we have teams from the other side of the border welcoming and supporting people. the border welcoming and supporting eole. ~ ., the border welcoming and supporting neale, ~ ., the border welcoming and supporting eole. ~ ., ., ,, the border welcoming and supporting n-eole. ~ . . ~ i., , people. murat sahin, thank you very much for taking people. murat sahin, thank you very much for taking time people. murat sahin, thank you very much for taking time out people. murat sahin, thank you very much for taking time out of- people. murat sahin, thank you very much for taking time out of your i much for taking time out of your busy schedule to speak with us one bbc news. a snapshot of what one agency is dealing with as everyone is reeling from the scale of this deepening humanitarian crisis, even as the war intensifies across ukraine. thank you very much, lyse doucet, in kyiv. let s head to turkey, where talks have taken place between russia s foreign minister and ukraine s foreign min
all the more costly for both sides. after more than a0,000 people were evacuated yesterday, ukraine s again announced seven humanitarian corridors out of key cities where there s been heavy fighting, including mariupol, despite not one temporary ceasefire working there yet. peace talks may well have happened, but for the thousands continuing to try and escape the fighting, there are more pressing things to think about. james waterhouse, bbc news, in kyiv. i m joined by the unicef representative in lviv, murat sahin. welcome to the bbc news. we noticed just days into this invasion that you knew executive director criticised what she said were attacks on hospitals, kindergartens and schools. you have contempt like
Katerina Mozhna and her four-year-old son Maxim are now safe, having fled to Romania from Ukraine, funded with help from generous Mail on Sunday readers.