the police and army all have expert teams working on the ground. our correspondent anna foster joined one demining patrol in horenka, on the outskirts of kyiv. the russians have gone but danger still lurks here. countless pieces of unexploded ammunition litter the kyiv suburbs. mines, shells, grenades. both fired by russian forces and used by ukrainian soldiers for defence. more than 80,000 have been neutralised so far. this is what is left of dimitro s work than. he was standing over it when a mine exploded. he will need to years of facial surgery to repair the damage. of facial surgery to repair the damaue. ,, of facial surgery to repair the damaue. ,, ~ damage. translation: it was noise. i damage. translation: it was noise- i can t damage. translation: it was noise. i can t understand - damage. translation: it was noise. i can t understand what| noise. i can t understand what happened. big noise in my head
around the ukrainian capital, kyiv, to clear unexploded ammunition left behind by fierce fighting. hospital staff say they re seeing an increase in the number of patients who ve touched or stepped on mines and shells. our correspondent anna fosterjoined one de mining patrol on the outskirts of kyiv. the russians have gone but danger still lurks here. a light anti tank weapon carefully inspected. countless pieces of ammunition litter the kyiv suburbs. mines, shells, grenades, both fired by russian forces and used by ukrainian soldiers for defence. more than 80,000 have been neutralised so far. this is what is left of dimitro s work van. he was standing next to it when it drove over a mine.
trucks. so that is the information that we got. you re quoting the tweet of the general staff of the ukrainian army. that s what they re claiming and we have not heard back from the russians about what they say this was. but, again, this is these are victories for the ukrainians. we shouldn t get overwhelmed by these moments because the bottom line is the russians still have much more armaments, much more power when it comes to military versus military. such a great point. so, jake, we know you sat down with the chief of the international criminal court after he visited two of the kyiv suburbs, bucha and bordianka. reporter: the chief prosecutor in the hague, one of the questions i had was everybody here likes to talk about nuremberg, the
slowly, yesterday, just 200 or so civilians were able to flee the city, jonathan, there s barely any gaps in there now, and if you can get the russians to agree to a humanitarian corridor, it is very difficult for anyone to get in their cars and drive out. the russians are turning to a litany of new tactics that are almost guaranteed to increase civilian casualties. one is the use of phosphorous weapons which basically rains burning white material over a large area. the russian air force also using unguided weapons. these are basically dumb bombs. you drop them from a great height and they fault where they fall, be it is a military base, a school, a hospital, a train station. president zelenskyy says these are war crimes and they need to be investigated just like these massacres we ve seen in bucha, and other parts of the kyiv suburbs. jonathan? the world is holding its breath seeing what will come out of mariupol in the days and weeks to come.
reporter: but brave residents like her carry out resistance. we kept it, we kept it, she says. showing the ukrainian flag given to her husband for his military service. we hid it. a bold risk in anticipation of this moment when russian troops would be forced to retreat. and the villages would finally be free. reporter: now, a lot of those russian troops who were responsible for these atrocities, not just obviously this one but in a number of towns and villages and kyiv suburbs as we have seen unfolding, horrifying scenes. they will now be redeployed. they have left the country. they are heading east and they will be part of this major offensive that russia is preparing in the east, in the donbas region. so the fear is that these are