ceasefire. the point is as far as russians are concerned they have broken so much more over the 20 years of mr. putin s rule that to say with any confidence about anything putin confirms or agrees to as something that shall stick is not a possibility. stay safe. thank you. thank you very much. there are now more than 2 million people who have fled ukraine. worsening an already major humanitarian crisis. we are not nazi. we are just on our land with hands up, please, we want to leave. we want to be happy. stop shooting. please.
problems like this are always things that happen in other countries. and then i moved to one of those countries and now we re here. but in all the reading we did about the first year of marriage this wasn t something we were prepared for. yeah. so let s try this. and just see. how are you doing? yeah. depends. sometimes sad sometimes angry. we are trying to do something just to, for not to think about my family all the time. but yeah. we re doing okay here. i imagine it s tough. your life has been up ended in the last two weeks. joe, how did you have the foresight to get out of kyiv? what happened? i think, you know, honestly we can t even really say it was our foresight. we felt like we had the opportunity to go and the reports were getting more concerning, and my parents in america i think were very
risks are negligible. are we then just meaning the united states prolonging the inevitable here about getting involved directly somehow? i think that s right. the fact is we still have wishful thinking about how quickly this is going to end. some people in the meantime people are losing lives every single day. exactly right. we re going to be in a position where we may have to make some difficult decisions. things that seem beyond the pale right now like a no fly zone, after tens of thousands of ukrainians are killed and the u.s. population, the european population demand action is not going to seem as unreasonable. so doing, making calculated risk informed decisions now will be better than letting this unfold, trying to sit on the sidelines, and then being dragged into something that is even more consuming because the russians
that the people have the most stake in their club, who care the most about it and the life blood of the club, and people who least count, and that s got to change. thanks for joining me. good to see you. come back more often. thank you. let s get more on the developments concerning china this morning. and tom is standing by in beijing. hello, you heard what was said about china. and what the british government should and shouldn t be doing. talk to us about the latest situation. hi, kay, we re hearing from others speaking about china s global leadership ambitions and maybe that is a spur for them to help in the u.k., and so far, we ve seen very little leadership on ukraine at all. they said they want to mediate but it s clear that it is saying it supports the mediation but
so what we have here is an antibacterial burn dressing pack. this is absolutely amazing. this is going to be basically fast tracked to the front line. ahead, 48 hours on the road across five countries to the ukrainian border. two weeks ago, the life of every ukrainian changed for ever. i woke up at five o clock, i checked bbc, and. it was war. we drive late into the night, crossing the borderfrom france into germany, stopping just outside dusseldorf. the next morning, after a much needed black coffee, the team make an early start. in his dayjob, dennis ougrin, another ukrainian, also works for the nhs, in london. i m doing something that i shouldn t be doing. i m a child psychiatrist. i m not very good with the military stuff, i m not good with guns or rifles