citizens than soldiers in ukraine. they are doing that intentionally. plus kind of planning to invite foreign mercenaries from syria to kill ukrainians. it is not about demilitarization and conventional geopolitics. it is genocide, a massacre. funny story. trying to see positivity in everything. we have intercepts of the syrian mercenaries and chatter that they will run to the eu as refugees. putin might be in for a surprise and out of a lot of money. it is terrible. literally leveling everything. destroying churches and schools and more than military bases.
knees. mobbed by teammates, his reaction both powerful and poignant. it was so emotional for me because, you know, the situation in my country. and it s it s so difficult for me right now at this moment thinking about football because every day in my country russia s army kill ukrainians people. and it was so emotional, just it s one thing i can say. the words of andriy yarmolenko there on sunday. meanwhile, elsewhere chelsea league s fans arriving since the russian billionaire owner roman abramovitch was sanctioned by the uk. on saturday the board
president zelenskyy says some towns simply no longer exist. imagies from a village about 30 miles west of kyiv show a school and a medical building as well. we start wis moth what it l like. we have the latest on the shelling. reporter: on the outskirts of the perimeter. normally this is a public access road but already a checkpoint is set up down the way. a bit of tension and security concerns. several missiles, air strikes, ukrainian officials say, landing in that base. we know there are more than 50 people wounded. several people killed. according to ukrainians authorities. still trying to determine whether there was any infrastructure damp on that base. let me give you the damage story why this is so important. this is a sprawling complex.
came here during the industrial revolution. so a lot of people came here figuring, we ll save some money, go back and buy land, but inevitably, you know, you re here. what do you need? you need a church. you need a bakery. you need a butcher shop. you need a bar. and so there was infrastructure. collection down here. reporter: a feeling for the history of this place, and these days something else, too. deja vu. in the field from 1942 to about 1950. the last of the insurgency and then maybe another one soon? yeah, yeah. reporter: with each conflict another wave of ukrainian families came to ohio. the mayor of parma already working with state and federal officials to once again make his city a home for the newly displaced. why would this be the right place for the community? because ukraine is part of
dozen pragueies. from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. everything we sell, all revenues going straight to ukraine. we want to help provide ammunition. reporter: in constant communication with a cousin five months pregnant, leaving her husband behind to fight. directly after the war. reporter: there are thousands of homes here like this one. that s my mom. that s my dad. reporter: where connections to ukraine run deep. what is it like to grow up as a ukrainian american in this part of ohio? funny. i don t know any other way. went to ukrainian school from age 5 to 17, every day. i didn t speak english until kindergarten. cousins were not blood relatives but, you know, the people you went to church with, were in organizations with, the people that lived up the street that spoke the language. that knew the traditions. reporter: how is it there are so many ukrainians in this part of ohio? well, the first ukrainians