficult because i'm so used to being with my family. they're my whole life. >> day break, the following morning, and they're trying to work out how to get aid in and the civilians out. the last route is closed. and it is clearly still being targeted. one paramedic asked us for help. he's yuri and he tells us the bridge crossing point had been shelled 15 minutes earlier and now he is wounded. he has been deafened by the
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blast, it was so close, and he's got several shrapnel wounds. bits have lodged in his leg, and he needs surgery. there's little that can be done on the road side. but one of our team does what he can. and shrapnel appears to have punctured hus -- his lung. he say he is finding it hard to breathe. targeting paramedics is a war crime. he leaves to try to get to a hospital with this parting message for the world. >> our country needs your help. good luck. >> nearby, multiple remains of cluster bomb rocket, independent experts including the investigative group have identified them as cluster munitions, being used by both sides in this war, but the angle suggests these have been fired from russian positions. the united nations is investigating the use of cluster bombs as war crimes.
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there are constant sirens warning of impending attacks on the nearby villages. those who have made it out talk of a nightmarish existence. >> it's hell there. it's hell, this mother tells us. my children's god mother is still there. it's not possible to leave the shelter. there is no food, no gas, no electricity. it is just like mariupol. everyone is cut off. >> the rituals of death are followed in between the attacks. by those still struggling to live. but this isn't real living. it's just surviving. and those trapped in kherniv don't know how much longer they can hold out. >> ukrainian's president volodymyr zelenskyy has addressed the forum, and called on energy rich nations and other world powers to increase their production to counter-act the loss of russian energy supplies. >> this is also a question of
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abandoning the usage of russian oil and gas. a responsible state, like the state of qatar, reliable energy resources and they can make their contribution to the civilization in europe. they can do much to restore justice. the future of europe rests with your efforts and it depends on your efforts. i ask you to increase the output of energy, to ensure that everyone in russia understands that no country can use energy as a weapon and blackmail. >> russia's military has released these pictures, this morning, reportedly showing a naval missile launch on ukrainian military infrastructure, which it claims it has destroyed weapons of a military equipments depot in this region.
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and sky news is in the west of ukraine. from there our reporter brought us up to date a little earlier on. >> it is perhaps a face-saving exercise for vladimir putin and russian forces more than anything. we'll have to see what this reframing of their objectives really means on the ground. but certainly, it does suggest a real shift when they invaded a month ago, the objective was to take ukraine, to topple the government, and to take the capital, and none of those things have happened in the last month. russian troops really are under immense strain, and many parts of the country. so now, to reframe their objective, of so-called liberating the eastern region of donbas is a much more realistic target for russian forces, who suffered huge losses in many areas. but we must remember that it is hard to believe what russia says. let's not forget they vowed they weren't going to invade ukraine.
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vladimir putin repeatedly saying to the international community they weren't going to invade and of course they did invade. and we've also struggled to get accurate information from them throughout the last four weeks. they repeatedly denied targeting hospitals, civilian shelters, that maternity ward in mariupol, so what russia says, and what it does, can be two very different things, and we really have to see how this plays out. but certainly the senior russian general is trying to put a very positive spin on things, saying that russia has achieved its objectives in the first phase of this war, and if their objectives were to drive more than 3.5 million people out of the country, and more than 12 million people to now need humanitarian assistance, more than half of the country's children now homeless, and according to ukrainian official, 136 children to lose their lives, in the last month, well, it's hard to see how that
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represents success of the russian forces but certainly it is reframing its objective in terms of what they want to achieve here in ukraine. we're going to have to see how that plays out in the next phase of this war. >> in lviv, thank you. our security and defense editor debra haynes is live in warsaw, where president biden is due to meet with the counterpart in the next hour. poland's reputation across the world and i would say the last 30 days has completely changed, not the least with this symbolic trip from joe biden. >> yes, here, in the old town area of warsaw, and presentations are very much under way for this very important visit, this meeting, and you can probably see behind me, the police cars, with their lights on, the flag of warsaw, the red and yellow of warsaw flag and the blue and yellow flag of ukraine dominate this area. there are people also lining up to see if they get to see anything of the spectacle.
