as far as possible. everyday, about 20 wounded soldiers, to our hospital from kharkiv, from mariupol. all of our soldiers have different types of injuries. for example, mine explosions, gunshots, bombs, head injuries, and all hospital staff work in a nonstop regime. we are mostly separated now from our families and from our children. it is very hard for our soul. our families have left the country and who, day after day, because now at the time of maximum unity and we will stay strong
as a smoke screen while it prepares to carry out what she called more appalling atrocities and war crimes. meanwhile, the humanitarian crisis grows ever worse. many of those fleeing fighting in the east head to the western city of lviv, still considered relatively safe. the un says nearly 6.5 million people are now displaced within ukraine. 3.2 million more have already left the country altogether. in a central square in lviv, they have placed these pushchairs to represent each child killed in a war that has lasted three weeks and seems far from over. jon donnison, bbc news. john mentioned the fact that lviv is relatively safe. the word relatively is the applicable word. there was an
a non aligned, non bloc country, so that means that russia is just interested in ensuring that such a country as ukraine does not exist. from my perspective, accepting neutrality today for us just means slavery for us tomorrow. there are other states that take this formal neutrality stance. finland and sweden are the obvious ones and i know the debate is changing in finland aboutjoining nato. sweden, the government is against the idea ofjoining nato at this stage. those countries don t appear to be slave countries. are you saying that you cannot put the genie back in the bottle now whereas neutrality might have been an option before the invasion, it simply isn t an option now? neutrality was never