tens of thousands of ukrainians being taken to russia against their will. cnn s phil black has some of their stories. reporter: the two didn t know each other before the russians came. n now, volodymyr was freed from the russian detention center. for weeks, sasha s family did not know he was still alive. seized and held by russian soldiers in early march. they heard nothing about his safety. volodymyr told them he knows his
hundred of tubes of artillery, they ll achieve success. they probably have a 3-1 artillery right now in the number of tanks. we are not seeing a lot about this battle in the western media. the ukrainians are not talking about it. we know it is a desperate for survival. it is important to keep in mind, general clark and general hertling, thank you. next more aid to get into ukraine and american diplomats back on the ground here and we ll talk to state department spokesperson ned price. hand, so you should really be focusing on both, and definitely at the same time. sensodyne sensitivity & gum gives us a dual action effect
my fiance was in the south. there were heavy fighting and shelling and it was getting terrible messages from him. it was very difficult to understand the connection some where they re in the shelling and we don t know if he s going to come back and when he s going to come back. this is even bad to complain because i understand this is the faith of ukrainians now to fight and i am proud that he made that decision. miss mendel, i appreciate your time tonight. thank you, anderson. january 6 exclusives ahead. some loyalists and what the former president saying running up to the election.
p ptheir occupation. this is war crime. this is not soldiers misbehaving. there is nothing to do, let s pick on some ukrainians and cut them up. no, this was a deliberate effort to interrogate and torture to get information and to find people to eliminate so that the russian occupation could not be resisted. and general holden, i was in bucha today, at least more than half a dozen people were shot and the bodies left found. the eye witness talked about the russian block that sat there beginning of march until the end of the russian s time there,
because he deliberately tried to remember as much as possible. he says sooner or later one of us had to be the first to be released and that s why we rye to remember the names of other people to let their relatives know they are alive. volodymyr says there were about 200 ukrainians in detention while he was the. he hopes all would get home quickly so the suffering their families are enduring can end and their healing can begin. phil black, cnn, in the kyiv region. kidnapping people as bargaining chips and forced detor deportation or shelling ve evacuees. both history and recent events show this is the way russia has and does. one of the reasons sided by the