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president biden is going to be at the presidential palace, which is in a building kind of beyond where i'm standing, and he will meet with his polish counter part there, before going to the national stadium here in warsaw where he is due to meet with ukrainian refugees, and he talked about how poland's reputation has been massively elevated by the war next door in ukraine, and that's in large part because of the huge assistance that it's being forced to give to this flood of refugees that have come across the border. the majority of more than three million refugees have come to poland, to move onward, or to stay here, and so president biden will be able to see firsthand accounts from people that have been fleeing the conflict and he is due to come back here, and go to a castle, which is just down the road from where i'm standing and later this afternoon, he will be delivering what officials are saying is going to be a key important landmark speech where
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you will imagine to hear much more of what he has been voicing, articulating ever since he became president but something that the war in ukraine has really galvanized, the sense of a global confrontation between the world's democracies, and authoritarian regimes like the one in russia, this is president biden's moment. he asked for this extraordinary summit of nato that took place in brussels on thursday and is why really he is in the region at all. he also attended eu council meeting, a g-7 meeting, and now here in poland, it is all about galvanizing western allies to make sure that they stand up to russian actions and to ensure that the war in ukraine does not go the way that president putin wants, which as it stands is exactly what is happening. >> debra haynes in poland, thank you very much. so russia has hinted that it
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might no longer be concentrating on taking full control of ukraine and will instead focus on its, as it puts out, liberating the donbas region in the east of the country, which is largely controlled by separatists. well our defense analyst is here. this is a big change in tact from moscow, is it not? >> it is, if it is a genuine change. we just don't know. and i mean this statement was made by the deputy to the chief of general staff, he's the senior military person, he hasn't been seen anywhere since the 11th of march, so this was his deputy, and only a two star general, a major general, so not even a four star, so this was a statement being made by someone a bit lower down. it came out of the blue. there was no sort of push for the statement. it just appeared. so we're not quite sure what to make of it yet. but if it is the beginning of a re-thinking process, then it is pretty significant, yes.
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>> is this president putin's opportunity if it is true of a face and retreat? >> that would be difficult, because militarily it would make sense for the russians to concentrate their troops at the donbas and three lines at the moment and all stuck and the ukrainians are successfully countering them and pushing them back which is remarkable and if i were a him, we have to concentrate our forces somewhere and we can can concentrate in the donbas. and the separatists are occupying about a third of the donbas, so it is possible that the russians will say look we'll take all of the donbs, the cities there, where the ukrainians are fighting most fiercely, we haven't heard much about it because there's no media there but it's where ukraine has the best forces and the russians might say, let's bring it down to this, and make this a proper victory, but
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politically, can they sit on it if they take it? probably not. because putin has crossed so many -- boundaries, nobody is going to play nice with him in the rest of europe the way they did before. he revealed himself to be an aggressive dictator and invader of a country, no question. so even if they now control the donbas as a result of all of this, they will have to fight to hold it. >> that's what vladimir pute and , vladimir putin and moscow wants but is that what we want? >> the ukrainians have the upper hand politically, and they are wiping the floor and the rest of the world with their opinion and the rest of the world interprets this not as a war of ukraine only, it is a war between the autocracies who think they can rule by force and the liberal democracies, so this isn't just a crisis for us to manage, this is a crisis we have to win, we,
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the western world, and so even if putin says i'll settle for the donbas, i don't think ukraine would accept it, because they are actually now in the ascend ant politically and the rest of world will back whatever the ukrainian government can live with it, if the rest of us can grit our teeth and say okay. but if the ukrainians say no, we can't live with this, the rest of the world will say, you don't have to do so. a ferry has been detained in ireland, where the coast guard says the ship was held on failures of crew training and documentation, and the government minister told us the situation is a mess, and those at the top of it the situation need to sort it out. >> it has turned into a complete mess. and as the secretary of state for transport said yesterday, this seems to land at the foot of the management of that organization who have not
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behaved, i have to say, in the best manner that we would expect leaders of a company of that kind of status and importance to behave. i know there are strong conversations around going to the department of transport and the company itself and indeed the company's owners, to try and sort this mess out. >> joining me now is sky news katie barnfield. some people will say this was only a matter of timing, and he sacked 800 staff and they have been with p & o over 20 years and tried to hire staff with little to no experience. >> and we are just a week on from that highly controversial decision by p & o to sack those 800 workers and indeed concerns were raised at the time, would the chief agency staff that they're bringing in replace these workers have the required experience and will they get trained up and quick enough to operate these routes safely. we are now hearing of course the ferry which is called the european causeway has been detained by the maritime coast guard agency, in northern
