liberated a number of towns near kharkiv. the region where they reported the civilian killed has seen several explosions. the cause is missiles and bombs. ukraine has not confirmed nor denied responsibility for the blast. another major development is finland joining nato possibly. they agreed to assist each other militarily should either country face attack. finland shares an 800 mile border with russia. finland s president will contact vladimir putin if that should happen. if that will be the case, what my response would be that you caused this. vladimir putin s profile. critics made a daring escape from russia. she ll tell us how she managed to get out. we ll start of the report of the russian civilian killed. scott mcclain. scott, since the first time this war began in february, what do we know? reporter: anderson, yeah. as you mentioned earlier, this is an area where ukrainians have been making progress in taking towns and villages around kharkiv. in those areas they
understood that, you know, war started. and, i mean, i m dealing with this state for ten years and i know the methods which they use and i know that they do not that human lives is nothing for them. human life is nothing. and, yeah, that was just hard to accept and i don t think that i accepted all the things which i saw during last two months completely. you said to the new york times, i want to make sure i have it right, you said russia doesn t have the right to exist. you think it no longer has the right to exist. what did you mean? without without war
liberated a number of towns near kharkiv. the region where they reported the civilian killed has seen several explosions. the cause is missiles and bombs. ukraine has not confirmed nor denied responsibility for the blast. another major development is finland joining nato possibly. they agreed to assist each other militarily should either country face attack. finland shares an 800 mile border with russia. finland s president will contact vladimir putin if that should happen. if that will be the case, what my response would be that you caused this. vladimir putin s profile. critics made a daring escape from russia. she ll tell us how she managed
car where i was, two hours speaking with terrible kgb investigator and so on. being there, is there relief or sadness and sad snns obviously you have been fighting inside russia. you care about russia. you want change in the country you were born in. is there sadness to be out? well, i was doing my activities and half of my time i spent at tours doing lectures and each time i came back and continued to do activism in russia. i just now feel that we well, i m as a russian citizenship, i should help ukraine just to give
reporter: the multiple rocket attack on this, the kharkiv regional administration, was an early sign of the ferocious cowardly brutality russia would unleash on civilian targets. this is ayuna then. she had been serving coffee and cookies to soldiers, saw a flash and curled into a ball. translator: i feel a physical manifestation of fear. i don t like cookies anymore. a box fell on me and i remember the smell. reporter: she asked to step away saying she s sick with butterflies like she hasn t felt before races when she used to swim professionally. andre picks up the story. translator: when i heard her voice i was crawling across the rubble and the emergency services were trying to kick me out. i pulled a man out and then heard her. i did not plan to leave her