home city is going through this. and hundreds of thousands of people are now homeless. even if the war stops, we don t know how so many people can find their hole in the situation. well, we thank you for joining us tonight. and thanks for sharing your story. coming up next, from performing on a stage, the serving in ukrainian parliament, we ll be speaking to an activist who is using music to bring people together during these unimaginably difficult times, when the 11th hour continues. continues for what you need. isn t that right limu? limu? limu? sorry, one sec. doug blows several different whistles. doug blows several different whistles. [a vulture squawks.]
but that they would use such a claim for some sort of pretextural event in the future, that s something we re concerned about. why does the british prime minister and foreign secretary, who wo i interviewed yesterday, why do they talk so plainly about war crimes? they re petitioned among 39 countries to the international criminal court. why is the u.s. so reluctant to call a spayed a spayed. we saw what happened with the maternity hospital. why not call it a war crime? we support the ongoing investigations into war crimes. we believe that s a valid investigative endeavor. but again, we want to make sure that what happens here is that the war stops. that s what our focus is on and we still think there could be a diplomatic path forward and we think russia should be held accountable for any war crimes they may conduct and there s an investigative process going on and we want to respect that.
mariupol to help them or a chance to get out from there. before i let you go, the last eu diplomat to leave mariupol said it will become a part of a list of cities completely destroyed. naming coventry, aleppo, et cetera. what goes through your mind when you hear your home included on a list like that? we try with our relations with our friends not to think about this, think only about people who need help to get out of the city. all of us, all of the mariupol citizens and there are no chance even if war stops and ukraine gets this territory back, there are no chance to build it in time. it s totally destroyed. all the plants are totally
impossible to deal with now. i have to say that whether it s from blankets to water purification tablets to generators to medical supplies because mums are giving birth in hospitals. um, you know, unicef on the back have to 100 incredible ukrainian colleagues are trying to make the supply but unless the war stops, unless the indiscriminate attacks stop, we are going to see more children wretched from their homes under bombardments. and in every crisis, there is the short-term need and then the much longer term need. the longer-term need could be psychological assistance, finding schooling for these kids who, for many of them, for two years were out of school because of covid. yeah, you re spot on. they have already come out of a really difficult period like children around the world, mums and dads will appreciate that. they have now also seen either bombardment or listened to their parents talk about going to a country they have never heard of. they stand there and i have seen th
but it s my city and. i want to save my city. a little lift in a war which doesn t let up. i was happy now because every day we re feeling bad, sometimes, because all the time we listen. syre na, you know? air raid siren? yes, 0k. there was one just just five minutes ago. yes, just now there was, yes. we hope that, very soon, that this war stops. kyiv still digs in securing its splendid statues just in case. i think everything will get better, danilo, a volunteer, tells me. it ll be ok. we rejust doing this in case it goes wrong. it went badly wrong this month in this neighbourhood in the north. apartments shattered by fragments of an intercepted