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ireland for a number of issues, including crew training, i mean they have ruled it unfit to sail. now, we heard from the policing minister talking about strong conversations ongoing between the government and p & o ferry, to try and sort this out. but that kind of language is not going to go far enough for some. including, for instance, the rmt union, who have been pushing for the government to seize all of p & o ships. we heard from them last night, about the detention of the ship, and they say the seizing of the european causeway by the nca shows that the gangster capitalist outfit p & o are not fit and proper to run a safe service. they should be barred and the ships im pounded and the sacked crews reinstated to get these crucial ferry routes back running safely. we heard on sky earlier, the shadow employment minister, just a matter of pushing for the government to pursue prosecution
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against p & o's leadership. the prime minister of course has already joined calls for p & o chief executive to resign. but of course, the detention of a ship now on safety grounds is only going to pile on further government pressure on the government to do more to intervene. >> katie barnfield, thank you. now, the drummer of the american rock band foo fighters taylor hawkins has died at the age of 50. ♪ >> announcing the band was devastated and saying hawkins musical spirit and infectious laster will live on with all of us forever, and oddly found in his hotel room in colombia with the world tour set to include the u.k. this summer. ♪
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well, this is sky news. coming up, president biden to condemn russia's invasion of russia as he meets refugees in warsaw. (music throughout) we hit the bike trails every weekend shinges doesn't care. i grow all my own vegetables shingles doesn't care. we've still got the best moves you've ever seen good for you, but shingles doesn't care.
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the german group. what do you make of president biden's trip to poland, it has been described as an ally to the u.s. is it a big change in relation? >> it is a huge shift over the course of the last six to eight weeks. and of course due to the war in ukraine and the role that poland is playing. both politically and geographically. poland is a bridge to ukraine. both for the refugees coming out, leaving ukraine, for europe, but also a bridge for humanitarian and military aid to ukraine, from the west. we are also key here for the defense of the eastern flank, and that's why the relationship has gone full transformation, and after the visit from the secretary of defense and secretary of state, we had a visit from the vice president, and now the president, all over
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the course of the last four weeks. >> and what do you think this trip will mean to not only poland but ukraine? because president biden will be meeting with refugees, as they spill over from ukraine into poland, which have faced the brunt of this refugee crisis? >> well, this visit for president biden is very much a front line visit. he, as you said, he visited a town only about 100 kilometers of our american friends, 60 miles from the border with ukraine, but very importantly, also just as we speak, there's a meeting between the ukrainian foreign and defense ministers, with the american counterparts, secretary blinken, and secretary austin, and this is the first time such a meeting, where u.s. and ukraine are coordinating directly military and humanitarian aid for ukraine. this is really a huge news that
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was unannounced immediately before, and we're happy to see it. >> and are meetings like this, they are showing that united front, isn't it, from nato allies against this russian invasion. what more do you want to see from other nato allies to support not only poland but ukraine? >> you are entirely right, that this is really first of all about ukraine. even this visit to poland is really a visit to ukraine in many ways. it is just because of the ongoing war that biden cannot go there. what else do we need to see? we need to support ukraine militarily, first of all. this meeting today between the ukrainian and american ministers can provide very much clear details, and when we hear from the ukrainian side, what we hear from the ukrainian side is first of all, a longer range missile defense, but also more of a
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heavier group including tanks and armored vehicles and also planes. so hopefully this will begin to be transferred to ukraine as it's fighting a fight for really europe's freedom. >> and we're seeing pictures now of the poland/ukrainian border where millions of people have fled to poland and have received a warm welcome. how is poland looking to the future and how they will logistically cope with so many people? >> over 3 million ukrainians, ukrainian friends, brothers and sisters, have crossed to poland, and how are we able to hope and cope, at first, it is the pour-out of kindness and support has been just tremendous, and it's not been an issue at all at first, because everyone took folks from ukraine to their homes, and people from ukraine to their homes, and now, it's
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clear that it has to be an effort that is an effort in which the whole of european union is participating, and the u.s. is also pledging money, and we need to make sure that everyone is taken care of, both in a day-to-day way, but also that over time, jobs are provided, and that eventually, these people who want to come back to ukraine can do it, and to support and work for ukraine, and they need to do that, and not only just staying in the west. >> and what do you expect to hear from president biden later? what do you need from the u.s.? >> i think we need a vision at this point of how this war between autocracies and democracies will play out. this is a theme of president biden's presidency.
