we saw forensic workers bring out what look like fragments russia s defence ministry claims it was firing precision weapons. only the military factory opposite the apartment block is scorched but still standing. misha and olya feel lucky to be alive today, even able to salvage something from the ruins. misha said they d just got home when they heard the first blast. if we d been in the lift a minute longer, he tells me, we d have been burnt or killed. russia may well have been aiming at a military facility across the road here, but once again it s civilians who are the casualties of this strike. the mayor here in kyiv now says 100 civilians have been killed in ukraine s capital alone, in a war that russia began over two months ago and still shows no sign it wants to stop.
it says it s shocked and outraged by the meaningless manner of her death. we saw forensic workers bring out what looked like fragments of the missile. russia s defence ministry claims it was firing precision weapons. only the military factory opposite the apartment block is scorched but still standing. misha and olya feel lucky to be alive today, even able to salvage something from the ruins. misha said they d just got home when they heard the first blast. if we d been in the lift a minute longer, he tells me, we d have been burnt or killed. russia may well have been aiming at a military facility across the road here, but once again it s civilians who are the casualties of this strike. the mayor here in kyiv now says 100 civilians have been killed in ukraine s capital alone, in a war that russia began over
and both hanutia and her daughter olya and her husband are living in the surrounding areas of lviv and so far are doing well, but that depends on how the war progresses. i am just hoping it never reaches lviv. james, we thank you for joining us today. we wish you and your family the best and that your aunt remains healthy as she is in lviv, and thank you for sharing your story with us as we watch what s happening in ukraine. thank you. thank you, yasmin. all right, everybody. an amazing interview from ali velshi. a cancer patient trying to get out of ukraine, and the man driving the way. plus, not all refugees getting equal treatment in their escape from ukraine. a look at racism at the border. that s coming up. birds flyin high you know how i feel (coughing) breeze driftin on by
now taking care of the children. two little girls, nastia and agusta, both 8, their beds next to each other. nastia telling us about the bombs that used to fall where she lived. agusta telling us about the harrowing journey, being told to close the windows and turn off their lights on the train because they saw explosions so close to them. i was scared, she told us. i didn t know if i would survive. these boys, danya and kolya, are both 9. telling us about the tanks they saw and the security checkpoints they passed through. the kinds of images these children will now carry their whole lives. kolya say he would like putin gone and for russian and ukraine to be friends. here in poland alone, more than 2 million ukrainian refugees now. these children have been tested, and so have the workers. katarzyna komar, just one of the many here carrying for the children, hoping to do right by them. the children talk about the
and wait some more. hoping to be among the 100,000 ukrainian refugees the biden administration has vowed to take in. where are you from? kyiv. reporter: alina and olya are sisters, trying to make it to relatives in new york, after life in a war zone became too much. we are sleeping and bombs and bombs and our babies are so small, so we need to woke up them, get dressed, and run to more safe place. reporter: the sisters already have u.s. visas, but their 4 and 6-month-old babies do not. the babies fathers left behind in ukraine. if we won t have the babies, we would stay with our husbands. we don t want to live without them. reporter: everyone in line here has a different story, but they all share one goal. to make it to the united states. what s your biggest fear right now? that my visa will be declined, she says. this is the third day americans anthony and oksanna eric from florida have waited in line,