hopefully. >> business is still good for martin schwas. ever more commuters and tourists now depend on his ferry. >> this used to be once every 20 years, now every 2 years the river can't be crossed, so we have to help out and demand is increasing. >> the ferry still has 50 centimeters to the riverbed. but martin schnaas doesn't know how long that will last. if it doesn't rain soon, he will probably have to give up. >> to ukraine now, where the suffering and cruelty from the war continue unabated. it's been six months since russia invaded the country. putin's bombs are landing in residential areas, killing and injuring those who are the most vulnerable: hospital patients. ukrainian pablo kovtonyuk has made it his mission to document these horrors. he is determined to hold the kremlin accountable for such atrocities. according to ukrainian data, some 700 health. facilities have been struck by russian missiles. far from the front line in chernihiv, hospitals are coming under attack. when he was deputy minister of health, pavlo kovtonyuk trie