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he's, this is in many ways a theoretical division, this confrontation between democracies and autocracies. right now in ukraine in europe, we have a real front line. so we need forward vision, from the president, for both victory and then rebuilding of ukraine specifically, but also in this confrontation that is very likely to continue for many years to come. >> thank you very much for your time today. >> always a pleasure. let's take a look at the weather now. k at the weather now. >> it will be fine for a few days yet but it will turn cooler and more unsettled next week,
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with wintry showers to come, most places very warm again today but onshore breezes mean it will be consistently cooler in northern and eastern coasts, and stiff wind in the south will make it feel chilly there. inland areas will be dry and sunny this afternoon, but the far north of scotland will be rather gray and murky. england and the north of ireland may see low clouds moving on to the coast later as well. most areas will be dry and clear overnight but mist and fog and low clouds will spread over many of the eastern british coast. tt this is sky news. coming up, on this program, for younger people, fyi.
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you see, son, with a little elbow grease, you can do just about anything. thanks, dad. that's right, robert. and it's never too early to learn you could save with america's number one motorcycle insurer. that's right, jamie. but it's not just about savings. it's about the friends we make along the way. you said it, flo. and don't forget to floss before you brush. your gums will thank you. -that's right, dr. gary. -jamie? sorry, i had another thought so i got back in line. what was it? [ sighs ] i can't remember.
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this week on "fyi," a special report, we hear an appeal from the young people who rely on food banks. >> and we'll be heading almost two miles down the icy waters of antarctica to check on an unbelievable ship wreck discovery. >> this is fyi, and as the war in ukraine continue, millions of people are still fleeing the country to safety. >> millions of ukrainians are also staying behind to fight the
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russian forces. >> struggling to find a safe route out. and areas are being bombed in all times of the day and night. we have video diary of some children who are still in the country. >> these children live in central ukraine. which has escaped intense bombing. they spend their time online learning in the morning and the rest of the day is spent volunteering to help the military making things like camouflage nets. >> it has changed my life. i'm scared for my parents and friends. i really want to go to school. and see my friends again. go for a walk on the weekends. and enjoy my life. >> i want to do something useful. so we can win the war. staying home and doing nothing is boring. and we need to help the military and all of the other people. >> meanwhile, she was forced to
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stay in a shelter before she managed to travel to a safer city further west in ukraine. >> i was staying in a bomb shelter for eight days and it was really crazy. it was all the time, you hear bombs. and buildings are getting destroyed near to your bomb shelter. and this is happening in the 21st century. but now i'm leaving there, and i'm safe and i'm really thankful. i'm staying with my friends right now. and of course, i feel kind of guilt of leaving my hometown and moving, but now i can be helpful, and not stay only in the bomb shelter. we are helping people at the local railway station. and also we help refugees to get to the borders and escape from the country, because people are really afraid.
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>> if you don't get why russian invaded ukraine and learn why and how world leaders are trying to end the war, click on the "i don't get it" link. there are a series of conversations that give kids a voice on some of the big issues on "fyi," conversations like noah. >> when we heard an increasing number of young people are being bored and meant to feel embarrassed using food banks, we thought it was time to have a conversation. >> we always struggled. my mom was working a lot but she wasn't earning enough to supply for us all. >> there have been times that we've not had as much as we've needed, and we've needed help. >> it was quite difficult really.
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especially in this area. and quite isolated. >> we were being judged for using the food bank and that can put people off. >> 2.5 million british children live in food poverty. we speak from experience. >> this food bank helped my family. we also volunteer here. >> this is a place where the food is actually stored and the food that is most needed is things that are the basic things that people need every day. >> thank you very much. >> my family, we didn't really have to ask for help. people would know that we're struggling and would help with food, and it helped with the church we went to, and i know for some people, it can actually
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be dawning to go into a food bank, and they don't want to say yeah, we're struggling. >> it was definitely that people had needed help and there is many ways that prevent people from going to the food bank. >> i already worried what people would think of me in school. people would say things and i was really embarrassed. and there were a few people who would make comments. you must be poor. and they would tell everyone about it. >> this girl is three. it costs a lot to try to travel back and forth to hospitals. my dad had to stop working. and that made it very difficult for us.
