Killed. Take a look at these pictures from kharkiv, a small town. Reportedly a cafe was hit with people gathering therefore awake after a funeral. This town is within reach of the front line but ukraine says there are no military sites at that location. Our correspondent James Waterhouse has latest now from kyiv. James waterhouse has latest now from k iv. ,. James waterhouse has latest now from kiv. ,. ,. , kyiv. This is that a doubt the deadliest kyiv. This is that a doubt the deadliest missile kyiv. This is that a doubt the deadliest Missile Strike kyiv. This is that a doubt the deadliest Missile Strike that| deadliest Missile Strike that ukraine has seen for more than a year. Now the images being put out by officials are fairly grim, even with the standards of the almost elite Missile Strike that ukraine enters. Its around the small village of hroza in the northeastern kharkiv region. Footage appear to show several bodies close together, next rubber which we are told it used to be a
is just part of an ordinary day. reporter: that s right. spot on. and i think what gets lost so often about it both sides of the border is the interconnectiveness of both sides. the president was panonting of very dangerous city protected by a border wall put up some time ago, elpaso. but the reality is the people that live unel paso are the people that live in juarez. they commute back and forth to go to work, go to school and the way the president talks about this is completely foreign to them. all these people behind me are walking back unmexico after spending a day inside of elpasoe. el paso has felt the disproportionate impact of the aggressive deterrent policies. is the first place he put the to place zeer otolerance.
go to work, go to school and the way the president talks about this is completely foreign to them. all these people behind me are walking back unmexico after spending a day inside of elpasoe. el paso has felt the disproportionate impact of the aggressive deterrent policies. is the first place he put the to place zeer otolerance. they didn t die in el paso. they died in the el paso sector. for the people that live and work on both sides and traverse it every single day, it s a complete laforeign idea, one not based on the realities on the ground. this is what it looks like, walking back and forth. we re going to talk a little later about all the reporting you ve been doing over the last several years on this. and 28th congressional district. you re on that conference commit
barrier. it s not going to be concrete. maybe it ll be steel. still, he needs some way to save face here, and he s not getting it. this humanitarian crisis down at the southern border, we ve heard, when did that start? who created it? the humanitarian crisis? let s see, we ve had a policy of deterrence in our country since the 90s where different administrations had tried to implement deterrent policies. a lot of times they ve led to more deaths. that s something jacob soboroff has gone down to the border and tracked. we ve seen time and time again. it was actually bill clinton who put up some of the first barriers in san diego. people went around that. then we had a period of a lot of families coming to the border. that was in the obama administration. they started to claim asylum. the obama administration were the first to build family detention, hold these families for longer than 20 days. then they were told they had to start releasing the children. the numbers came back up. t
migrant families piling up at the southwest border and that for months authorities there have been asking for support and for help. and it s not just these large numbers of families, but many of them are sick because it s flu season. but rather than getting extra support to try to address them and adjust the conditions such that children can be taken care of, all of the focus has been on deterrent policies. so the directive from the white house is we re not accommodating families who are arriving now. instead we re coming up with new policies to replace things like family separation, like the asylum ban, both of which have been blocked by the courts with new policies, even though these officials are telling the white house that these new ideas, whether we re tacking about one to force asylum seekers to wait in mexico or vast tent cities, they re likely to face the same fate. they re either likely to be blocked by the courts again or