on what happens around lviv where we know a number of people are hunkering down, it s been very hard recently but if that changes, the situation on the polish border will change, too. poland itself has taken aroundtwo million people, does it have enough resources on its own? the polish authorities are now calling for more support, a number of mayors have said they have reached saturation point, what they are doing now is looking to other regions, other municipalities to step up and find reception centres. the way the model has been working is refugees crossing the border will generally stay a night or two around the border near the border and then they will recuperate, gather information and then move on a longer term accommodation or structure somewhere else in the country, the country is managing very well now but it does need
we re dealing with thousands of tanks, we re dealing with tens of thousands of russian soldiers which are in our land. so, we have a huge, colossal challenge. and while this is a system that is very interesting and effective, and it helps, and it was developed originally for special operations forces and it s helpful to work with small groups which is our tactic, of course. and it s helpful in the battlefield but up for talking about 100 or something like that. , that doesn t resolve the problem we have now. we re dealing with a huge force which is currently in ukraine, and we are succeeding. we are doing quite well. so, we do need support, additional support, absolutely, with equipment. let s talk about these guys, and the stinger missiles. stinger missiles are also very
accommodation somewhere else in the country. the country is managing very well now, but of course it does need support. it is calling for more support. and unhcr and its partners are ready to provide that. one of the things we are doing is providing cash to refugees. that is very important because it gives them flexibility, means that they can spend money on what is needed for them. ~., spend money on what is needed for them. ., , ., them. matt salt marsh from unhcr, thank ou them. matt salt marsh from unhcr, thank you for them. matt salt marsh from unhcr, thank you forjoining them. matt salt marsh from unhcr, thank you forjoining us. them. matt salt marsh from unhcr, thank you forjoining us. it them. matt salt marsh from unhcr, thank you forjoining us. it is - them. matt salt marsh from unhcr, thank you forjoining us. it is now . thank you forjoining us. it is now early thank you forjoining us. it is now early evening in western ukraine, there early evening in western ukrain
challenge. and while this is a system that is very interesting and effective, and it helps, and it was developed originally for special operations forces and it s helpful to work with small groups which is our tactic, of course. and it s helpful in the battlefield but up for talking about 100 or something like that oh that doesn t resolve the problem we have now. we re dealing with a huge force which is currently in ukraine, and we are succeeding. we are doing quite well. so, we do need support, additional support, absolutely, with equipment. let s talk about these guys, and the stinger missiles. stinger missiles are also very portable, and they re useful for low flying, relatively slow aircraft. everybody got familiar with how the afghans use them against a
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