neighboring countries in 10 days, he calls it the fastest growing refugee crisis in europe since world war ii. meantime, growing questions whether russia is actively targeting civilians or doesn t care what it hits. cnn s alex marquardt reports from a small village west of kyiv devastated by a small aircraft on friday. the small country road is now lying in rubble, collapsed homes and a deep crater where a russian missile struck. the attack, caught on a village security camera hit the home of igor megiav in a small village about 15 miles from kyiv where he was with his family. now they re gone, killed in an instant, five family members and a friend, including his 12-year-old daughter who was disabled in an accident with a drunk driver, his wife just 46
but we cannot forgive the hundreds upon hundred of victims. nor the thousands of thousands of suffered. god will not forgive. not today, not tomorrow. never. and instead of forgiveness, there will be judgment. there are growing questions about whether russia actively targeting civilians or just doesn t care what it hits. we report from a small village southwest of kyiv. devastated by a air strike on friday. the small country road is now lined by piles of rubble. burned out cars, collapsed homes and a deep crater with a missile struck. the attack caught on a village security camera. hit the home. the small village about 15 miles south of kyiv. where he lived with his family. now, they re gone.
about how this new law will impact his classroom. thank you for joining us. thank you for having me. just your reaction to the florida governor signing this into law. yeah. you know, two-fold it hits hard in my heart professionally and personally both. professionally it truly makes me feel like i am not trusted as a professional. i know my kindergarten standards through and through and nowhere in our curriculum does it have anything about teaching sexual orientation or sexual identity. so for them to say that that s happening that, you know, it is kind of crazy, but we should be able to have discussions and that s what we re encouraged to do in kindergarten. personally because my kids do have discussions. they want to know who my partner is and pictures outside the
sure but probably maybe up to about half a mile wide that kind of line of destruction. as hunter was just talking about where you have damage. i have been in so many tornado scenes and can you have a house that looks absolutely untouched and the house right next to it is completely demolished. it just depends on where that exact, you know, where the windy where the tornado cuts through to the outside of it there isn t any damage. where it hits, everything is completely destroyed. so you probably have a fairly narrow band but about 200 miles long, at least just from that one tornado where everything in its path is destroyed. unfortunately, it hit towns directly. so it s not a huge population zone. but if it hits the town, you are going to have a lot of damage. mayfield, kentucky, which is just to the south of paducah right here. that s one of the towns that took a direct hit. they went for almost an hour without any communication from that town after that storm went through. so, obvio
i mean, is this expected to be the new norm in this region? well, this has everybody so worried. if this is the new normal, i can tell you what we have been able to see. south korea does not have the infrastructure to needed to deal with a top hat crisis. you have a compound effect. every time it hits, the situation gets worse and worse. what we know from the u.n. is that africa is disprop dispropodisprop disproportionately affected by climate change. it s important for our vurers to remember. south susan, 125 miles on the outside of this road. and yet, they are paying a very