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it became harder, i actually work to get food. >> it just became a lot harder. there are times where my parents would go without food. and make sure that we could eat. and parents have to make that decision whether to make their needs or help their children. >> with the healthy food, it is much better than unhealthy food. and you don't have enough money, it adds health risks to it. >> people are going to go to the options that are cheaper, because then, they're not spending as much money. but they're still managing to eat. >> at school, me and my sister would have free school meals and
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pasta had vegetables and she was charged an extra 16 p, and it is not good, that with free school meals you still have to pay for the vegetables so you have a healthy diet. >> in part of the school, we didn't get much help at all, and i was struggling to eat and my mom was working a lot and wasn't earning enough, so it was a lot of not being able to scrape up enough money because of bills and stuff. it is very stressful when you can't eat anything but you're very hungry as well. it's definitely distractive, because you're more focused on your stomach than lessons. you have to tell yourself. so my mom did find out about the help, and she was able to apply for food stamps and it definitely helped. >> the primary issue is how
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important it is to put yourself in someone else's shoes before you say something or write something. >> before the pandemic, food banks were helping but now with so many struggling to make money, with the pandemic, it has gotten ten times worse. >> hi, guys. >> hi. >> i come from a big family. we are all together, it's very active. during the pandemic, we didn't have certain foods and it made it a lot more difficult. it was quite difficult. especially in this area, and quite isolated from other, from like many stores and supermarkets. we had support from others around us who would help us out
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if needed. i think we have a responsibility to help each other. especially in a country that is one of the search richest in the world. it is incredible really that we're in need of food. >> when people need help in a food crisis, they need help, but it is not a long term position. i've heard someone said, don't worry about the stigma, just get the help that you need. because it's easy to get help, it is easier to get help than struggle and i don't want anyone else to go through that. and those people who may, in a few years time, they may need help, so don't worry about it, and actually getting what you need is what matters. >> to check out more kid conversations on big issues like racism, bullying, and being a career, all on the web page.
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so maya, do you know what that is? >> i think it is a film reel, right? >> it is. and everything has gone digital now. these dies, they're recording on to a memory card. but back in the day, this is how they used to record film. so what happened to the stuff that was recorded on to film? because everything is now done on computers and into the cloud, right? >> the british film institute national archive, we're checking it out. >> i'm at the master film world, the most precious area here, to see how the films are kept and the amazing things they're doing with the films and i'm about to enter a special vault that is kept at minus 5 degrees. i'm not kidding. and ryan here will show us around. >> can you feel the cold? >> yes. >> why does the film have to be kept in such cold conditions? >> well, film deteriorates, and naturally, so we keep it very cold, which stabilizes
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everything and kills all the bugs so it will last for hundreds of years. >> so you can see one up close? >> we can go in the vault and see where they live. >> oh, my gosh. it's freezing. >> this is where the cans live, in the cold. >> and you have an interesting story, right? >> they were saved from a ship wreck 100 years ago? >> absolutely. it was an expedition to antarctica, the ship got trapped in the ice and sank and the guy who made the film of the expedition saved it, so this is the actual can of film. >> be very careful. these are very fragile. they're over 100 years old. so this was in antarctica 100 years ago. >> oh, my gosh. >> would you like to see the film? >> it would be amazing. >> okay, let's go. >> it is not just about preserving reels of film, but the digital film are or the computer drives. these are set in storage. and the film producers can use
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the footage for new projects. and all kinds of document ris, to have a whole new generation of heroes. the latest resource film that is being released it several. >> so this is the famous explorer sir shackleton who went down to antarctica, to try and cross over the whole of the continent of antarctica. he went on his ship, the endurance. with 28 men. and they then got stuck in the ice. they had bad luck. >> and did they all survive? >> it was extreme difficult journey but they did eventually all get back. >> so who was it who actually filmed the voyage? >> the guy who films the voyage is a guy called frank hurley, and he was employed by the expedition, as the official photographer. there's really never been a film that has been better than this about antarctica with images absolutely stunning. >> why is the lack of filming so important? >> if you can imagine, if you
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can invent a machine that would go back and travel through time, like this, and imagine how cool that would be, to go 100 years ago, and go to antarctica, and that is what you would be looking at, you know, it is like a window into another time. >> nice one, scarlet. we've got an exciting update. this is sir shackleton's ship endurance and it has just been found nearly two miles down after it sank over a century ago. the search mission was headed up by the tv historian and he sent this video on how they found the ship. >> this is a very significant ship wreck find in recent history and i think it will seize the world's imagination like the finding of the titanic back in the day. the day the endurance sank, it
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was an exciting film, there was an estimation of where the ship sank. that proved unbelievable accurate. it was found using sonar. we have the world's most advanced underwater vehicles for this ship. people said we couldn't do it. people said the conditions down here here were too tough. but we did. the wreck appears to be in one big piece largely. just as it was last seen before it sank in november, 1915. it is so cold down there, there are no wood-eating micro organisms down there at all. so the wreck, it is as if it has been frozen in time, it has been preserved. we are leaving the wreck exactly as we found. it we are not touching it. we are not taking anything from. >> it the only thing we are taking is data. we are taking a laser scan. it means a model of the wreck to be reproduced to centimeter accuracy and using techniques that have never been used at that depth before to bring back
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the most accurate picture back of that wreck. >> thanks for that, dan. now we're going to end on positive news about ukraine. >> yes, so we think it's amazing to see the warm welcome ukrainian refugee children are getting as they start their newe in other countries and we really love this video that went viral of a little boy's birthday at his new school in spain. see you next week! ♪♪ >> we aim to be the best and most trusted place for news. there are hundreds of these turbines, thousands more across.
