civilian populations have had to move underground. we saw in some of those areas cancer wards full of children now being taken underground were they arejust children now being taken underground were they are just barely making calls to the international community is saying we are running out of medicine and food and we have no heating and we have no water. help us. —— kharkiv. that humanitarian corridor that was created today, we were told when we got up in the early hours of the morning that the russian defence ministry had announced of this corridor that would last for about five hours. i spoke to the deputy mayor of mariupol who first said we are trying to see what we could do to get at least 50 buses to get 5000-6000 get at least 50 buses to get 5000—6000 people out. this is a city that has about 450,000 people, and they say that 200,000 people need to come out. and within hours that ceasefire, that truce was broken and people said that they were being sheued people said that they were being shelled as they tried to get out, that they were facing the fighting. so here they are equally as terrified. there are conversations