royal family in the procession, as well as the queen s coffin. it will be carried on a gun carriage from buckingham palace through the city to an historic hall in the palace of westminster. that is where the queen will lie in state until her funeral on monday, as more than a half million people are expected to pay their respects. this is cnn s live coverage as the people of london get close to their beloved queen and say farewell one last time. i m don lemon at buckingham palace. and i m anderson cooper in london overlooking the procession route. we ll take you every step of the way on this leg on the queen s final journey. the procession will begin at buckingham palace, as don was saying, and move down the mall to westminster with royal family members walking behind the queen s coffin. they ll pass the horse guard s parade ground, traveling on to white hall. they ll go by landmarks including number 10 downing street, parliament square, until they arrive outside westminster
as a result of the russian siege. they talk of shops and pharmacies looted as food and water runs out. a column of private cars fled the city after russia shelled an agreed evacuation corridor. millions of ukrainians are escaping to neighbouring countries. according to the polish border guard agency, more than 1.75 million people have arrived since the war began. about a million are still there and polish officials say the country is struggling to cope. the fourth round of peace talks between moscow and kyiv have now started. ukraine hints at some progress. the deputy head of office for president zelensky says he believes that moscow s position is more constructive now than previously. a russian delegate has also said draft agreements could be reached, but it s not clear what areas these would cover. tim muffett has the latest. an apartment block in kyiv attacked this morning.
yavoriv was attacked, it is a military base so essentially all military bases in ukraine are a target. the same as some government buildings and the same as some obvious targets of military operations. i don t understand why they didn t evacuate the military base but this is something entirely to be taken up once the war has ended. at this point in time, the fact that this attack happened so close to the polish border should be setting off alarm bells and red flags for all of the nato member states. it is not just that attack but also the drone filled with explosives which hit a suburb in zagreb, the capital of croatia, a drone sent by the russian military. that should also ring alarm bells in nato member states and actually, make clear that nato cannot stand
anytime soon, and so poles are beginning to plan for the long term, how to shelter people, how to integrate them within polish society in the long term and that is a completely different question than the temporary shelter they have had to give up until now. for the children of war, open arms are mightier than the fist. young ukrainians, eased into life in poland with a karate class joy to distract from trauma and a lesson that the greatest strength comes from peace. my father might be fighting. i don t know. i don t have massage from him. dariy hasn t heard from his dad for three days. the emotions make it hard to feel settled here. in poland, it s very cool here, but we want to go back home because home is home. when we in activities like karate class, or something else, we forget about war on at the moment.
since the war began. they are worried about their future but they are also nervous, nervous about talking about it in front of our cameras, and that s when you really feel the full weight of the fear that people have of criticising this war. there is national pride now, even in the playground. a refuge from war but a life still trapped in uncertainty. tom bateman, bbc news, antalya. the war in ukraine continues to have an impact on the global economy and worse is expected. the conflict is affecting fuel prices, gas prices and food supplies so far. since russia s invasion, wheat prices have risen by 38%. our correspondent nina warhurst reports it s amazing to think that a conflict happening more than 1,500 miles from where we are in essex is affecting prices of flour that might end up on your high street.