saved by the railways that are this country s lifeline. they come from across the second biggest country in europe after russia. it is war in my city. the children and i are scared of the war. i don t like the war. we went to meet the man leading the effort to rescue refugees. a former businessman who is now in charge of the biggest evacuation in recent european history. alexander heads a team of nearly a quarter of a million people keeping ukraine moving. this was him just weeks before the war began with french president emmanuel macron. in wartime, some of his colleagues don camouflage. he is talking by phone to a polish minister. we need to develop passenger movement with poland and to increase the number of border
supposed to other producers stepping up, i don t think there s any great difference. i don t think you ll be a decisive factor. a decisive factor. because the warden ukraine a decisive factor. because the warden ukraine has a decisive factor. because the| warden ukraine has scrambled a decisive factor. because the - warden ukraine has scrambled up the tectonic plates of geopolitics, does make it more likely that there is a return to compliance with iran nuclear deal? i return to compliance with iran nuclear deal? return to compliance with iran nuclear deal? i think ironically what it has nuclear deal? i think ironically what it has done nuclear deal? i think ironically what it has done is nuclear deal? i think ironically what it has done is more - nuclear deal? i think ironically what it has done is more than| what it has done is more than anything, which is taking complete so admit the iranians realise that the window to reach a deal is closing and before the ukraine crisis
but there is no sympathy for ukrainian officials who bow to the kremlin. if they cooperate and want to make our city russian, i don t know the word, it is treason. remarkably, ukrainians are still in control of the mayor s office, for now. you can hear shelling out side, says the deputy mayor. but we are getting used to it. the russians have allowed us to keep working, but it is not clear how long that will last. not surprisingly a lot of the people we are in contact with inside kherson do not want us to identify them, but they tell us essential drug supplies are running out and russian forces continue to arrest and to interrogate and to scare people. are you worried that by speaking
overnight, russian airstrikes on kyiv intensified, killing four people. residential buildings were hit, along with a metro station. yahlda hakim is in lviv, to the west close to the border with poland. yahlda is the war inching closer to you? yes, laura, air sirens have been sounding all day here. meanwhile, in kyiv, a 35 hour curfew is now in place. residents can only leave if sirens sound and they need to reach bomb shelters. our international correspondent orla guerin has the latest and a warning some viewers may find this report distressing. it is starting to feel like the new normal, buildings burning after russian attacks overnight. it was too much for some here. this is a city living on its nerves. people wondering if their neighbours
so, how this moves and how it develops very closely and now, back to those you in the in russia, thejournalist who interrupted the tv news bulletin on monday to protest against the war in ukraine has been fined 30,000 roubles or 280 dollars. marina ovs yann ikova ran on set carrying this poster reading stop the war! dont believe the propaganda . it was an unprecedented moment of dissent against the kremlin beamed into living rooms across russia. ms ovs yann ikova appeared in court today, charged with organising an unauthorised public event. she spoke afterwards. it was my own anti war decision. it was my decision by myself because i do not like russia started this