are not waiting to find out what happens next. the roads out of kyiv jammed with traffic, most of it heading west. these people don t want to be liberated by vladimir putin. after weeks of extraordinary bout, this suddenly looks like panic. extraordinary calm. made morning, and twojets panic. extraordinary calm. made morning, and two jets fly over the city, it is not clear who is, but it seems only a matter of time before russia controls the air and much besides. pauladams, bbc news, kia. kyiv. sirens woke residents early this morning here in kyiv, a city which prayed for peace but prepared for war. my colleague nick beake has been finding out what people here think of the last night s extraordinary events and what they fear will follow now. sirens the invasion, the attack that russia promised would never happen has now
would face consequences that have never been experienced in history. ukraine s president, volodymyr zelensky, has declared martial law. he urged his citizens not to panic, insisting his country would emerge victorious. and nato says it is activating its defence plans, bolstering its presence in front line states. in the last hour, boris johnson has said this hideous and barbaric venture must end in failure. well, our correspondent paul adams, failure. well, our correspondent pauladams, here in failure. well, our correspondent paul adams, here in kyiv, has this round up of the day s dramatic events. until early this morning, some here seem to have doubted that he would do it. not any more. the west warned vladimir putin was about to attack. he said he had no such plans. that fiction now utterly exposed. explosions right across this vast country.