8:00 in the morning. so right in the early morning rush hour here in kyiv. and the early times there was sirens going off for a very long time. and then just blast after blast that took place as the rockets were impacting the ukrainian capital here. and some of the places that we went to were in central kyiv. for instance there was a playground that was hit leaving a gigantic kracrater and a busy insection and there was just a seen of carnage at that intersection with several cars completely destroyed. we saw some dead bodies there as well and the ukrainians told us that five people were killed at that place alone. and just to give you an idea of the area that that was in, this was next to a museum and next to a university building. it is unclear that there would have been any sort of military infrastructure there. there certainly didn t seem to be any. and the ukrainians are telling us this is a scene that is going on in many parts of the country here in ukraine. they say th
he joins me ahead with his personal story of living under china s covid lockdown. but we want to get right to cnn s john avlon, charlie dent. alice stewart is here as well. i m happy to have all of you on. good evening to you. john, let s start with the new stuff, the stuff that s breaking. hi, everyone. the fbi issuing investigators issuing, i should say, a subpoena to the national archives to access classified documents that trump took to mar-a-lago. are we going to find out what he took to mar-a-lago, and what does this mean for the former president, you think? well, we will find out what he took to mar-a-lago. we may find out the context in which he took it. was it trump cluelessness, or was there classified information that hadn t been declassified? there s also a statute having to do with these documents which might end up being material. there is a law on the books that says if you steal, spindle, mutilate official documents, that there are punishments that go
fight among themselves. it isa it is a zinger of a letter. sacked on monday rishi sunak manifestly and repeatedly failed to help deliver her key policies. as he agreed to do so when she took the job. we will get reaction to that. the dead bodies are piling up in gaza s biggest hospital and cannot be taken away due to fighting. today, doctors began digging a mass grave in the grounds of the al shifa hospital to prevent disease spreading. we will hear from a palestinian doctor who has worked at the al shifa hospital and is appealing for a cease fire. the climate editor on the future of weather forecasting which could help save lives. good evening. inside cabinet, there is collective responsibilty. outside cabinet, no loyalty is owed, particularly to a prime minister sacked on monday rishi sunak manifestly and repeatedly failed to help deliver her key policies. it isa it is a 3 page assassination of questioning his mandate to be in the job, his confidence to deliver, what he pro
brought in. he s known as a brutal man. and somebody, as jill just said, has been blamed for master minding a lot of atrocity that we saw in syria. give us a sense of what you know about him. so the general is a very interesting character. he s known for his brutality, even against his own fellow officers. so this guy is didn t interesting character to say the least. he s 55 years old. he commanded the air force which is interesting begin the fact that he is an army general. so i m sure that created resentment within the russian air force and jill mentioned that he masterminded the siege of aleppo, that is exactly right. he was one of the ones to actually be in charge of that and is clearly a protect of the asad regime. so as far as his next moves are
raining death. among them, many smerch rem remnants. experts say this is among the heaviest bombardments in recent history. zhuravlyov is no stranger to these brutal tactics. atrocities targeting civilians. they re very similar to what we saw in syria in 2016. so, it shouldn t come as a surprise that zhuravlyov also led russian troops during the siege of aleppo. he is the architect of the devastation you see here. for leveling aleppo, he was awarded the highest honor granted to russian officers. hero of the russian federation. yet syrians have documented his war crimes. russian. reporter: despite the direct line from the impunity the world afforded russia and syria, to