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[ speaking in foreign language ] >> that's what's left of the north tunnel where the north koreans exploded five nuclear warheads. >> this is xi's show of strength, at a time when china is more fragile than it has been in any recent years. >> shrapnel from the explosion littered along the way. we take you to the heart of the stories that shape our world. the train station, the airport, they're both closed. we're not sure about the roads. we've seen reports they are being blocked by police. we're going to try to find a way out. they're stranded here. this is deliberate. we help you understand the world with us. tom cheshire, sky news, beijing.
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refresh italiano subway now has italian-style capicola on the new supreme meats and mozza meat. just like my nonna makes when she cooks! i don't cook. wait, what? it's a good thing he's so handsome. subway keeps refreshing and refre- my mental health was much better. my mind was in a good place. but my body was telling a different story. i felt all people saw were my uncontrolled movements. some mental health meds can cause tardive dyskinesia, or td, and it's unlikely to improve without treatment. ingrezza is a prescription medicine to treat adults with td movements in the face and body. it's the only treatment for td that's one pill, once-daily, with or without food. ingrezza 80 mg is proven to reduce td movements in 7 out of 10 people. people taking ingrezza can stay on their current dose of most mental health meds. don't take ingrezza if you're allergic to any of its ingredients. ingrezza may cause serious side effects, including sleepiness. don't drive, operate heavy machinery, or do other dangerous activities until you know
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how ingrezza affects you. other serious side effects include potential heart rhythm problems and abnormal movements. it's nice people focus more on me. ask your doctor about ingrezza, #1 prescribed for td. learn how you could pay as little as zero dollars at ingrezza.com. (vo) small businesses are joining the big switch. save over $1,000 when you switch to our ultimate business plan for the lowest price ever. plus choose from the latest 5g smartphones. get more 5g bars in more places- switch to t-mobile for business today. when that car hit my motorcycle, get more 5g bars in more places- insurance wasn't fair. so i called the barnes firm, it was the best call i could've made. call the barnes firm now, and find out what your case could be worth. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million
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simmons says it's wrong only a handful of deaf actors are working in film. >> regardless of mr. "coda" wins best picture, the success of this boundary-shattering film already represents a film in terms of who hollywood is now looking to cast. katie spencer, sky news. let's take a look the at the weather now. we'll be fine for a few days yet but it will turn cooler and more unsettled next week with wintry showers for some. most places will be very warm again today but onshore breezes
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may be considerably cooler near northern and eastern coasts. stiff winds in the south will make it chilly there. inland areas will are dry and sunny this afternoon but the final for scotland will be gray and murky. northeast england and the north of ireland may see low clouds moving onto a few coasts later. this is sky news. coming up, the very latest from ukraine, and from warsaw, where president biden is about to meet his polish counterpart.
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♪♪ good morning, everyone. it's saturday, march 26th. i'm andrea mitchell live in warsaw, poland. several big developments on a very windy morning in poland. president biden is meeting with ukraine's top officials, defense minister and foreign policy minister with defense secretary austin and secretary of state antony blink. this could be a major shift of policy in moscow. a top general saying the
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