instances of suspected russian cluster bombs are being investigated. those munitions are specifically banned under international treaties. here s what she said on wednesday. for more than one month now, the entire population of ukraine has been enduring a living nightmare. i echo the secretary-general s words, and i will quote him, continuing the war in ukraine is morally unacceptable, politically indefensible, and military nonsensical. the head of the u.n. s human rights council speaking wednesday in geneva. i ll have more from lviv at the top of the next hour. first let s go to kim brunhuber in atlanta for more. kim. thanks so much, hala. still to come on our program, ukraine s president is expected to speak to australia s parliament next hour as he continues to appeal for more assistance from the west amid russia s reentless attacks. we re live in sydney ahead. stay with us.
barbershop. oleg is one of those stranded here, unsure when or if he will be able to return to his home in the donetsk region. i have no idea. i dream about this, but it s very hard, and i think some years i need wait. reporter: but he is grateful to have a safe place in lviv, found through his friends. thanks god. thanks, my friends. thanks my lucky fate i find this place. reporter: as the war continues, she s working to place the displaced in an informal network of 20 small shelters across the city. we want to give caring support and other people. reporter: doing good in the midst of the bad. when people, kids, families,
everyone went through their cupboards and kitchen cabinets, pooled it all together, tried to make it through together. but it was obvious that once the grocery stores were looted and there was a thriving black market, you know, the more vulnerable you are, maybe the elderly, maybe you did not think of drawing cash before the war began, the more risk you were taking to just die of hunger in the middle of europe in the 21st century, which is incomprehensible to me as i tell you, but i have to tell you because it s the truth right now. the city is still besieged. so to answer your question, the way to survive was to cooperate with neighbors. i wonder how people view this russian attack on mariupol. vladimir putin is saying he came to liberate ukrainians and ethnic russians. what were they saying about him in these bomb shelters as they
professor matthew schmidt there from the university of new haven in connecticut. thanks very much. millions of ukrainians had to flee their homes because of the war and because of such a staggering number, aid workers sometimes have to think outside the box to find them a place to stay. that includes an offbeat refugee shelter in lviv located in what some call the wild house. don lemon went there. this was photo studio, and now it s still shelter. reporter: when bombs started falling on her country, this 29-year-old journalist knew she had to act. one day, morning, 24 of february, we woke up and we understand that this war is coming all territory of ukraine. so everything changed? everything changed. reporter: so she and her friends founded what might be lviv s most eclectic shelter in a building she calls the wild house. on the first floor, a coffee
outhouse. he later expressed regret for those words but not the actions. europe s first war of the 21st century was also putin s war. the tiny georgian enclave was a backwater of the soviet union. but it was here that putin got a taste for violating international boundaries, intervening to support the breakaway region, pouand rollin his tanks across the border. there s been a lot of speculation about where the russian troops are. well, here they are. inside georgian territory and outside the main conflict zone, the big question is how far will they go? reporter: then, as now, the invasion provoked international scorn. but just after the short georgia war, putin seemed confident. relations with the west would